UK Parliament / Open data

Energy Bill (Draft)

Written statement made by Lord Marland (Conservative) on Tuesday, 22 May 2012 in the House of Lords, on behalf of the Department of Energy and Climate Change.

My right honourable friend the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change (Edward Davey) has made the following Written Ministerial Statement.

I am pleased to be publishing a draft of the Energy Bill today, in order for pre-legislative scrutiny to be carried out on it.

The draft Bill includes measures necessary to reform the electricity market to deliver secure, clean and affordable electricity.

At the heart of our electricity market reform (EMR) measures are feed-in-tariffs with contracts for difference (CfDs), long-term instruments which will provide stable and predictable incentives for companies to invest in low-carbon generation. CfDs are more affordable than alternative incentives and will mean a better deal for consumers. Through the work on final investment decisions (FID) enabling we are committed to working with developers to enable some of this investment to come forward in advance of the CfD regime coming into force, and the Bill contains measures to support this process. This will be complemented by a capacity market that will, if required, provide security of electricity supply by ensuring sufficient reliable capacity is available. Measures relating to conflicts of interest and contingency arrangements will ensure that the system operator which will deliver these schemes is appropriate. Renewables transitional measures will ensure that existing investments under the renewables obligation remain stable. Finally, an emissions performance standard (EPS) will limit carbon dioxide emissions from the most polluting fossil fuel power stations by setting appropriate standards for all new fossil fuel powered generation. Taken as a whole, EMR will enable large-scale investment in low-carbon generation capacity in the UK and deliver security of supply, in a cost-effective way.

In addition to EMR, the Energy Bill will also improve regulatory certainty by ensuring that Government and Ofgem are aligned at a strategic level through a strategy and policy statement (SPS), as recommended in the Ofgem review of July 2011.

The Bill also ensures that the Office for Nuclear Regulation will be fully able to meet the future challenges of regulating the nuclear industry, as the first new power plants since the 1980s are built.

Finally, the Bill contains provisions that will enable the sale of the Government Pipeline and Storage System (GPSS). The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Defence Equipment, Support and Technology, at the Ministry of Defence is laying a separate Written Ministerial Statement today.

I am confident that measures contained in this Energy Bill will enable us to keep the lights on, bills down and air clean. I am pleased to commend it to the House today for PLS and will look forward to the publication of the Energy and Climate Change Select Committee’s report.

About this written statement

Reference

737 cc59-60WS 

Session

2012-13
Draft Energy Bill
Tuesday, 22 May 2012
Command papers
House of Lords
House of Commons

Legislation

Draft Energy Bill
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