NBS-M009 Revision Session November 2010
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Transcript of NBS-M009 Revision Session November 2010
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NBS-M009 Revision Session November 2010Topics Covered in Module• Carbon Reduction Commitment
• Building Regulations
– Code for Sustainable Homes
• Regulation in Electricity Supply
– Implications on Diversity of Supply
– Connection Charges and the Triad Demand
• Renewable Electricity Options
– The Renewable Obligation
– Feed-in Tariffs
• Other Topics• The Renewable Transport Fuel Obligation
• The Future: Integrated Obligations?
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2
Carbon Reduction Commitment Energy Efficiency Scheme - Changes since Comprehensive Spending Review
• Timing of phases has been changed
• Phase 1 is extended for an additional year - i.e. until 2013 – 2014
• Phase 2 was originally to start in 2010 – 11 with qualification year 2010 – 2011, Footprint year 2011- 2012 and first compliance year 2012 – 2013– Original Timescale for Phase 1
– Revised Timescale Phase 1
New Consultation Document – published 17th November 2010
2008 2011-12 2012-132010-11
R
2008 2011-12 2012-13 2013-142010-11
R
R
Qualifying Year
Footprint Year with Annual Report
Compliance Year with Annual Report
Registration Period Surrender of Allowances
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Carbon Reduction Commitment Energy Efficiency Scheme - Changes since Comprehensive Spending Review• Timing of phases has been changed
• Revised Phase 1
• Phase 2 is delayed by 2 years – note change to Footprint Year
• Original Phase 2
– Revised Timescale Phase 2
2010-11 2012-13 2013-142011-12
R
2016-17 2017-182014-15 2015-16
2012-13 2013-14
R
2017-18 2018-192015-16 2016-172014-15
Footprint Year No Report
2011-12 2012-13 2013-142010-11
R
Qualifying Year
R Registration PeriodFootprint Year with Annual Report
Compliance Year with Annual Report
Surrender of Allowances
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Carbon Reduction Commitment Energy Efficiency Scheme - Changes since Comprehensive Spending Review
Subsequent Phases delayed by two years and will each last 7 years
Last Phase (7) starts in 2038 and runs to for 5 years to 2043
By amalgamating Footprint and First Annual Reporting Year there will be one less reporting year in each Phase saving
Removes requirement for those who fall just below threshold and do not have to register from making Information Disclosures – likely to affect ~ 15000 organisation.
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All Energy Use Emissions
All Energy Use Emissions
Relevant Emissions
Relevant Emissions
5
Calculating Emissions to be included in CRC -EES
Total Footprint Emissions Total
Footprint Emissions
Regulated Emissions
Regulated Emissions
CRC Emissions
CRC Emissions
MUST: Remove all Emissions covered by CCA and EU-ETS
CAN: remove up to 10% of emissions, but not if measured by regulated meters or covered by CCA/ EU-ETS. MUST: account for at least 90% of emissions
MUST: remove emissions from exempted transport and onward Supply
MUST: remove 100% of emissions covered by CCA exempt subsidiaries
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CRC-EES Purchase of Allowances: Phase 1
During phase 1 and unlimited number of allowances will be issued, but there will be a cap on total emissions in Phase 2 and thereafter.
•All Allowances will be purchased in April of relevant year at a FIXED cost of £12 per tonne
•Additional allowances can be purchased in the Secondary Market from other participants (or traders) who have a surplus.
•Additional allowances can also be purchased through the “Safety Valve System” which is analogous to the “Buy Out Prices” for ROCs
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CRC – EES: Purchase of Allowances:
Banking Allowances•Allowances surplus to an organisations needs can be sold on the Secondary Market or banked against future years.
•However, it is not possible to carry forward banked allowances between phases.
Operation of “Safety Valve”AIM: To prevent price volatility in Secondary Market (as happened in Phase 1 of EU-ETS)
•Participants pay a deposit equal to prevailing Safety Valve price in preceding month.
•Government purchases extra allowances on EU-ETS and cancels same number of EU-ETS allowances.
•Participants reimburse Government (or receive a rebate) for an difference between deposit price and actual price subject to a minimum price of £14 (revised upwards from £12 – February 2010)
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• In October’s Spending Review the UK Government announced that the CRC will be simplified to reduce the burden on businesses, with the first allowance sale for 2011/12 emissions now taking place in 2012 rather than 2011.
