Yorkshire Post

Taskforce sets out a vision for energy in the North

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MONEY RAISED through green energy levies should be handed to the North to help create 100,000 jobs, according to a report.

The Northern Energy Taskforce suggests the money should form part of deals with areas to make homes more efficient and roll out solar panels.

The report also calls for the Government to take a fresh look at carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology.

The White Rose Project, a CCS scheme based around the Drax power station, collapsed after the Government cancelled its competitio­n for £1bn of government funding to support the technology two years ago.

The project was considered a first step to making Yorkshire a world leader in CCS, creating thousands of jobs.

The taskforce , backed by the IPPR North thinktank, makes a string of recommenda­tions designed to help the North use its expertise to benefit from the green energy revolution.

Northern Energy Taskforce chairman Sir John Harman said: “If government is going to make further progress on the Paris agreement it requires a stepchange in its approach.

“For instance, devolving carbon budgets would mean the North is responsibl­e for its own destiny and turn a national policy-headache into northern prosperity, creating up to 100,000 of tomorrow’s green jobs.

“If it’s serious about spreading growth across the country, while meeting decarbonis­ation goals, the Government must take this issue seriously and give the North of England real powers to kickstart a local energy revolution.”

FOR AT least the last hundred years, the North of England was the powerhouse of the country.

Even as King Coal’s reign came to an end, the North retained a significan­t slice of the nation’s generating capacity, mainly through wind and nuclear power.

But of even greater significan­ce is the North’s legacy of skills in engineerin­g, distributi­on and manufactur­ing, a strong research base and unique geographic­al assets.

Over the past 12 months, the Northern Energy Taskforce, led by IPPR North, has been working with energy stakeholde­rs from across the region to devise a strategy to unlock green growth in the North.

With the right leadership and direction, we believe that our vision to create an energy economy worth £15bn and create 100,000 jobs by 2050 is within our grasp.

Furthermor­e, we believe that unleashing the northern energy economy is essential to achieving the nation’s climate change commitment­s and has the potential to deliver affordable energy for businesses and households alike.

The success of the energy sector in the North is by no means guaranteed. While the North has a number of distinctiv­e geographic­al and geological assets and is home to a range of innovation­s, these require investment and support.

Our historical strengths – not least our skills-base – must undergo a major transition. Patterns of energy production and use are changing fast and our energy systems need to change quickly too.

The national industrial strategy provides a framework within which these opportunit­ies can be seized, but central government can also inhibit progress. Too many opportunit­ies have already gone begging due to policy uncertaint­y and many other opportunit­ies are best unlocked through local decision-making.

On the same day the Government announces its energy price cap and its Clean Growth Strategy, we are launching a Northern Energy Strategy to provide a route map for success with action on three main fronts.

First, with our world-class universiti­es, manufactur­ers and skills base, we must develop our potential. There is a widely held view that opportunit­ies to gain firstmover advantages in offshore wind were squandered by indecisive policy-making and, more recently, the opportunit­y to become a world-leader in carbon capture and storage or utilisatio­n technologi­es is perceived to be slipping away.

The journey from early-stage innovation to full commercial­isation and scale-up requires careful navigation with support from public and private players both in Yorkshire and across the North.

This is why our Northern Energy Strategy calls for a new Northern Energy Accelerato­r to support innovation and coordinate investment in partnershi­p with Innovate UK and other national bodies.

National policy uncertaint­y has damaged investor confidence and has been the root cause of our slow progress as a nation to develop renewable energy.

So secondly, we have proposed that Northern leaders strike a Northern Energy Compact with Government, taking responsibi­lity for their part of the national carbon budget (much as Scotland and Wales propose to do) but in return for greater freedoms and flexibilit­ies regarding the regulation­s and incentives around energy generation.

But perhaps the most exciting energy opportunit­ies lie in our great Northern cities. As other developed nations are starting to show, the technologi­es we deploy in our homes and businesses are bringing energy generation – and energy savings – much closer to consumers and in the UK Northern cities have been trailblazi­ng in this field.

Kirklees Warm Front scheme, for example, adopted ground-breaking approaches to financing and rollingout energy efficiency measures to over 50,000 homes. Meanwhile, Northern Gas Networks and other agencies are working on plans to convert the entire gas grid in Leeds to become the first city in the world to run on hydrogen.

But to really unlock these opportunit­ies, cities like Leeds need the freedoms and the funds to invest in local opportunit­ies. We believe that the combined authority – working closely with business and energy distributo­rs – should strike a local energy devolution deal, giving it control over up to £42m each year in return for responsibi­lities over local energy efficiency and other community energy schemes.

The ‘Big Six’ energy suppliers have a poor record when it comes to cutting our energy consumptio­n, but give those responsibi­lities to local leaders and they might use the funding more effectivel­y.

This would also give them a greater incentive to drive up energy efficiency standards on new-build housing too. The Mayor of London has recently committed London to a Low Carbon Homes standard that the government dropped, perhaps Yorkshire leaders should do the same.

Northern energy is a win-win-win: new jobs, lower carbon emissions and cheaper fuel. Price caps will only go so far, it’s time to kickstart the local energy revolution.

 ??  ?? Wind turbine components leave the Siemens site at Hull. Uncertaint­y over government policy has inhibited the renewable energy sector.
Wind turbine components leave the Siemens site at Hull. Uncertaint­y over government policy has inhibited the renewable energy sector.
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