Monday, 16 September 2013
Scottish Power sponsor fuel poverty conference
Scottish Power are sponsoring a fuel poverty conference, although making a astonishing £712m profit.
Scottish Power has been selected to sponsor a national fuel poverty conference in Yorkshire. Fuel Poverty Action believe that it is not appropriate for a company that made over £700m last year, to be sponsoring a fuel poverty conference and said the company made millions in profit while people froze in their homes. Though, the organisers of the event say they are happy to work with any company that is willing to support it's efforts and said they are more critical of the government for not providing the funds.
Figures in 2011, claim that there could be as many as 6m fuel poor households (uSwitch, 2011).
A company spokesperson defended their sponsorship of the event: "Our support helps National Energy Action to host a very important conference that brings together a range of experts to discuss the issues of fuel poverty and ways to tackle fuel poverty. We have supported the conference previously in 2010, and we are happy to be able to help out again this year."
Friday, 22 March 2013
Climate change petition gains thousands of signatures
Started after climate change debate pushed back in school curriculum
A petition started after the debate on climate change was ‘vastly scaled back’ in the school curriculum has gained over 12,000 signatures.
The petition was started by 15 year old Esha Marwaha after she discovered that the draft key stage 3 (the national curriculum for under 14 year olds) geography curriculum for English schools had pushed back discussion on the issue. In a special blog she wrote for the Guardian, she said ‘Climate change is the most pressing and threatening issue to modern-day society. Through lack of understanding from generations before us, we are having to fix it. And how can we do this without education?’
Campaigners have emailed education secretary Michael Gove to reinstate the climate change debate
(Image source - Telegraph)
‘Our government, part of the generation who bear much of the responsibility for this problem, intends to not only fail to act on climate change themselves but to obscure the truth from children and young people. It is outrageous that Michael Gove can even consider the elimination of climate change education for under-14s. We must keep climate change in the curriculum in order for young people take on this challenge of tackling the threat posed by our changing climate’. Her views echoed the petition to the education secretary, Michael Gove, on the website change.org.
Following the immense support the petition has gained, which at one point was getting 500 signatures an hour, other groups have joined the campaign to get the climate change debate reinstated to the school curriculum. 2000 people from student network group People and Planet have emailed Gove to argue their case for reinstated the subject. Also, students, members of the UK Youth Climate Coalition and others plan to approach academics, universities and schools to take part in the formal consultation around the plans, which closes on 16 April.
Wednesday, 20 March 2013
Nuclear plant in Hinkley gets planning consent
Ed Davey gives consent to EDF to build plant in Somerset
A new nuclear power plant will be built in the UK after planning permission was granted by energy secretary Ed Davey.
French firm EDF will be allowed to build two new reactors on the site of an existing power station, which is set to close in 2023, at Hinkley Point in Somerset. The new plant will become one of the biggest in the UK, with estimates suggesting the two 1.6-gigawatt reactors will produce 7% of the country’s energy, enough to power over 5m homes. The new plant at Hinkley will likely be the first in a new wave of power stations as the Coalition looks to replace aging coal and nuclear plants across the country.
The new plant will replace the existing one at Hinkley Point
(Image source - This Is Somerset)
Davey said following the announcement, ‘It's vital to get investment in new infrastructure to get the economy moving. [Hinkley] will generate vast amounts of clean energy and enhance our energy security. It will benefit the local economy, through direct employment, the supply chain and the use of local services’.
However, Davey and EDF are still in negotiations over how much subsidy the energy firm will get during the life of the plant. It is thought officials are discussing a contract that would guarantee the French company being paid nearly £100 for each megawatt hour of electricity produced over 30 to 40 years.
Monday, 18 March 2013
Shale gas good for UK in the short term
Fracking only advised in areas where it will prove most valuable, says report
Shale gas obtained by the process of ‘fracking’ will be beneficially to the UK in reducing carbon emissions, according to the findings of a new report.
The report, from the Grantham Institute on Climate Change and the Environment at LSE, states that by replacing coal-powered power stations with ones run with shale gas, as they will ‘emit less than half the carbon dioxide per kilowatt hour of coal-fired plants’.
Reports says shale gas can be beneficial, but committed to it too much is 'risky'
(Image source - The Guardian)
However, the report also states that it is risky to assume that the UK has vast quantities of shale gas locked away underground or to assume that gas prices will be lower in years to come. The report believes the best course of action in terms of obtaining shale gas is to focus on areas where it can be most valuable in terms of reducing carbon emissions, which the report describes as a ‘dash for smart gas’.