• Revenue from the sale of CRC allowances, totalling £1 billion a year by 2014/15, will be used to support the public finances, including spending on the environment, rather than recycled to participants.
• But what about registration payments etc. Will these still be paid???
• If 5000 organisations are involved this non-recycling will imply an effective tax averaging £200 000 per organisation per year
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CRC – EES: Purchase of Allowances:
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Issues relating to self generation of electricity
• CHP – An organisation can claim credits for electricity
exported to other organisations. Organisation does not declare own use of electricity
– An organisation cannot claim credits for exported heat as under CRC it is deemed to have zero emissions. - Could cause problems for District Heating Operations
• Renewable Generation – – If no ROCs (FITs) are claimed then generation is
treated as case with CHP– If ROCs are claimed then electricity generated must be
declared and emissions calculated as though it was grid imported – i.e. at a relatively high carbon factor – even though the generation would have a low factor – will affect UEA.
– Issue of geographic vs corporate emissions
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Description Year 1
Year 2
Year 3
Subsequent Phases
Absolute Metric
Compares the current annual emissions to the average emissions over the preceding five years
0% 45% 60% 75%%
Early Action Metric
Recognition for good energy management undertaken prior to the start of the scheme. based on two factors, equally weighted,
(i) % of non-mandatorily HH metered electricity and gas emissions covered by voluntarily installed automatic metering (AMR) by 31 March 2011.
(ii) The percentage of the emissions covered by a valid Accreditation Scheme certificates on 31 March of each compliance year.
100%
40% 20% Not Applicable
Growth Metric
Gives recognition to those organizations which are growing but emissions are growing as a slower rate as measured per unit of output compared with those in preceding years
0% 15% 20% 25%
Relative Weighting of Phases
As Phase 1 has been extended. What will be relative percentages in final year of that Phase?
LEAGUE TABLES under CRC - EES
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Example of PerformanceCompany A has emissions which decrease from 2000 to 1800 tonnes between years 1 and 2 of Phase 1 and at the same time output increases from £1500000 to £16000000.
Company B has emissions which increase from 3000 to 3100 tonnes over the same period when the output increases from £2000000 to £2500000.
How do the two companies compare with regards to the absolute and growth metrics?.
Carbon emissions (tonnes) Output
kg per £1 of output
Company AYear 1 2000 £1,500,000 £1.33Year 2 1800 £1,600,000 £1.13% change -10.0% -15.6%
Company B Year 1 3000 £2,000,000 £1.50Year 2 3100 £2,500,000 £1.24% change +3.3% -17.3%
• Company A performs much better with regard to absolute metric• Company B is better with regard to growth metric
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Carbon Reduction Commitment – Energy Efficiency SchemeOriginally a new emissions trading system which will affect ~ 20 000 organisations in the UK – now a Taxation System.
• ~ 5000 organisations will fully participate in trading, • remainder will only have to report emissions but may now be
exempt from reporting following recent (Nov 2010 developments).
Criteria for inclusion is based on electricity use.• At least one Half-hour Meter (HHM) and • an annual consumption > 6000 MWh
[ annual consumption ~ equivalent to 1500 houses]
If an organisation satisfies first criterion then they merely have to report.
CRC split into Phases • Phase 1 (Introductory) will have a fixed price of CO2 allowances at
£12 per tonne• Subsequent Phases will have a cap to limit emissions and
allowances will be auctioned. Recent activity suggests that auctioning for Phase 2 may be reconsidered.
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The Carbon Reduction Commitment Periods• The CRC will be divided into phases, each of which will be 3
or more years
• Within each phase there will be:
• A qualification period, Organisations must assess whether or not they qualify to make an information disclosure or participate fully in CRC
• A registration period, Organisations must either submit their information disclosure or register as a participant with the administrator
• A footprint year, participants must monitor their total emissions from energy use. Note some emissions are excluded such as those already covered by EU-ETS etc.
• A series of compliance years, runs from April to March – now starting in April 2012, participating organisations must
• purchase allowances for each tonne of CO2 they emit, based on expected energy use,
• monitor their usage.
