Government unveils UK Low Carbon Transition Plan: Full details
Other Central Government stories
- Worklessness in London costs £5 billion a year, says London Councils
- Labour MP, aged 53, found dead at home
- Cameron faces 'hostile' audience during college visit
- MPs question leadership of equalities watchdog chief Trevor Phillips
- Bank of England warns of job market 'uncertainty'
Advertisement
A comprehensive plan to move the UK onto a permanent low carbon
footing and to maximise economic opportunities, growth and jobs was
published by the Government today.
The UK Low Carbon Transition Plan plots out how the UK will meet
the cut in emissions set out in the budget of 34% on 1990 levels by
2020. A 21% reduction has already been delivered –
equivalent to cutting emissions entirely from four cities the size
of London.
Transforming the country into a cleaner, greener and more
prosperous place to live is at the heart of our economic plans for
Building Britain’s Future and ensuring the UK is ready to
take advantage of the opportunities ahead.
According to the Government, by 2020:
- More than 1.2 million people will be in green jobs
- 7 million homes will enjoy pay-as-you-save home energy makeovers, and more than 1.5 million households will be supported to produce their own clean energy
- 40% of electricity will be from low carbon sources, from renewables, nuclear and clean coal
- We will be importing half the amount of gas that we otherwise would.
- The average new car will emit 40% less carbon than now.
The Transition Plan takes a cost effective route to reducing
carbon and keeps the overall impact on the consumer to a minimum.
Today’s plan will not increase average energy bills by 2015,
compared to now.
By 2020, the impact of ALL climate change policies, both existing
and new, will be to add, on average, an additional 8% - or
£92 - to today’s household bills. Since 2000
£20 billion has been spent tackling fuel poverty, assisting
millions of households in the UK.
The Plan includes greater powers for the regulator Ofgem to protect
the consumer and, following new legislation, new resources for
discounts off the bills of some of the most vulnerable
households.
The Government claims its Transition Plan is the most systematic
response to climate change of any major developed economy, and sets
the standard for others in the run up to crucial global climate
talks in Copenhagen in December.
The UK Low Carbon Industrial Strategy, published alongside, sets
out a series of active government interventions to support
industries critical to tackling climate change. It puts
workers and businesses in the UK at the forefront of massive global
opportunity by targeting key industries and regions where the UK
has competitive or commercial advantage, including offshore wind,
marine power and carbon capture and storage. This includes
the first allocations from the £405m funding for green
industry and technology announced in the Budget.
Also published today are the Renewable Energy Strategy which maps
out how the Government will deliver the UK’s target of
getting 15% of all energy (electricity, heat and transport) from
renewables by 2020, and the Government’s Low Carbon Transport
Plan which sets out how to reduce carbon emissions from domestic
transport by up to 14% over the next decade.
Energy and Climate Change Secretary Ed Miliband said: “The UK
was the first country in the world to legislate for carbon budgets.
It was a dramatic change in approach.
"This is a transition plan for Britain, a route-map to 2020, with
carbon savings expected across every sector and a carbon budget
assigned to every government department alongside its financial
budget.
“Renewables, nuclear and clean fossil fuels are the trinity
of low carbon and the future of energy in Britain. Under our
plans we will get 40% of our electricity from low carbon energy by
2020 and more in the years afterwards.
“Our plan will strengthen our energy security, it seeks to be
fair to the most vulnerable, it seizes industrial opportunity and
it rises to the moral challenge of climate change.
“In five months, the world must come together at Copenhagen
and follow through on the commitment of world leaders last week to
stop dangerous climate change. Today we have shown how
Britain will play its part.”
Business Secretary Lord Mandelson said: “The strategies we
are launching today outline the government’s vision for
achieving a low carbon future for the UK, reshaping the way we live
and work in every element of our lives.
"This is a challenge that every economy is facing, and we are
determined that by setting clear policy now Britain positions
itself to benefit both economically and environmentally from the
transition.
“The UK is already the sixth largest economy for low carbon
goods and services, globally worth £3 trillion and growing,
and today the government is outlining how its support for the
economy will ensure our businesses and our workforce continue to
lead the way. We must combine the dynamism of the private sector
with a strategic role for government to deliver the benefits of
innovation, growth and job creation in the UK.”
Transport Secretary Andrew Adonis said: "Transport accounts for a
significant amount of our domestic emissions. Therefore
decarbonising this sector has to be front and centre of efforts to
meet our obligations and commitments to tackle climate change. Our
strategy sets out a long-term vision for a fundamentally different
transport system in our country, where carbon reduction is a
central consideration in the way we do business.
"If we are to safeguard the future of transport then we must also
safeguard the environment that it impacts upon – I am
determined to do that."
The UK is the first country in the world to set itself legally
binding ‘carbon budgets’. Under the Climate
Change Act 2008 emissions of greenhouse gases are constrained in
each successive five year period. The Transition Plan sets out how
the UK will cut emissions by 34% on 1990 levels by 2020 from the
main emitting sectors – power, homes, workplaces, transport
and agriculture – on the way to achieving a reduction of at
least 80% by 2050. Every government department has today been
allocated its own carbon budget, as the Government pilots a new
system to run alongside financial budgets.
Departments will have to live within these when taking major policy
decisions and managing their buildings. Failure could have real
financial implications for Government.
An outline of announcements contained in the documents published
today:
THE POWER SECTOR
Around 50% of the annual emissions cuts between now and 2020 will
be achieved by further greening of the electricity mix. The
Government expects 40% of the electricity used in 2020 to come from
low carbon sources – 30% from renewables, the rest from
nuclear (including new build) and clean coal.
New today:
- Up to £6m to start development of a ‘smart
grid’, including a policy road map next spring.
