Leicester Mercury

Blackouts unlikely this winter: Boss of big energy firm ‘confident’

BUT NEED MORE HELP ON PRICES

- By TOM PEGDEN tom.pegden@reachplc.com @tompegden

THE boss of one of Britain’s biggest home energy providers thinks the chances of winter blackouts are unlikely – despite fears about gas supplies caused by war in Ukraine.

Greg Jackson, from Octopus, said the UK has strong infrastruc­ture in place to deal with drops in fossil fuel supply, partly thanks to investment in renewable energy.

Octopus in particular – which has major bases in Leicester and Greater Manchester – uses technology such as solar and wind to offset carbon emissions and said 100 per cent of its electricit­y is green.

The group’s generation business recently teamed up with the Nest pension scheme to take a £200 million stake in the Hornsea One Wind Farm.

The installati­on off the Yorkshire coast is one of the world’s biggest operationa­l offshore wind farms.

It follows investment­s in the Lincs Offshore Wind Farm on behalf of Octopus Renewables Infrastruc­ture Trust, the Borssele V Offshore Wind Farm in the Netherland­s, and in floating offshore wind developer Simply Blue.

Last year, Nest appointed Octopus to help it invest billions in green energy on behalf of Nest’s 11 million pension savers.

Speaking on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, Mr Jackson said: “I think the reality is that domestic supply is safe and that industry, from time to time, sometimes driven by prices, by the way, voluntaril­y reduce their energy usage. “So, we have a terrible price crisis, but I think the UK is more fortunate than many of our European neighbours that we’ve got more resilient supply. “You know, this is a fossil fuel crisis. Make no mistake, the cause of this crisis is that we’re too dependent on fossil fuels, often from regimes where, you know, we see what (Vladimir) Putin’s doing in Ukraine.

“The fossil fuels give those regimes both the funding and the leverage. “We need to escape from the clutches of fossil fuels. And we’ve had fossil fuel crises periodical­ly ever since I was a kid and probably before that.

“This is different, because, for the first time ever, we’re sitting on the solution to escape fossil fuels altogether – moving to a system that’s powered by

INFRASTRUC­TURE FOR SUPPLY –

Make no mistake, the cause of this crisis is that we’re too dependent on fossil fuels

Greg Jackson

electricit­y, electricit­y coming from homegrown renewables, from increased interconne­ction from things like nuclear.

“We have the ability to build a system that isn’t dependent on fossil fuels anymore and it will be cheaper than the one we’re in even before the crisis, and it will stop us being at the mercy of crises like this.”

Mr Jackson also said the current level of government support was not enough as things get worse.

He said: “Clearly, it’s not sufficient now and, you know, we need to look at a similarly significan­t assistance from the government for this winter.”

He also called for energy companies and the government to work together

to solve the crisis, saying: “There is no company that can tackle this problem alone or indeed working just with other companies.

“It needs companies and government­s to work together. We’ve been working with government for a year.

“I think the last support package was really significan­t. It’s just that the crisis has deepened since then and that’s why it needs revisiting.

“We just know that the level of increases is going to be unmanageab­le for so many without the right support from the government and it’s beyond what any one company can do.”

Do you agree? Is the government doing enough? Tell us at:

 ?? ?? RENEWABLES: Lincs Offshore Wind FarmPA
RENEWABLES: Lincs Offshore Wind FarmPA
 ?? ?? RESILIENCE: Greg Jackson, chief executive of Octopus
RESILIENCE: Greg Jackson, chief executive of Octopus

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