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Financing the CRC - EES
• Will there still be charges to Participants for all aspects of operation now that no money is to be recycled? Latest Consultation document does not address this question.
• Original Proposed Charges
Activity
Participant Registration £950
Participant Annual Subsistence
£1290
Fixed price sale participation fee
£10
Safety valve charge (per transaction)
£300
There are also other charges – see CRC Documentation
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Weekly fuel mix in electricity Generation11 - 17th January 2010
Mon Tues Wed Thurs Fri Sat Sun
Notice higher proportion of coal used during day time hence a higher carbon emission factor.
Electricity Security and Diversity
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Shannon – Wiener Index of Fuel Mix Diversity• Shannon – Wiener Index is a measure of diversity originally developed as a
measure of biodiversity.
• Higher index values occur with higher diversity.
• But there is no absolute upper limit.
• There is a maximum diversity index for a given number of items (e.g. species, fuels) when all items are in same proportion, but index will be higher for a greater number items.
• Index is low if one item dominates
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Variation in maximum value of Index with number of items. The situation occurs when all items have equal proportion.
e.g. with 6 fuel types the maximum value of index would be 1.8.
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• The Shannon-Weiner Index (H) is defined as:
H = - pI ln pI
where pi is the proportion of the ith item.
The index value increases with number of items and also the relative proportions of items
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Shannon – Wiener Index of Fuel Mix Diversity
With three fuels, the maximum value reaches 1.09 when all the fuels are in equal proportions.
In Norway where Hydro provides 99.5%, the index for the three fuels used is just 0.035.
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Percentage Fraction1980 2010 1980 2010
nuclear 12.2 14.4 0.122 0.144coal 74.5 32.0 0.745 0.320oil 11.2 1.0 0.112 0.010gas 0.6 45.7 0.006 0.457renewables 1.5 6.8 0.015 0.068
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Shannon – Wiener Index of Fuel Mix DiversityHow has diversity of Electricity Generation in UK changed over last 30 years?
Must evaluate fractional proportions: NOT percentages when using Shannon-Wiener
Shannon – Wiener: H = - pI ln pI
H = - pI ln pI
1980 2010nuclear 0.257 0.279coal 0.219 0.365oil 0.245 0.046gas 0.031 0.358renewables 0.063 0.183Total 0.815 1.231
Shannon Wiener Factor has improved from 0.815 to 1.231 but is set to decline post 2015 with closure of coal and nuclear plant.
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• Charges are made for Connections to the Transmission and distribution Grids.
• For generators charge is in two parts
– A charge per installed kW which varies across 20 charge zones ranging from >+£20 per kW to <-£5kW
– A charge per kW according to local substation
• For demand charge is made according to the TRIAD demand and as a Unit Charge
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Demand Connection Charges 2010 - 2011
The TRIAD occurs in the period 1st November – 28th/29th FebruaryIt is the mean of the following:1)The maximum demand in any one half hour in the above time period.
2)The second highest demand in any one half hour provided it is separated from (1) by at least 10 days.
3)The third highest demand in any one half hour period provided that it is separated from (1) and (2) by at least 10 days
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Zone TRIAD Demand (£/kW)
Energy Consumed (p/kWh)
N. Scotland 5.865932 0.790954
S. Scotland 11.218687 1.547861
Northern 14.523126 1.993796
North West 18.426326 2.552189
Yorkshire 18.344745 2.520788
N Wales & Mersey 18.891869 2.62578
East Midlands 20.934125 2.886193
Midlands 22.692635 3.184194
Eastern 21.835099 3.026211
South Wales 22.524989 3.028765
South East 24.63381 3.377343
London 26.756942 3.602492
Southern 25.49445 3.53718
South Western 26.057832 3.553243
Demand Connection Charges 2010 - 2011
Subject to Revision on December 1st 2010
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Date Period Demand (MW)01/12/2008 35 5640114/12/2008 35 5519115/12/2008 34 5587617/12/2008 35 5500820/12/2008 35 5501503/01/2009 35 5708504/01/2009 35 5630105/01/2009 35 5595406/01/2009 35 5804907/01/2009 35 5696110/01/2009 35 5719411/01/2009 35 5643012/01/2009 35 5713713/01/2009 35 5732702/02/2009 35 55195
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Demand Connection Charges - Example
All Demand periods > 55 000 MW in the 2008 – 2009 TRIAD
The TRIAD periods are shown in YELLOW.
