Cyprus Today

‘Record green energy year not enough to meet carbon targets’

-

ALTHOUGH Britain generated most of its electricit­y from low carbon sources for the first time in 2017, it needs to invest more in clean energy to meet climate change targets, experts said on Wednesday.

Nuclear is the UK’s largest source of low-carbon electricit­y at 21 per cent, followed by wind at 15 per cent and biomass at 9 per cent, according to analysis by Carbon Brief, a website that covers energy policy, using data from Imperial College London.

“Even though there’s been good progress so far, there isn’t enough new low-carbon generation that we know of to meet the UK’s targets,” Simon Evans, policy editor at Carbon Brief, said.

Britain’s greenhouse gas emissions have fallen 42 per cent since 1990, meaning it is half way towards meeting a legally binding target to cut these emissions by 2050 to 80 per cent below 1990 levels.

It is investing in projects to support new nuclear technology, cut the cost of renewables and encourage people to buy low-emission vehicles, as Britain’s ageing coal and nuclear plants are due to close in the 2020s.

But initiative­s to fund technology to capture carbon emissions from power plants and industry and store them undergroun­d have yet to produce a commercial-scale project.

Gas is the UK’s main source of power, providing 40 per cent of electricit­y, Carbon Brief’s analysis showed.

“New nuclear costs are far higher than anticipate­d and carbon capture hasn’t even got off the ground yet,” Tom Jennings, policy director at the Carbon Trust, an environmen­tal consultanc­y, said in emailed comments.

“The big challenges are low carbon transport, such as investment in electric vehicles, and heat.”

Most of Britain’s emissions reductions have occurred in the power and waste sectors, while emissions in the transport and building sectors are rising.

Shelagh Whitley, a climate expert at the London-based Overseas Developmen­t Institute, said that Britain must end fossil fuel subsidies to meet carbon targets.

“The government spends almost £200 million a year subsidisin­g fossil fuel-based electricit­y production,” she said in emailed comments.

“That extends the life of highcarbon assets, and makes it more challengin­g for alternativ­e lowercarbo­n options to compete.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cyprus