UK’s first-ever National Infrastructure Assessment unveiled

Latest News Thu, Jul 12, 2018 7:53 AM

Britain has a “golden opportunity” to switch to greener ways of providing energy to homes and businesses without increasing bills – but only if Ministers act now to make the most of it.

That’s a key finding from the National Infrastructure Assessment – the first ever for the UK – published by the National Infrastructure Commission.

Chairman Sir John Armitt said it has long been assumed that a switch to greener sources for the country’s energy needs would mean a hit on people’s pockets – but analysis for the Commission shows this would not necessarily be the case.

In fact, making this switch towards low-carbon and renewable sources for both the country’s power and heating, combined with a move towards electric vehicles, would mean the customer of 2050 would pay the same in real terms for their energy as today.

But he warned this will only be possible if the right decisions are taken now by government. These include continuing to invest in low cost renewable technologies, such as wind and solar, so that these provide at least half the country’s generating capacity by 2030, as well as ramping up efforts to improve the energy efficiency of the UK’s buildings and enabling a rapid switch to electric vehicles.

The National Infrastructure Assessment also warns that the Government will need to take steps to find low-carbon alternatives to oil and gas for heating homes and businesses.

Chairman of the National Infrastructure Commission Sir John Armitt said: “Whether for cooking, lighting, keeping homes warm or electric cars on the road, where the UK’s energy comes from will need to change radically over the coming decades if the UK is to meet its legally-binding climate change targets.

“If we act now we have a golden opportunity to make our country greener, and protect the money in the pockets of consumers long into the future – something few of us expected to be able to do.

“Ministers can seize this chance by investing in renewables and other low-carbon technologies so they become the main players in our energy system – something that was considered a pipedream as little as a decade ago. But they need to act now to realise the full potential of what can be achieved.”

Julie Hirigoyen, Chief Executive at UKGBC, said of the National Infrastructure Assessment: “We welcome the NIC’s focus on creating a ‘low carbon, low cost’ economic infrastructure in the UK, with energy efficiency highlighted as a key element of the future energy system. The recommendation that Government should set a target of 21,000 energy efficiency measures a week by 2020 recognises that there is currently a serious lack of effective policy drivers.

"However, we believe the NIC has missed a key opportunity by not designating energy efficiency as a national infrastructure priority which could help to minimise the costs and maximise the benefits of decarbonisation. The Assessment’s recommendations will not lead to the step-change in energy efficiency that is needed to achieve the UK’s carbon targets and are vague about how improvements should be delivered and financed.

"We therefore urge the Government to build on the NIC’s proposals by establishing an ambitious national infrastructure programme for energy efficiency, with clear long-term targets, firm policies, governance arrangements and funding.”

Established in 2015, the National Infrastructure Commission is an independent body tasked with providing clear advice to the Government on how best to meet the country’s long-term infrastructure needs. Alongside measures for delivering a low cost, low-carbon energy system, the Commission’s recommendations include:

  • Digital technology – that the Government devise a National Broadband Plan by Spring 2019, to deliver full fibre connections across the whole of the country, including those in rural areas – this should ensure that the technology is available to 15 million homes and businesses by 2025, 25 million by 2030, and all homes and businesses by 2033
  • The future for the nation’s roads – that the Government work with councils and private companies to deliver a national network of charging points for electric vehicles and ensures that the impacts of connected and autonomous vehicles are taken into account when planning for the next rail control period and road investment strategy;
  • Encouraging growth of cities – that Metro Mayors and city leaders develop and implement long-term strategies for transport, employment and housing in their areas, to support economic growth, with new powers and devolved infrastructure budgets. The National Infrastructure Assessment’s spending plans include funding for projects including Crossrail 2 in London, and Northern Powerhouse Rail linking the major Northern cities, and recommends a boost in funding for major cities totalling £43 billion to 2040, with cities given stable five-year budgets, starting in 2021;
  • Tackling floods – that the Government should put in place a long-term strategy to deliver a nationwide standard of flood resilience by 2050 with funding for flood risk management increasing significantly over the coming decades
  • Cutting waste – that new national rules for what can and cannot be recycled be introduced, with restrictions on the hardest-to-recycle plastics, aimed at increasing rates and reducing the amount of plastics going to incinerators. This would also mean that all food waste is separated making it available to create biogas, so it can be used to heat people’s homes and potentially as a transport fuel.

Cllr Martin Tett, the LGA’s Transport spokesman, said: “Good infrastructure enables improved competitiveness and quality of life but requires long-term planning.

“(The) launch of the country’s first National Infrastructure Assessment is the first step in ensuring that our businesses and local communities have the transport networks, flood protection, digital connectivity and vital utilities for the coming decades.

“It is positive that the report recognises the important role of local government and some of the barriers that prevent councils from doing more to plan for the long-term infrastructure needs of their areas. In particular, we support the call for councils to have stable, devolved infrastructure budgets, as Highways England and Network Rail have, together with the ability for councils to capture a greater share of the uplift in land value that comes with infrastructure investment for the benefits of local people.

“It is important the Government now works with local government to take forward the recommendations from this important report.”

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