Note: there are periods when demand is higher than 15/12/2008 or 01/12/2008, but these are not separated by at least 10 days from principle TRIAD period on 06/01/2009
NOTE: TRIAD periods are almost always between period 34 and 36.
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Demand Connection Charges - Example
Typical Daily profile in December/ January for a company
Note: one of the two daily peaks coincides with the peak TRIAD period 35.
Explore shifting Process Time Cycle by 2 hours
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Demand Connection Charges - Example
Period Before After
30 1792 1985
31 1837 2038
32 1783 1918
33 1928 1826
34 2010 1749
35 2040 1661
36 1800 1493
After reschedulingDemand over TRIAD period reduces from 2040 to 1661 – i.e. by 379 MW
If in South West, Saving in connection charge = 379 * 26.057832
= £9876
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1
A > £20 per kW
3
2
4
B £15 to £20 per kW
8
5
6
7
C £10 to £15 per kW
10
11
12
D £5 to £10 per kW
9
13
14E £0 to £5 per kW
18
19
15
17
F - £5 to £0 per kW
20 16 G - £10 to -£5 per kW
Generator Connection Charges under BETTA
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Zone No. Zone Name Zonal Tariff (£/kW)
1 North Scotland 20.077673 2 Peterhead 18.708975 3 Western Highland & Skye 22.790380 4 Central Highlands 17.633272 5 Argyll 13.339264 6 Stirlingshire 13.436032 7 South Scotland 12.485883 8 Auchencrosh 10.909540 9 Humber & Lancashire 5.416173
10 North 8.792347 11 Anglesey 6.171408 12 Dinorwig 5.497379 13 South Yorks & 3.594137 14 Midlands 1.56432815 South Wales & 0.391732 16 Central London -6.414672 17 South East 0.806124 18 Oxon and South Coast -1.362801 19 Wessex -2.635277 20 Peninsula -5.871777 25
In addition there is a local sub-station tariff which varies from as much as £4.79 per kW at Farr in the SHETL area to as little as -£0.60 per kW at Mark Hill in Ayrshire which was built specifically for a wind farm.
These reflect the capabilities of the local regions around each substation
Generation Connection Charges 2010 - 2011
Charges subject to possible amendment on 1st Dec 2010
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Renewable Obligation Certificates
The Regulator
OFGEM
SUPPLIERS
Trader and Brokers
Renewable Generator
Notifies Regulator how much generated.
Sells ROCs to Trader
Sells Electricity with or without ROCs
Notifies OFGEM of compliance -i.e. ROCs or pays FINE
Supplier Buys ROCs from Trader
ROC’s issuedFINES recycled in holders of ROCs in proportion to number held
Because of recycling, ROCs have value greater than their nominal face value
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Example of estimation of total value of ROCs
• Explain how the Renewable Obligation mechanism used in the UK works and how the value of renewable electricity may be estimated. [50%]
• As company operating a 1.5 MW wind turbine which had a load factor of 27.63% during the period 1st April 2007 to 31st March 2008, estimate the total income you would have received from electricity sales using data given in Tables 1 and 2.
• You may assume that any imbalance charges are compensated by embedded benefits.Table 1 Wholesale Electricity Prices 2007 –
2008Table 2. Other relevant data for the
period 2007 – 2008
Period
Volume of Electricity
Traded (GWh)
Average price
(£/MWh)
Apr – Jun 1780 22.10Renewable obligation
2007 – 200825,551,357 MWh
Jul – Sep 2050 27.00Renewable Obligation Certificates presented
16,406,751
Oct – Dec 2420 45.95 Buy Out Price £34.30 per MWh
Jan - Mar 2310 54.95 Climatic Change Levy £4.30 per MWh
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Renewable Obligation ---- 25,551,357 MWh ROCs presented ---- 16,406,751
Shortfall in generation/ ROCs presented = 9084606
Value of Buy out Fund = 9084606 * £34.30 = £311 601 985.80
So Mark up value = 311601985/80 / 16406751 = £18.92
Total value of ROC = £34.30 + £18.92 = £53.22
Total value of Renewable Generation = £38.88 + £53.22 + £4.30 = £96.40
A 1.5 MW wind turbine @ 27.63% load factor generates 3630.582 MWh in year
So total income = 3630.582 * £96.40 = £350 003.05
Example of estimation of total value of ROCsVolume traded (GWh) price
Volume * price Product
Apr - Jun 2007 1780 £ 22.10 39338.0
July - Sept 2007 2050 £ 27.00 55350.0
Oct-Dec 2007 2420 £ 45.95 111199.0
Jan-Mar 2008 2310 £ 54.95 126934.5
Totals 8560 332821.5
Volume Weighted Average Price £ 38.88
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Renewable Obligation and Feed In Tariff Changes
• Generators < 50 kW declare once a year under RO – will be mandatory to change to FIT from April 1st 2010
• Generators 50 kW – 5 MW will have option of a once only change from RO to FIT by a deadline
• Generators > 5 MW remain in RO
• RO is extended to 2037 subject to a maximum eligibility of 20 years.
