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The business case for going green

by Paul O'Brien Monday 27 February 2012

Copy of an article Neil McInroy from CLES and myself recently did for Public Finance magazine.

Councils should be leading the way with renewable energy schemes. They can reap important economic and social rewards as well as environmental benefits

A report published this week by the Association for Public Service Excellence (APSE) suggests there is still a business case for local government-led renewable energy schemes.

We are finding that many councils around the UK are pushing ahead with the renewables agenda and would urge others to do the same. Our new research provides evidence as to both the business case and broader impacts of renewables for local economies and communities.

APSE commissioned the Centre for Local Economic Strategies (Cles) to examine the issue. Our report, Powerful Impacts: Exploring the economic and social benefits of renewable energy schemes, assesses the benefits of projects in terms of: payments from Feed in Tariffs (FiTs); number of people employed; value to supply chains; training and skills development; and savings in carbon emissions.

Cles researchers found that £1 invested in local renewable energy schemes that were early to get off the ground could deliver an average £2.90 in cashable benefits. They also found that a scheme fitting solar panels to 500 homes can create 12 full-time equivalent jobs and save 650 tonnes a year in carbon emissions.

The model built in sensitivity tests for factors that are liable to fluctuations, principally FiT rates, borrowing rates, equipment costs and energy costs. While government proposals to cut FiTs for solar schemes might have dented confidence, public sector decision-makers are now recognising that lower tariffs can be offset by falls in costs of equipment that are forecast.

Researchers re-calculated the return on investment in light of the latest information on reductions to FiTs. Based on reducing the tariff from 43.3p per kWh to 21p for solar schemes, they found this falls to £1.50.

A return on investment of £1.50 is obviously a drop compared with rewards for those trailblazer projects. But £1.50 can still be a healthy return and the predicted fall in the cost of solar panels also means the initial outlay is reduced.

The report features case studies demonstrating how forward-thinking councils have not only developed renewable energy projects as a way of cutting energy bills, enhancing energy security and reducing emissions, but also used them as a catalyst to stimulate jobs, skills and supply chains locally.

It must be remembered that solar is just one element of renewables. While the authorities discussed in our report have used solar technology, we believe similar benefits can be derived from other projects such as wind, biomass, electric fleet and energy efficiency schemes.

APSE’s previous publication, The Virtuous Green Circle, set out how a ‘revolving fund’ for investment in sustainable energy can operate in local government. Cles researchers found critical success factors are to deliver schemes at minimum cost and risks to the local authority and to ‘lock in’ economic benefit – and that a direct local authority approach offers most ability to control these factors.

Our new report argues that impacts of renewable energy on local economies should be fully recognised in local decision-making and national funding mechanisms. To this end, we are pleased that the Department of Energy and Climate Change appears to have recognised the need to differentiate between schemes that provide a community benefit and those driven by profit and will consult to protect social landlords from an additional cut for multi-installations.

This distinction is an important one. If cuts to FiTs make commercial rent-a-roof schemes less attractive to those seeking purely to maximise profits, there is all the more reason for councils that can make a sound business case for renewables but also have broader environmental, social and economic ambitions, to take a direct approach.

Fortune has most definitely favoured the brave and pioneering authorities have seen the best return on investment in renewables schemes. We suggest that others should push ahead as a matter of urgency.

Delivering sustainable local growth

by Paul O'Brien Friday 27 January 2012

With recent announcements on feed in tariffs for solar photovoltaics creating such controversy, many could have been forgiven for believing the opportunity for local government to deliver local growth through its response to climate change had gone. From what I have seen in councils around the country, this is far from the case. However, the reduction in tarrifs does create an opportunity to reappraise what strategy authorities should pursue in a rapidly changing environment.

It could be said that there has been an over emphasis on renewables to the detriment of energy efficiency measures of late. Indeed, it has been a bit like investing in larger size clothing to tackle an expanding waistline rather than focusing on the fundamental problem of over consumption.

In the current financial climate nobody needs to apologise for building their previous strategy around pursuing feed in tariffs, renewable obligations certificates or the renewable heat incentive to fund an overall approach to tackling climate change. However, I predict a rebalancing of strategy brought about by a shifting Government emphasis towards energy efficiency measures signalled by Green Deal. Significant opportunities exist for local authorities in this area and, as with the feed in tarrifs, councils that move first will get the most benefit, while those that dawdle may fall victim to funds running out further down the line.

One authority that has been at the forefront of strategy development on environmental sustainability over the past decade is Nottingham City Council and there will be very few in local government who are not familiar with the Nottingham Declaration. An ambitious plan has been developed aimed at providing 20% of the city’s energy through renewable and low carbon sources by 2020; the rate is 11.5% already.

I was therefore interested to hear the authority’s plans for Green Deal. It is looking to become a Green Deal provider and targeting an £80m investment with potential benefit for 12,900 properties across the city. This should generate £13m of annual savings with a payback period of 20 years.

Combine this with recent investment in solar and the 8,000 jobs that are predicted from the imminent expansion of the city’s tram system and you can see very quickly how an economic growth strategy built around energy efficiency and the development of renewable energy schemes adds up.

APSE's view is that at a time when local government is once again being looked at as a vehicle for creating local economic growth it would be surprising if the opportunities that the green economy creates were not near the top of the list for politicians and strategists alike.

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