UK to phase out coal by 2021 with current carbon tax

  • Spanish Market: Electricity
  • 22/10/18

The UK is on track to phase out coal from its power system by 2021, but the carbon-intensive fuel could make a comeback in 2020-25 if the government lowers its carbon tax — something it could do as soon as next week when it publishes its budget on 29 October.

New research published today by Aurora Energy sheds light on the implications of one of the biggest decisions for the power sector next week — whether or not Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond will choose to lower the UK's carbon tax — now set at £18/t CO2 equivalent (CO2e).

"There's actually quite a lot of uncertainty around the future of carbon pricing," Aurora's director of research, Richard Howard, said. "Which is why with the budget coming up we thought we'd do an analysis to see the impact."

In four different scenarios, Aurora models how various carbon support price (CSP) levels would dictate how long it takes for the UK's remaining 10GW in coal-fired capacity to be phased out as coal becomes less and less competitive with gas-fired generation.

In a scenario where the carbon tax is left at £18/t CO2e, coal plants are phased out of the grid by 2021, well in advance of the official 2025 target. I In a scenario where the UK lowers the tax to £7/t CO2e, coal units stay on the system until 2025. Wholesale electricity prices are slightly lower in this case, reducing power system costs by £700mn/yr, enough to save households on average £9/yr in 2021-40. But the extra coal-fired generation also creates an additional 29mn t of carbon emissions during the fourth phase (2023-27) of the EU emissions trading system (ETS), 20pc higher than in the first scenario.

"The government faces a difficult decision in the upcoming budget," Howard said. "If the carbon price was cut, then households would save around £9 per year. But this risks a surge of coal power in the early 2020s, making it extremely difficult to meet our climate goals."

A third scenario looks at what might happen if the government hiked the carbon tax to £70/t CO2e by 2030, in line with the original trajectory stated in 2011. Compared with the scenario where the CSP is kept at £18/t CO2e, this would result in an extra 10GW of renewable capacity coming on line by 2040, mainly in the form of onshore wind and solar photovoltaics (PV).

A fourth scenario imagines a constant CSP, but with gradually rising ETS allowance (EUA) prices. The first two scenarios assume a constant EUA price of £17/t CO2e.

Until this year, there was little reason to believe the government would lower the carbon tax. EUA prices were still relatively low, ending last year at around €8/t CO2e. When first adopted by the UK in 2013, the CSP was intended as a stand-in for the ETS — widely perceived to have failed because of oversupply and prices near zero — and it was seen as doing its job.

But in recent months, EUA prices have soared to as high as €25/t CO2e, sending total carbon costs for UK emitters at one point in early September to €45.74/t CO2e. That undermined the logic that a strong CSP was needed to do the work that the ETS could not.

More recently, of course, EUA prices have crashed back below €20/t CO2e, touching as low as €18.50/t CO2e several times this week. But those losses could turn out to be a mirage. The recent crash was largely because of market speculation that the UK will fail to agree a deal with the EU before its scheduled departure from the bloc on 29 March 2019 — an outcome that would result in it quitting the ETS, the government said last week, opening the way for a flood of allowances held by UK emitters to make their way back into the market. Were a deal agreed, that vision would fade and the EUAs could recover the ground recently lost.

Even coal-fired operators back a "strong" CSP.

There is little appetite in the power industry for a cut. Amid uncertainty about whether the carbon tax will be lowered or not, industry participants have made their voices heard. Utilities SSE, Drax, and Orsted sent a letter yesterday to Hammond, urging the government to maintain a "strong and stable" CSP to help maintain industry confidence after Brexit and facilitate the Clean Growth strategy.

Drax and SSE each own coal-fired generation in the UK, but both have staked a future for themselves in renewables. SSE owns the Fiddler's Ferry coal-fired plant near Liverpool, but it has also invested heavily in onshore and offshore wind. Last year, it urged the government to adopt a strong carbon price floor post-2020.

Meanwhile, as the owner of most of the UK's remaining coal-fired plants, Drax's call for a robust carbon tax is perhaps more surprising. But Drax has also converted several of its older units to biomass and plans to switch at least a couple of its remaining coal-fired plants — Drax 5 and 6 — into combined-cycle gas turbines (CCGTs).

The Aurora study, Carbon Pricing Options to Deliver Clean Growth, was commissioned by Drax. But Howard said the company had no influence over its findings.