• Feed In Tariff will be banded and decremented year on year and will be fixed from inception of a project. It will run for a maximum of 20 years.
• A small scale generator who uses electricity on site will benefit from:– A generation FIT,
– An export FIT,
– A reduced import of electricity29
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Energy Source Scale Generation Tariff (p/kWh) Duration
to 31/03/2012 after 01/04/12 (years)
Anaerobic digestion ≤500kW 11.5 11.5 20Anaerobic digestion >500kW 9 9 20Hydro ≤15 kW 19.9 19.9 20Hydro >15 - 100kW 17.8 17.8 20Hydro >100kW - 2MW 11 11 20Hydro >2kW - 5MW 4.5 4.5 20Micro-CHP***** <2 kW 10 10 10Solar PV ≤4 kW new 36.1 33.0 25Solar PV ≤4 kW retrofit 41.3 37.8 25Solar PV >4-10kW 36.1 33.0 25Solar PV >10 - 100kW 31.4 28.7 25Solar PV >100kW - 5MW 29.3 26.8 25Solar PV Standalone 29.3 26.8 25Wind ≤1.5kW 34.5 32.6 20Wind >1.5 - 15kW 26.7 25.5 20Wind >15 - 100kW 24.1 23.0 20Wind >100 - 500kW 18.8 18.8 20Wind >500kW - 1.5MW 9.4 9.4 20Wind >1.5MW - 5MW 4.5 4.5 20Existing generators transferred from RO 9 9 to 2027
Feed in Tariffs – Introduced 1st April 2010
***** for first 20000 installations
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Feed in Tariffs – Export and Issue of Deeming
http://www.decc.gov.uk/en/content/cms/what_we_do/uk_supply/energy_mix/renewable/feedin_tariff/feedin_tariff.aspx
Payment for tariffs will be from a levy on Utility Companies which MAY see a cumulative rise in bills of around £1 billion or more.
In addition there will be a payment of 3p per kWh for any electricity exported as opposed to consumed on premises.
BUT an export meter is needed to identify this.
Householder will save on imported electricity at ~ 11 – 12p per kWh, so optimum financial model may not be to generate as much as possible
i.e. for each unit generated and consumed it is worth 41.3+ 11 = 52.3p /kWh for each unit exported it is worth 41.3 + 3 = 44.3 p/kWh
If no export meter is fitted – a transition arrangement of deeming that 50% of generation will be exported will be made - that may well not be as attractive to consumer.
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From the National Infra-Structure Plan 2010 following Comprehensive Spending Review
• The Government will reform the electricity market, so that it attracts the private sector investment necessary to meet the UK’s energy security and climate change objectives, including the investment in nuclear, carbon capture and storage and renewable technology.
• In addition to supporting the carbon price, this will also assess the role that revenue support mechanisms (such as Feed-In Tariffs), capacity mechanisms and emission performance standards could play.
• For complete information see Section 4 ofhttp://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/d/nationalinfrastructureplan251010.pdf
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From the National Infra-Structure Plan 2010 following Comprehensive Spending Review
The Government will assess proposals against the criteria of cost-effectiveness, affordability and security of supply;
• to ensure that regulation of national electricity networks enables the investment needed in transmission infrastructure to connect new low-carbon generation, such as nuclear power stations and offshore and onshore wind turbines;
• maintain the Feed-In-Tariffs to support investment in emerging small-scale generation technologies in electricity, saving £40M by improving their efficiency, and complement this with the Renewable Heat Incentive to reward ground-source heat pumps and other renewable heat sources, while making efficiency savings of 20% by 2014-15 compared with the previous government’s plans.
