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UK set for 15% renewables target | UK set for 15% renewables target |
(about 8 hours later) | |
The European Union is expected to tell the UK that 15% of energy needs must be met from renewable sources by 2020. | The European Union is expected to tell the UK that 15% of energy needs must be met from renewable sources by 2020. |
The figure, currently about 2%, will include all energy used for heating and cooling buildings. | The figure, currently about 2%, will include all energy used for heating and cooling buildings. |
Experts have called the target challenging because they say heating and cooling are hard to achieve on a mass scale using renewable fuels. | |
The EU, which is trying to create a low-carbon economy in Europe, will announce its decision next week. | The EU, which is trying to create a low-carbon economy in Europe, will announce its decision next week. |
Tough but achievable | Tough but achievable |
As current heating and cooling technologies are unproven on a mass scale, electricity generation is expected to meet much of the target - primarily through offshore wind, however the government is also looking favourably on the prospect of a tidal barrage across the Severn. | |
It is expected that the UK will have to obtain between 30% and 40% of its electricity from wind, wave and solar sources by 2020 - up from the current level of 5%. | |
"The target is do-able but only if we really pull out all the stops," observed Gordon Edge, head of offshore energy at the British Wind Energy Association. | |
He said there was still a problem with "interconnectors", cables that transport the electricity from the offshore wind farms to the National Grid. | |
Mr Edge added that following years of scepticism from the government's industry department, civil servants were now asking: "What can we do to help? There has been a huge change in attitude." | |
The UK's expected 15% target is a share of the total EU target of gaining 20% of energy from renewables by 2020. | |
The share is calculated on nations' existing levels of renewable power and Gross Domestic Product (GDP). | |
A government spokesman would not confirm the 15% figure but pointed out that Prime Minister Gordon Brown, in a speech shortly before Christmas, said that the UK would hit whatever target it was given. | |
In the autumn, he overruled an attempt by the business and enterprise department to get the targets redefined to make them less onerous. |
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