The Energy and Climate Change Committee has said it’s concerned that recent government announcements on renewables may result in higher consumer bills in the long run. It’s worried that mixed signals to investors will mean they demand higher returns, in the form of consumer-funded subsidies.
It didn’t put a figure on this, saying that the effect would only be seen in three to five years’ time.
The figure of £120 per household is not particularly credible. It’s based on analysis which is “simplistic” and “arguably anecdotal” according to the company that produced it, which went on to argue that the government should commission more thorough research.
Investor confidence has taken a knock, according to the industry
The Committee said that investor confidence had been damaged by a number of government announcements on renewables, including the early closure of the Renewables Obligation to onshore wind, cuts to solar subsidies, and the cancellation of a £1 billion competition for carbon capture and storage technology.
It pointed to analysis by consultants at EY which said the UK had fallen to 11th in their rankings of “attractiveness” to investors in renewable energy, down from 4th a few years ago. EY said that the recent reductions in support for renewables had “baffled” investors.
The Committee said both the substance of the decisions and the way they’d been handled had damaged investor confidence.
It warned that if projects do go ahead they might be more expensive for consumers than they would have been before the government’s announcements. If investors are less confident in the return their projects will make they may demand higher subsidies to make the risk worth their while:
The impact of this was expected to become visible in three to five years, further down the project pipeline.
£120 extra in energy bills per household – based on “simplistic” analysis
The committee was told by a company called Octopus Investments that there could be an estimated £3.14 billion in additional costs for financing renewables.
The Guardian quotes the head of the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit, a charity, as saying that if this cost were shouldered only by domestic energy consumers it “would add as much as £120 per year to the average household bill”.
It’s not clear why the £3.14 billion in estimated extra financing costs would be paid only by domestic consumers. If subsidies fed into higher prices this would also be borne by heavy industry and other companies.
And the original figure is dubious, as freely admitted by Octopus Investments. In its submission to the Committee the company said:
This analysis involved taking a figure of £157 billion in capital that was needed by the sector, and assuming that lower investor confidence would mean investors want 2% extra in “risk premiums”.
Octopus Investments said the government should engage consultants to perform a more thorough analysis.