- DECC to take direct responsibility from Ofgem for establishing a
new grid access regime within 12 months.
- Launch of the new Office for Renewable Energy Deployment in DECC
to speed up the growth of renewables in the UK.
- £11.2m to help regions and local authorities prepare for
and speed up planning decisions on renewable and low carbon energy
whilst protecting legitimate environmental and local
concerns.
- The final shortlist of the schemes for the Severn Tidal Power
feasibility study is confirmed as three barrages (including the
Cardiff-Weston barrage) and two lagoons. Three innovative schemes
have also won funding to support their development.
- A consultation covering the changes to the existing Renewables
Obligation, such as extending the life-time of the RO to at least
2037 and the introduction of a 20 year limit on support, to make it
capable of delivering some 30% of our electricity from
renewables.
- Approval for the UK’s largest biomass power station on
Teesside
HOMES AND COMMUNITIES
Around 15% of the annual emissions cuts between now and 2020 will
be achieved by making our homes more efficient and supporting small
scale renewable energy. There are massive cash savings to be made -
in a poorly insulated home, up to £1 out of every £3
spent on heating is being wasted.
New today:
- The Government aims to place the energy suppliers’ social
programmes on a statutory footing with increased resources when the
current voluntary agreement ends in March 2011.
- Strengthening the energy regulator Ofgem’s powers to
protect the consumer.
- ‘Pay as you save’ pilots helping people make their
whole house greener by using the savings made on energy bills to
repay the upfront costs, backed by up to £4m from low carbon
investment funding. An eventual national roll out could
create 34,000 jobs.
- Consultation on the shape and rates of a new ‘clean energy
cash-back’ scheme (Feed in Tariff) to be in place by April
next year. People and businesses that generate their own
electricity from low carbon sources will be paid for doing
so. A similar scheme for renewable heat will follow in April
2011.
- Extending the current CERT energy efficiency programme by a year
to 2012. Alongside an uplift of 20%, total help under the
scheme will total £3.2 billion.
- A new personal carbon incentive scheme to challenge people on a
voluntary basis to save energy, through the Government’s Act
on CO2 campaign.
- Challenging 15 villages, towns or cities to be testbeds for
piloting future green initiatives.
WORKPLACES AND JOBS
Around 10% of the annual emissions cuts between now and 2020 will
be achieved through greater efficiencies in our workplaces. By
2050, our offices, factories, schools and hospitals need to reduce
emissions to almost zero. Jobs and business opportunities will be
created in new sectors outside the energy sector and help will be
needed to support all businesses be more energy efficient.
New today:
- Up to £120m from low carbon investment funding to
significantly advance the offshore wind industry in the UK.
- Up to £60m from low carbon investment funding announced in
the Budget to cement the UK’s position as a global leader in
wave and tidal energy including:
- Up to £9.5m investment in the Wave Hub sub-sea socket off
Cornwall and up to a further £10m funding to make the South
West the UK’s first Low Carbon Economic Area, a world centre
for wave and tidal energy, building on business opportunities and
skills.
- Up to £10m for testing facilities at the National Renewable
Energy Centre in Northumberland and up to £8m for the
European Marine Energy Centre in the Orkneys.
- Up to £22m for a new Marine Renewables Proving Fund for
testing and demonstration of wave and tidal technologies.
- £6m of funding to explore areas of potential “hot
rocks” to be used for geothermal energy. The deep geothermal
resource of the South West of England alone could meet 2% of annual
UK electricity demand.
- A £4 million expansion of the Manufacturing Advisory
Service, to provide more specialist advice to manufacturers on
competing for low carbon opportunities, including support for
suppliers for the civil nuclear industry.
- A new Nuclear Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre to combine
the knowledge, practices and expertise of around 30 manufacturing
companies with the capability of universities on manufacturing,
processes and skills.
- Campaign to be launched later this year to help small and medium
businesses in the shift to low carbon.
- The public sector must lead by example. Emissions have already
reduced by a third between 1990 and 2007 and DECC has challenged
itself to reduce emissions from its own building by 10% in 09/10
with more to follow.
TRANSPORT SYSTEM
Around 20% of the annual emissions cuts between now and 2020 will
be achieved by cleaning up the way we travel. By 2050, road
and rail transport will be largely decarbonised and aviation and
shipping will have seen a significant improvement in
efficiency.
New today:
- Providing proposed detail on the kinds of electric and plug-in
hybrid cars that could qualify for the £2-5000 consumer
incentives expected to apply from 2011. This includes the
requirement for the vehicle to have maximum tailpipe emissions of
75g CO2/km. An update has also been published on the infrastructure
framework which is supporting this scheme.
- A new steering group for the freight and logistics industry to
find effective ways of measuring, reporting and reducing emissions
across the logistics sector
- Commitment to work with our European partners to develop a robust
mechanism for regulating CO2 from new vans.
FARMS AND MANAGING LAND AND WASTE SUSTAINABLY
Around 5% of the annual emissions cuts between now and 2020 will be
achieved by reducing emissions from agriculture, land use and
waste.
New today:
- For the first time ever, an ambition for agriculture to cut
emissions. Changes to farming practices can save farmers money and
contribute 6% cuts from current projections by 2020.
- Support for anaerobic digestion, a technology that turns waste
and manure into renewable energy.
- Support for energy efficient and low carbon farming. Within the
limits imposed by the current EU rules on state aid, the Government
and the Carbon Trust will work to make farming businesses eligible
for its interest-free loans for low-carbon activity.
- Agreeing an action plan with the agriculture sector to reduce
emissions and developing an advisory service to help farmers.
- Encouraging private funding for woodland creation.
- Reducing the amount of waste sent to landfill, and better capture
of landfill emissions.
The UK's most up-to-date social housing and public sector news website