With a lower carbon support price, coal generation revives TWh

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18/04/24

Wind capacity additions down 93pc under AMLO

Wind capacity additions down 93pc under AMLO

Mexico City, 18 April (Argus) — Mexico installed just 96MW of wind power capacity in 2023, a new low amid President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador's policy to limit private sector development. Last year's wind power capacity additions were down by 93pc from the 1,281MW installed during Lopez Obrador's first full year in office in 2019, according to the Global Wind Report 2024 published by the Global Wind Energy Council. New wind power additions were also down by 39pc from the 158MW installed in 2022. Lopez Obrador's statist energy policy has sought to claw back state-owned utility CFE's market position in the face of an enormous private sector clean energy build out launched during the previous administration. Between 2016 and 2018 CFE held three long-term power auctions, contracting 7,000MW of new renewable energy projects as the government made a push to decarbonize Mexico's power matrix. But Lopez Obrador ruled out further auctions and has actively curtailed the award of new generation permits, stalling the development of 5,800MW of wind projects, according to wind energy association Amdee. Mexico has 7,413MW of installed wind capacity, accounting for 8.2pc of the country's 89,890MW total installed generation capacity, according to the energy ministry. Despite the slowed pace in Mexico, new wind installation continued to grow in Latin America last year, led by Brazil with 4.8GW to bring total onshore capacity in the country to 30.4GW in 2023. GWEC expects 28.7GW of new wind capacity in Latin America over the next five years, on top of the 50.6GW of current capacity. Globally 117GW of new wind energy capacity was installed last year, up by 50pc on the previous year and a new record. GWEC expects global wind capacity to double to 2TW by 2030, as governments agreed to triple global renewable energy capacity at the climate talks in Dubai last year. The outlook for Mexican wind power also looks more positive with both presidential candidates in the 2 June election committed to accelerating the energy transition through the build out of new clean energy capacity. Governing party candidate and current frontrunner Claudia Sheinbaum pledged to make renewable energy a "hallmark" of her administration and committed this week to investing $13.6bn in clean energy projects if elected. By Rebecca Conan Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Australia’s Queensland legislates emissions targets


18/04/24
18/04/24

Australia’s Queensland legislates emissions targets

Sydney, 18 April (Argus) — Australia's Queensland state today approved two separate laws setting renewable energy and emissions reduction targets over the next decade, as it transitions away from a coal-fired dependent power generation system. Queensland set net greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions reduction targets of 30pc below 2005 levels by 2030, 75pc by 2035 and zero by 2050 under the Clean Economy Jobs Act, while theEnergy (Renewable Transformation and Jobs) Act sets renewable energy targets of 50pc by 2030, 70pc by 2032 and 80pc by 2035. The state is on track to surpass the 2030 emissions target, latest data show, as it achieved a 29pc reduction in 2021. Even though the share of renewables in the power mix last year was the lowest across Australia at 26.9pc, it has been increasing consistently since 2015 when it was 4.5pc, according to data from the National Electricity Market's OpenNem website. Coal-fired generation has been steadily falling, down to 42.9TWh or a 65.7pc share in 2023 from 52.9TWh or 83pc in 2018. Most of Queensland's coal-fired plants belong to state-owned utilities, which the previous Labor party-led government of Annastacia Palaszczuk indicated would stop burning coal by 2035 . The new Labor party premier Steven Miles disclosed the 75pc emissions reduction target by 2035 in his first speech as leader last December. The Energy Act locks in public ownership of electricity assets, ensuring that at least 54pc of power generation assets above 30MW remain under state control, as well as 100pc of all transmission and distribution assets and 100pc of so-called "deep storage" assets — pumped hydro plants with at least 1.5GW of capacity. The government will need to prepare and publish a public ownership strategy for the July 2025-June 2030 and July 2030-June 2035 periods. A fund totalling A$150mn ($97mn) will also be set up to ensure workers at existing state-owned coal-fired power plants and associated coal mines have access to new jobs and training or financial assistance during the transition. The Clean Economy Jobs Act sees the government receiving advice from an expert panel on the measures needed to reduce emissions. The government will need to develop and publish sector plans by the end of 2025 with annual progress reports to Queensland's parliament. By Juan Weik Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Sheinbaum pledges $13bn for Mexican energy transition


17/04/24
17/04/24

Sheinbaum pledges $13bn for Mexican energy transition

Mexico City, 17 April (Argus) — Mexican presidential candidate Claudia Sheinbaum pledged to invest $13.6bn in electricity infrastructure through 2030, with a key focus on Mexico's energy transition. "We are going to accelerate the energy transition with new solar, wind and hydropower projects," Sheinbaum told a meeting of business associations in Merida, Yucatan, on 15 April. Former Mexico City mayor Sheinbaum is ahead of opposition candidate Xochitl Galvez for the 2 June presidential election, according to recent polls. While Sheinbaum is the continuity candidate for President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador's Morena party, she has been a vocal supporter of clean energy development in contrast to Lopez Obrador's pursuit of conventional power projects and a restriction on private sector renewable energy development. "We are developing a national energy plan not just to 2030 but towards 2050 to coincide with our international climate change commitments," Sheinbaum said. Mexico committed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 35pc by 2030 from a 2000 baseline at the Cop 27 climate talks in 2022. Key projects through 2030 include 13.66GW of new power capacity across three hydropower plants, the third and fourth phases of the 1GW Puerto Penasco solar plant, two gas-fired combined cycle plants, cogeneration plants for the Cadereyta and Salina Cruz refineries, and additional wind and solar capacity. In addition to large scale electricity projects, Sheinbaum also committed to a build out of distributed generation, calling for the installation of solar panels in residential and commercial property. But while Sheinbaum pledged her "commitment to reaping the benefits of the historic moment Mexico is seeing in terms of foreign direct investment," she also recommitted to cap private sector electricity participation at 47pc. Foreign direct investment into Mexico hit $36.1bn in the fourth quarter of last year, 22pc above the same period in 2022, but investment into the energy sector has tanked under Lopez Obrador's statist energy policies, according to the latest statistics from the economy ministry. Lopez Obrador's government has largely focused on fossil fuel-based electricity generation, including the construction of new gas-fired combined cycle plants. But despite a commitment to build at least five combined cycle plants during his administration, Sheinbaum confirmed that only the Merida plant is due to launch by the end of this year. Launch dates for the Valladolid, San Luis Colorado, Gonzalez Ortega and Tuxpan plants have been pushed back to 2025-2030. By Rebecca Conan Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Malaysia sets up cross-border renewable energy exchange


