The Scotsman

Platform

A powerful argument to meet Shetland’s electricit­y needs, says Drew Ratter

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In August, the UK government launched a review aimed at reducing the high cost of electricit­y paid by consumers and businesses.

Ironically, the electricit­y regulator Ofgem, which boasts of “making a positive difference for energy consumers”, was already busy consulting on a proposal that, if implemente­d, will cost consumers almost half a billion pounds more than it should.

Yes, half a billion pounds. You couldn’t make it up.

Let me explain. Shetland is the only major island group in the UK that is not connected to the national electricit­y grid. It relies on a diesel power station which has reached the end of its lifespan to keep the lights on (topped up by a gas turbine power station at the Sullom Voe Oil Terminal and as much wind generation as a closed grid can withstand).

Instead of a replacemen­t for Lerwick Power Station, Ofgem is recommendi­ng the installati­on of a 60MW import-only cable from Caithness to Shetland to supply electricit­y to the islands, with back-up from 64 standby generators housed in containers near Lerwick.

The proposal is from SSE Networks (SSEN), owner and operator of the electricit­y grid in the north of Scotland, and would be built by National Grid’s commercial arm NGSLL (cable) and Aggreko (stand-by generators), most likely by late 2020 or early 2021.

Ofgem’s own documentat­ion states that the cost of this cable plus standby generation will be £582 million over 20 years, £450m of which will have to be met by UK electricit­y customers.

Ofgem appears determined to press ahead with the cable. It is very clear that to do so would amount to a derelictio­n of its role as custodian of electricit­y consumers’ money.

But the solution is at hand – if the regulator stops ignoring the elephant in its own room next door.

At the same time as it is preparing to sign off on a 60MW cable, Ofgem has developed a blind spot about a parallel process for a much larger 600MW transmissi­on cable to allow the export of electricit­y from our consented Viking Energy Wind Farm project, a 50:50 joint venture between the Shetland community (principall­y through the Shetland Charitable Trust) and SSE Renewables.

At no extra cost, this cable would (i) perform the function of the smaller cable, (ii) provide much greater value for money to electricit­y consumers and (iii) allow Shetland to become a nationally significan­t producer of renewable energy while also helping to diversify a marginal economy, creating up to 800 jobs and generating income of up to £233m.

The cost to electricit­y consumers of the 600MW cable is estimated to be £885m over 15 years, which means that together the two cables would cost £1.467 billion.

The cost of the large cable (£855m) and the back-up generators (£132m) amounts to only £1.017bn.

With such a huge potential saving available, and the prospect of being able to deliver nationally significan­t electricit­y production from Shetland’s world-class wind resource at times when the wind is not blowing elsewhere in the UK, the government should be breaking down barriers, not creating them.

Ministers should call in the small cable proposal as a matter of urgency to review the excessive burden on electricit­y consumers. l Drew Ratter is the chairman of the Investment Committee of Shetland Charitable Trust

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