RenewableUK: Policy Exchange ‘wrong to be worried about offshore wind’

Paul Boughton
RenewableUK, the trade association for the wind, wave and tidal industry, has highlighted some misunderstandings and confusions in a Policy Exchange paper ‘The Full Cost to Households of Renewable Energy Policies’.
 
The paper attempts to estimate the cost to households of current Government energy policies, but fails to account for the reforms to the electricity market being brought in this year, or the 10 per cent cut to support for wind power implemented as part of the Renewables Obligation Banding Review.
 
Jennifer Webber, RenewableUK’s Director of External Affairs, said “Policy Exchange is wrong to be worried about offshore wind. The real danger to household bills over the next ten years comes from the same kind of uncertainty about the cost of imported fossil fuels we’ve seen over the previous ten – a decade in which gas prices more than doubled. Britain’s fantastic wind power resource – the best in Europe – can help reduce that uncertainty.”
 
The paper fails to cover the economic benefits associated with a high level of investment in renewable energy, including a significant expansion in manufacturing jobs in some of the most deprived areas of the UK.
 
“The expansion of offshore wind could bring over 70,000 jobs – full-time employment which is badly needed by so many families. Energy policy and its impact on household bills is an important subject for discussion – but Policy Exchange needs to go back to the drawing board on this one.” Ms Webber concluded.