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For complete information see Section 4 ofhttp://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/d/nationalinfrastructureplan251010.pdf
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From the National Infra-Structure Plan 2010 following Comprehensive Spending Review
The Government will (para 4.18):
• Support investment in low carbon energy supply by:
maintaining Feed-In Tariffs for small-scale generation, funded through an obligation on electricity suppliers equating to a levy of almost £900 million over the period to 2014-15. At the same time, the efficiency of Feed-In Tariffs will be improved at the next formal review [2012], rebalancing them in favour of more cost effective carbon abatement technologies.
May be an issue for PV as carbon abatement using PV is around £700 per tonne saved way above many other strategies – see German Example
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For complete information see Section 4 ofhttp://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/d/nationalinfrastructureplan251010.pdf
Equivalent to £36 per household
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• The Pool
• NETA / BETTA
• Deregulation
• Changes in Company Ownership
Changes in Electricity Supply Regulation
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Eastern **
Industry-Промышленность
Independents-Независимые
Electricité de France
Innogy
Nuclear Electric *
BNFL (Magnox)
PowerGen
RECs
Licensed Suppliers
Лицензированные
поставщики
Consumers
Потребители
Second Tier
Consumers
Вторичные потребители
The
Pool
Пул
Scottish Nuclear
(Атомная) *
ConsumersПотребители
Scottish Hydro
Scottish Power ScotlandШотландия
England and Wales
Англия и Уэльс
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Bid from company B £19.31 per MWh
Bid from company A £19.20 per MWh (0.96R / kWh)
Bid from company D £19.40 per MWhBid from company E £19.50 per MWh
Bid from company C £19.32 per MWh
Range of bids from companies in range £18 - £19 per MWh
0.90 - 0.95 Roubles per kWh
Range of bids from companies in range £15 - £18 per MWh
0.75 - 0.9 Roubles per kWh
Range of bids from companies in range <£15 per MWh
0.75 Roubles per kWh
10000 MW
10000 MW
10000 MW
1250 MW1250 MW
1250 MW1250 MW1250 MW
32500 MW
System Marginal
Price
= £19.31
SMP
Companies up to and
including B successful
£1 ~ 50 Roubles
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Новая система оптовой торговли НЕТАHow well has it performed since starting on 27th March 2001?
Wholesale prices rose rapidly in 2004/2005, fell sharply from mid 2006, rose rapidly since mid 2007 then fell but are less stable.
The weighted average wholesale price of 18th November 2010 was £43.27 although the peak price was £73.60 during period 34
UK becomes net importer of
gas in 2004
Langeled and Balzand Pipe Lines completed
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The Balancing Mechanism Балансирующий механизм
Day Before
День до
Current Day
Текущий день
IPN FPN
Gate Closure Закрытие периода
Real
Time
30
mins3.5 hours 1 hour
Operation of Balancing Mechanism
Балансирующий механизм
Summary Краткое описание
• Changes to contract position cannot be made after Gate Closure• Balancing Mechanism provides System Security
• Изменения в позиции договора не могут быть внесены после закрытия периода• Балансирующий механизм обеспечивает безопасность функционирования Системы
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The Balancing Mechanism Балансирующий механизм
The New Electricity Trading Arrangements
Новая система оптовой торговли НЕТА
• To allow system to remain stable
• Too little electricity on the system
–Generators can OFFER to INCREASE output
–Suppliers can OFFER to REDUCE consumption
Time
FPNOFFER
Time
FPNOFFER
• If OFFER is agreed then Generators / Suppliers are PAID for any electricity increased / reduced under the OFFER.
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The Balancing Mechanism Балансирующий механизм
The New Electricity Trading Arrangements
Новая система оптовой торговли НЕТА
• Too much electricity on the system
–Generators can BID to REDUCE output
–Suppliers can BID to INCREASE consumption
• If BID is agreed then Generators / Suppliers PAY for any reduction in generation / increase in demand under the BID.
