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Industry expert says government subsidy briefings are undermining solar sector

A number of national newspapers have carried reports this week indicating that Energy Secretary Amber Rudd is gearing up to further slash solar power subsidies. The Government says this is necessary to limit the cost to consumers who help fund the subsidies via their energy bills.

According to David Hunt, managing partner of specialist renewables recruitment company Hyperion Executive Search, the UK’s solar industry is being ‘undermined’ by briefings from Ministers about imminent cuts to renewable energy subsidies.

 

A number of national newspapers have carried reports this week indicating that Energy Secretary Amber Rudd is gearing up to further slash solar power subsidies. The Government says this is necessary to limit the cost to consumers who help fund the subsidies via their energy bills.

 

Mr Hunt (pictured) points out that the reports wrongly referred to a feed-in-tariff of 43p per kilowatt hour, a subsidy that has not existed for almost four years. The current tariff stands at 12.92p.

 

He said: “Every time the Government indulges in unofficial briefings, it further undermines a sector that is still in its formative stages but which is already doing so much good for the economy. The most recent figures produced by the Renewable Energy Association (REA) showed an 8.7 per cent increase in the number of people working in our industry, compared to a mere one per cent rise in overall employment during the same period.

 

“There are also now more than 6,800 companies operating in the renewable energy sector, of which over 2,000 are in the solar PV industry. Even more importantly, there is a genuine spread of companies and jobs across the UK including the much vaunted Northern Powerhouse which is responsible for 11,000 jobs in the sector.”

 

David, who is also chair of On-site Renewables Group for the REA, said a report by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) revealed that the UK Government was continuing to pour billions of pounds in subsidies into fossil fuels while slashing support for renewables.

 

He added: “The IMF survey highlighted how fossil fuels receives a staggering £26 billion in subsidies, compared to the £3.6billion cost of supporting renewables. In addition to the repeated cuts to subsidies, we have witnessed a string of unbalanced planning directives including the fast-tracking of fracking and the scrapping of the Code for Sustainable Homes which would have made all new homes more energy efficient and therefore cheaper to run for the consumer.'

 

Mr Hunt continued: “Until Ministers start to wield their power more responsibly, the renewables industry will continue to see a drain of jobs, talent and tax receipts out of the UK and into the arms of global competitors.”

27 August 2015

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