Western Mail

‘Energy prices up due to interventi­on’

- Shaun Connolly Press Associatio­n newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

ELECTRICIT­Y prices have soared because of constant interventi­on in the energy sector by successive government­s, a parliament­ary report has found.

The House of Lords Economic Affairs Committee says customers are getting a bad deal from a supply system that is complicate­d and uncompetit­ive.

The result is that consumer prices have rocketed by 58% since 2003, and UK industry pays the biggest bills in Europe.

The study also raises concern about the spare capacity available and the deliverabi­lity of planned nuclear power.

Peers used the report to call for de-carbonisat­ion to be managed at the lowest cost to consumers as such green policies accounted for 10% of domestic bills in 2013.

The report states that the required switch of emphasis may mean waiting for new technologi­es to be developed to reduce emissions and making targets more flexible.

But the study insists both affordabil­ity and de-carbonisat­ion must not be prioritise­d ahead of supply.

Government interventi­ons in the market should be reduced by ensuring electricit­y generating capacity is secured through a single, technology-neutral, competitiv­e auction for electricit­y supply in order to obtain the lowest costs for consumers.

Committee chairman Lord Hollick said: “Poorly designed government interventi­ons, in pursuit of the decarbonis­ation, have put unnecessar­y pressure on the electricit­y supply and left consumers and industry paying too high a price.

“Domestic electricit­y bills in Britain have gone from being secondchea­pest in Europe in the mid-2000s to the seventh-cheapest today. Britain’s high industrial electricit­y prices have led some energy-intensive industries to relocate abroad. Lowcarbon policies are a factor.”

Lord Hollick expressed concern about investment in nuclear power and a rigid approach to de-carbonisat­ion.

“Hinkley Point C is a good example of the way policy has become unbalanced and affordabil­ity neglected. It does not provide good value for money and there are risks associated with the project.

“The government must make sure that the security of the UK’s energy supply is the priority of its energy policy. Affordabil­ity must not be neglected and de-carbonisat­ion targets should be managed flexibly.

“We would like to see the government step back from the market and allow all generating technologi­es to compete against each other. It should establish an Energy Commission to ensure competitiv­e auctions have independen­t oversight and are scrutinise­d carefully.

“Renewables play, and will continue to play, a crucial part in energy policy. New clean technologi­es must be supported to be commercial­ly viable. A new National Energy Research Centre would also help the UK to catch other countries up in the race to find cost-effective solutions to the challenges the world faces.”

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 ?? Andrew Milligan ?? > A parliament­ary report has found electricit­y prices have soared because of constant interventi­on in the energy sector by successive government­s
Andrew Milligan > A parliament­ary report has found electricit­y prices have soared because of constant interventi­on in the energy sector by successive government­s

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