Time
FPNOFFER
Bid
FPNOFFER
Bid
Time
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The Balancing Mechanism Балансирующий механизм
Generators / Suppliers may submit OFFERs or BIDs which differ for different levels of deviation from the Final Physical Notification
National Grid Company normally accepts OFFERS / BIDS which are cheapest unless System Constraints prevent this.
25 - 50 MW: £30 per MWh (1.5 Roubles per kWh)
50 - 100 MW: £50 per MWh (2.5 Roubles per kWh)
0 - 25 MW: £20 per MWh (1 Rouble per kWh) FPN окончательная физическая нотификация
Example of Differential Offers from a Generator
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The Balancing Mechanism Балансирующий механизм
What happens if System Operator has got it wrong?
• OFFERs / BIDs cannot be cancelled
• UNDO BID removes an OFFER and is usually less than the OFFER
• UNDO OFFER removes a BID and is usually more than the BID
• OFFERs / UNDO BIDs [ or BIDs / UNDO OFFERs] are submitted in pairs
OFFER / UNDO BID: Pair +2
OFFER / UNDO BID: Pair +1
BID / UNDO OFFER: Pair -1
BID / UNDO OFFER: Pair -2
FPN
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FPNPaid SSP
FPN
Actual Metered Volume
Pays SBP
Новая система оптовой торговли НЕТАCharges for imbalance depend on whether BM unit is deviating in same direction as overall system or not.
Example shows cases where imbalance is in same direction as system
Штрафные санкции за нарушение баланса зависят от того, отклонился ли субъект БМ в том же направлении, что и вся система, или нет
Рисунок показывает случаи, когда нарушение баланса происходит в одном направлении с системой
Установлено в двустороннем
порядке договаривающ
имися сторонами
Settled bilaterally between
contracting parties
Установлено в двустороннем порядке между
сторонами
Settled bilaterally between parties
Actual Metered Volume
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• Review of Building Regulations in UK– Factors affecting energy consumption and carbon emissions– Standard Assessment Procedure
• Approved Document AD1a - New domestic Properties• AD1b – New non-domestic Properties• AD2a - Existing domestic Properties• AD2b - Existing non-domestic Properties
Other Topics Covered
• Code for Sustainable Homes
• Energy Performance Certificates
• Introduction in Indian Building Regulations
• Introduction to Chinese Building Regulations
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Building Regulations – Topics covered
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U-Value Specification with different Regulations
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1976 1985 1990 1994 2000 2005 2010
U – Values W m-2 oC-1
SAP < 60
SAP > 60
External Wall 1.0 0.6 0.45 0.45 0.35 0.45 0.35 0.35
Roof 0.6 0.35 0.25 0.2 0.16 0.25 0.16 0.16
Floor 1.0 0.6 0.45 0.35 0.25 0.45 0.25 0.25
Windows Not specified 3.0 2.0* 3.3 2.0 2.0
Windows as % of external walls
17% 12% -
Windows as % of total floor areas
- - 15% 22.5% 25% 22.5% 25% 25%
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Compliance to Building Regulations
• Compliance to Building Regulations may be achieved by one of several alternative methods.
– Elemental Method
• Specifies maximum U-value and perhaps maximum glazed area – valid until 2002 Regs but with restrictions in 2002
– Target U-value – weighted average U-value allowed some flexibility in design – valid until 2002 Regs
– SAP Rating (1994 Regs) – largely an economic assessment
– Carbon Index (2002 Regs)*
– Target Emission Rate (Current Regs)*
– * SAP Procedure is use for these methods. SAP Rating is also calculated but it no longer a means of compliance.
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Building Regulation: Compliance Summary
Up to and including 2000 Regulations • Elemental Method – specifying U-values of fabric elements• Target U-Value – allowed some flexibility of design.• SAP Rating – an economic measure – only permitted for
compliance in 1994 Regs.
2000/2002 Regulations• Carbon Index Method- a distorted Carbon Measure
2005/6 Regulations• Dwelling Emission Rating must be better than Target Emission
Rating. Latter is a derivative of the Target U-Value Method.
2009/10 Regulations• Retains DER and TER but expects a 25% improvement on
performance over 2005/6 standards
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