17/04/24
17/04/24

Malaysia sets up cross-border renewable energy exchange

Singapore, 17 April (Argus) — The Malaysian government is creating the Energy Exchange Malaysia (Enegem) to allow for cross-border "green electricity" sales to neighbouring countries, starting with pilot sales to Singapore. The auctioning process for cross-border sales of clean electricity will begin with a 100MW pilot run utilising the existing connection between peninsular Malaysia and Singapore, announced Malaysia's Ministry of Energy Transition and Water Transformation on 15 April. The auction will be open to renewable energy bidders in Singapore that have import licences issued by Singapore's Energy Market Authority. This pilot phase of 100MW is to "make sure that it works, and then if it does work, hopefully it can be expanded to a gigawatt level," said the chairman of the Energy Commission Malaysia Rashdan Yusof at the Atozero conference in Singapore on 17 April. "On the demand side, there will also be an auction for suppliers of renewable energy into the exchange," said Rashdan, adding that the exchange will aggregate all the renewable energy sector participants, predominantly in the solar sector, and then provide the energy to Singapore, depending on requirements such as load factors, among other things. Malaysia aims to catalyse the development of the Asean regional electricity grid and cross-border energy trading. There are "tremendous discussions" on future interconnections, said Rashdan. Malaysian state-owned utility TNB has signed six agreements with utility counterparts in Thailand, Vietnam and Laos, and has two feasibility studies planned with utilities in Indonesia and Singapore, he said, without providing additional details on these deals. There is great willingness to establish this regional power grid but one of the obstacles is that "each jurisdiction has different energy pricing systems," said Rashdan. There is a significant difference in energy pricing between Singapore and Malaysia, for example, as energy is largely subsidised in Malaysia. "These subsidies, I find, will be a core impediment in terms of the free flow of electrons," he added. "The energy exchange can level the economic and commercial playing field, so that money can flow. Once the money can flow, the electrons will flow. That's the aim of the energy exchange, to have that transparency and market-based system, without the distortion of price subsidies." There are a number of bilateral power agreements in the region, with some even crossing multiple borders, such as the Laos-Thailand-Malaysia-Singapore Power Integration Project, which connects renewable power supplies from Laos to Singapore. But Asean countries need to scale up to multilateral power trading to fully benefit from regional grid interconnectivity. Regional grid optimisation in Asean could cut the net present cost of full decarbonisation by 11pc from $7.2 trillion to $6.5 trillion, according to international classification society DNV's Asia-Pacific regional director for energy systems Brice Le Gallo last year. By Prethika Nair Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

BHP to expand gas-fired West Australia power station


17/04/24
17/04/24

BHP to expand gas-fired West Australia power station

Sydney, 17 April (Argus) — Australian resources firm BHP plans to increase power generation at its 154MW Yarnima gas and diesel-fired facility near the Pilbara iron ore mining hub of Newman in Western Australia (WA) state. The proposal, according to documents filed with WA's Environmental Protection Authority (EPA), will see output increase by 85MW to a total of 239MW through gas reciprocating engines and associated infrastructure with up to 120MW of nominal new capacity to be built in stages. Peak scope 1 greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from the project are predicted to be 480,030 t/yr of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e), while scope 3 emissions related to supplying the gas are expected to be 37,260t CO2e/yr. Power demand at BHP's iron ore operations in the Pilbara is forecast to increase from 150MW currently to 1GW by 2040, as the company reduces its GHG emissions through electrification of its rail and mining fleets and must balance renewables with firmed generation. The iron ore mining sector is a large-scale producer of Australian GHG emissions through its Pilbara-based operations. Displacing liquid fuels such as diesel, which Australia consumes at an average rate of around 500,000 b/d by electrifying processes and switching to lower CO2-emitting sources such as gas, is expected to trend as Australia's largest polluters meet government mandates . Yarmina currently runs a 35MW diesel-fired temporary power station as part of its installed capacity. Canadian energy firm TransAlta earlier this year lodged plans to build a new 150MW gas-fired power station for BHP's Nickel West operations in WA's Northern Goldfields region. WA's domestic market is likely to be short on gas later this decade despite being Australia's largest LNG export state, the Australian Energy Market Operator (Aemo) has warned in its Western Australia Gas Statement of Opportunities. Aemo's modelling released last year shows the closure of WA's state-owned coal-fired power stations will drive increased requirements for gas-fired electricity generation in the next decade. By Tom Major Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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