According to a new report by Ernst & Young (EY), interest in the
UK with regard to investment in renewable energy has fallen to an all time low.
In the mid-2000s, the UK often topped the league for
renewable energy investment but it has now fallen to 13thplace in EY’s
Renewable Energy Country Attractiveness Index (RECAI). The reasons for this
fall in interest are depressingly clear, including political hostility to clean
energy and environmental action, slashing of clean energy subsidies by central
government in favour of tax breaks for North Sea oil, nuclear power and shale
gas. The report concludes that as a result, investment worth tens of billions
per year in clean energy projects will be lost to the UK.
“A non-committal approach is putting the attractiveness of
the UK’s renewable energy sector on a landslide” said Ben Warren, energy
corporate finance leader for EY, speaking to The
Guardian. “The current approach is going against the grain of almost
universal global support for renewables, and is masking the UK’s advantages of
a growing energy imperative as ageing power plants are retired, strong natural
resources, and efficient capital markets.”
Mr Warren added that if the current government continues on
its present track with regard to renewable energy policy, “the only way for the
UK is down”. However, wind energy companies remain confident, with Hugh McNeal,
chief executive of trade association RenewableUK, pointing out that the
government will still oversee a doubling of wind energy to at least 20 percent
of UK power demand by 2020. Furthermore, the country remains the world’s
largest offshore wind market.
EY’s report found some signs of optimism in the form of the
licence auctions for new offshore wind farms due to take place over the next
few months. However, even here, a level of uncertainty has been introduced by
the conditions the government has placed on the licences and its track record
thus far of clean energy policy U-turns.
The shadow energy and climate change secretary, Lisa Nancy,
condemned the Tories ideological crusade against green energy, stating that it
is destroying jobs, damaging investment and exacerbating the chances of Britain
suffering a major power crunch in the near future.
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