Independent Report Recommends Coordinated NI Energy Policy
A single department with responsibility for all energy matters, the radical reduction of Northern Ireland’s dependency on home heating oil, and renewable electricity-based heating for the south and west where gas networks may never reach, are just three of the recommendations of a new report on the energy industry in Northern Ireland. The independent report, […]
A single department with responsibility for all energy matters, the radical reduction of Northern Ireland’s dependency on home heating oil, and renewable electricity-based heating for the south and west where gas networks may never reach, are just three of the recommendations of a new report on the energy industry in Northern Ireland. The independent report, ‘Energising Northern Ireland’, was commissioned by the Consumer Council and produced by former GB energy Minister, Lord Whitty. Speaking at the launch of his report, Lord Whitty said: “I am pleased to have had the opportunity to explore the NI energy market and its unique problems, complexities and peculiarities. “Although Northern Ireland’s energy is affected greatly by global markets, policy in Great Britain, relations with the Republic of Ireland and the European Union, much of the energy policy levers rest with the Northern Ireland Executive and the Utility Regulator. My Report looks at the long term interests of domestic energy consumers in Northern Ireland, recognising the difficult choices and substantial short and medium term costs involved. “Specifically I have considered the issues of affordability, sustainability and security of supply, which are different but cross-related and interdependent, and because of this my report attempts to bring together these disparate players and issues to provide a coherent strategic framework. “I believe that progressing these issues in a more coherent way can deliver reductions in fuel poverty, significant carbon saving, better infrastructure and more secure supply.” The ‘Energising Northern Ireland’ report also recommends a far more substantial energy efficiency programme, that home heating oil be included in the remit of the Utility Regulator (as an interim measure to reducing NI’s dependency on home heating oil), and that objectives to reduce fuel poverty and decarbonise energy supply be considered just as important as security of supply. The Consumer Council’s Chief Executive, Antoinette McKeown welcomed the publication, saying: “This report offers an independent view of the Northern Ireland energy industry as a whole. It offers radical but practicable recommendations for coherent and coordinated energy policy, at a time when so many households are desperately trying to cope with continually rising energy prices, within an overall increasing cost of living.”
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