‘Fracking’ has proved controversial in Britain, with many critics fearing prolonged fracking sites could lead to earthquakes, polluted water supplies and decreases in housing prices. Supporters of it believe it can provide energy security due to it being collected domestically. Earlier this month, Greenpeace launched a protest outside George Osborne’s constituency office by erecting a mock fracking rig, and last year, the EU warned Britain about ‘jumping headlong’ into shale gas and argued that the country didn’t fully understand the environmental consequences of fracking.
Friday, 15 March 2013
Over 1,800 Green Deal assessments in first month
Contracts worth nearly £27m have been awarded through scheme
Over 1,800 assessments on homes and office buildings have been carried out by Green Deal providers since the scheme was launched at the start of the year.
The Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) has released figures showing that, between the end of January and the end of February, 1,803 people had an assessment for a Green Deal package for their property carried out. Edward Davey, the energy and climate change secretary, says the scheme, which lets people take out loans to make energy efficiency improvements to their home, has gotten off to ‘an excellent start’.
Early figures do suggest that the Green Deal scheme is going well
(Image source - Which.co,uk)
‘We're seeing clear signs of a promising new market gathering momentum," he said. "In little more than a month, there have been 1,803 Green Deal assessments and that shows genuine interest from consumers. We have created the Green Deal to overhaul our inefficient housing stock and help people keep their homes warm, while also reducing their energy bills. And as the market builds and awareness of the Green Deal increases, I am confident that consumer interest will grow and grow’.
There were concerns that the Green Deal may fail, as experts claimed the scheme wouldn’t actually save people much money. There were also fears that the scheme hadn’t been widely advertised, as a poll held just days before its official launch found that 81% of people didn’t know what it was. Also, whilst these figures are encouraging, they don’t indicate how many of those who had assessments carried out actually went on to have the work carried out.
Wednesday, 13 March 2013
Japan extracts 'frozen gas' from seabed
First country to successfully produce methane hydrate gas offshore
Japan has become the first nation to successfully extract ‘frozen gas’ from deposits from under the sea.
The Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry announced the news with images showing what they claim is gas flaming from a pipe at the project, which is located 50 miles off the coast of central Japan. This breakthrough of harvesting methane hydrate, a form of methane gas which is frozen below the seabed, could be a massive step towards commercial production of the gas for the country, which imports most of its energy due to its own scarce resources.
Commercialising the production of 'frozen gas' could help solve Japan's energy problems
(Image source - The Guardian)
The process of extracting the gas, which uses a technology developed to reduce pressure in the underground layers holding the methane hydrate 4,363 feet below the sea surface, is expensive compared to other forms of gas production. However, this hasn’t put off Ryo Minami, director of the oil and gas division at Japan’s Agency for Natural Resources, who believes they will find of way of lowering the cost of collecting ‘frozen gas’, telling the Financial Times, ‘Ten years ago, everybody knew there was shale gas in the ground, but to extract it was too costly. Yet now it's commercialised’.
Monday, 11 March 2013
Britain at risk from oil supply disruption?
Report suggests station closures and storage capacity cuts could lead to possible crisis
Findings gathered by business advisors Deloitte for the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) argue that, due to reductions in storage capacities to save money, as well as the closure of thousands of petrol stations over the past 40 years means the UK is at risk of oil and petrol shortages if something was to disrupt supplies. It is estimated that the average petrol station has enough stock for just two days demand.
The report is one of two covering the impact the entry of supermarkets and the demise of independent retailers has had on the petrol retailing market. The second, produced by the Office of Fair Trading, rejected arguments from independents that competition in the market was not working because supermarkets controlled the market due to their purchasing power.
The report argues that petrol stations don't have enough stock to cope with disruption to oil supply
(Image source - Daily Mail)
John Hayes, energy minister, said the report showed the retail sector had more than enough stocks to “meet fuel supply shocks” before contingency measures were taken. However, the Petrol Retailers Association, claimed the Deloitte analysis demonstrated that the majority of forecourts were running with “dangerously low” levels of reserves.
In 2011, there were 8,700 petrol stations, down from 37,500 in 1970, with many people believing the rate of closures is due to the power of supermarkets, such as Tesco and Asda, who have petrol stations as part of nearly all of their UK stores. These supermarkets control around 40% of the petrol/diesel market (worth over £47bn a year) despite only accounting for 15% of petrol stations nationwide.
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