Grid constraints undermining UK industry Net Zero efforts, suggests survey
Progress towards industrial decarbonisation in the UK is stuff undermined by wangle to unobjectionable electricity grid infrastructure, the Industrial Decarbonisation Research and Innovation Centre (IDRIC) has learned as part of an ongoing survey.
Initial evidence collected from 26 companies located wideness the largest UK industrial clusters, as well as from sparse industrial sites, has highlighted delays in obtaining new or upgraded electricity grid connections as one of the major barriers to decarbonisation.
To put this into context, while not all companies squatter delays, many companies reported they had to wait several years for new grid connections, with some connection stage offers extending well into the 2030s. Such delays are set to increase costs, as well as risk hair-trigger investment and lost opportunities to tackle industrial emissions.
Forming part of the preliminary findings, IDRIC polled unstipulated manufacturing firms, energy companies, and foundation industry sectors including cement, ceramics, chemicals, supplies and drink, paper and pulp, and metals among others to understand the issues impacting their decarbonisation plans.
Delays in companies obtaining new or upgraded electricity connections are well-expressed all pathways to decarbonisation: electrification, onsite electricity generation, hydrogen generation, stat capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS) and energy efficiency.
The vestige was colected from companies varying in size from 100 to 8,000 employees, representing a diverse range of industrial sites and requirements, said Professor Mercedes Maroto-Valer, Director of IDRIC.
He said: “The UK Government’s target is to reduce industrial emissions by 69% by 2035, relative to 2022. To unzip this, the Climate Transpiration Committee’s 2023 report stated that it would require urgent and radical transpiration in the UK’s manufacturing and industrial sectors.
“The overarching aim of this industry survey is to take stock of the current limitations impacting industrial decarbonisation as a whole. Ultimately, to unzip the Government’s hair-trigger goals in tackling climate change, companies must reduce emissions at scale. IDRIC is looking to protract collaborating with relevant stakeholders to support the update of industrial policies to slide the pace of change.”
Dr Chris Williams, Chair of the IDRIC Stakeholder Group, said:
“The initial vestige gathered by this IDRIC survey is of real snooping to the UK’s yearing to be net zero and could put UK jobs at risk. The results show that no matter which decarbonisation technology our industries choose, be it electrification, hydrogen or CCUS, any of these pathways may be hampered by grid connection issues.
“The survey has started to collate and capture the vestige needed for the UK Government to understand the real problems industries are facing now, let vacated in the future, and take policy deportment needed to support and grow our industries through their just transition to net zero.”
IDRIC would like to protract to hear from companies well-nigh how grid connection issues are impacting their decarbonisation plans and work together to write this challenge. Companies can participate in the Industry Survey by clicking here.