British Tories unveil green policy

Next UK eco minister?
The British Tory party has outflanked the governing Labor party by announcing the most radical green policies ever.
Tory green strategist Zac Goldsmith stayed in the background for the policy announcement today from party leader David Cameron
But the plans to encourage homeowners and businesses to generate their own energy will wow voters.
Increasing small-scale generation in homes, offices, schools and hospitals is key to the fight against climate change, Zac Goldsmith believes. A Tory government would spend up to £300m on this “green energy revolution,” Cameron pledged.
The Conservatives’ energy policy will make it easier for people to buy and install equipment such as solar panels and wind turbines, by loosening planning rules and guaranteeing they can sell the energy back to the grid at a fixed price.
IT is expected there will be carbon credits for off-grid energy generators.
Much of the electricity from Britain’s big power stations is lost as it travels along the wires to the consumer.
by encouraging householders, small businesses, schools and hospitals to create their own electricity from renewable sources. The Tory leader, David Cameron, will announce today that his party would scrap grants for people who install wind turbines, solar panels or combined heat and power generators. Instead, it would guarantee prices for electricity created by householders through a system in “feed-in tariffs”.
The reforms could help a future Conservative administration avoid building more nuclear power stations if it was successful in reducing carbon emissions. At present, the Tories say they would use nuclear power as a “last resort” but have not ruled it out.
Unveiling his Green Paper, Mr Cameron promised to create a “safer and greener” Britain by adopting a decentralised system of producing energy on the model of countries such as Germany and the Netherlands. His pledge to go “from laggards to world leaders” on green energy is part of a policy offensive aimed at telling voters what a Tory government would do.
Mr Cameron will argue that by relying on government and big energy companies, Britain has been heavily reliant on fossil fuels and that too much energy is wasted through heat loss and distributing power to the consumer. A “do-it-yourself” approach would give people a direct interest in saving energy, he will say.
The Tories would streamline the planning laws to make it quicker and easier to install micro-generating equipment. They would ensure there was a market in which it was as easy to sign a contract to create electricity as to buy a mobile phone. Surplus electricity would be sold to the local network for more than the market price.
Smart meters to measure the electricity flowing in and out of homes and offices would be available free to anyone installing DIY energy equipment.
In the short term, the cost of kickstarting the switch to low carbon energy would be met by abolishing existing grant schemes for micro-generation. The long-term bill of between £200m and £300m would be found from the auction of permits under the EU’s emissions trading scheme.
Ofgem, the regulator, would be obliged to cut carbon emissions by encouraging decentralised energy.
The Tory policy document will say: “In the face of the enormous challenge of man-made climate change, “business as usual”or the incremental adaptation of our economy is not enough. Britain needs dynamic industrial change if it is going to compete and win in the new low carbon era.”
What the party is proposing
* Decentralised energyto play “major part” in meeting Britain’s needs.
* Every household, small business, school, hospital able to generate electricity through micro-generation.
* Feed-in tariffs to guarantee fixed price for electricity from decentralised, low carbon sources such as wind power, photovoltaic, combined heat and power, biomass, waste and micro-hydro.
* Any person or organisation allowed to install a low carbon generating appliance of below 250kW using accredited professional.
* Credits on electricity bills for surplus amounts fed into local network.









December 9th, 2007 @ 4:02 pm
[...] British Tories unveil green policy from off-grid. [...]