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Report calls for more proactive UK grid investment to help decarbonise

A government-appointed panel found that the electricity distribution network in Britain must undergo a fundamental change if it is to achieve its net zero emission target. This will require more proactive investments.

The distribution networks that deliver electricity to homes, businesses, and other places are heavily regulated. Companies receive an allowance each year for their expenditures. This is called a price control. It protects customers from excessive grid costs.

In its latest report, the National Infrastructure Commission said that the current regulatory system was too complex, and focused more on short-term cost than the larger goals of economic growth or decarbonisation.

The UK is aiming to achieve net zero emissions before 2050.

It added that "Price controls need to be reform to allow proactive investment."

The National Infrastructure Commission (NIC), in its latest report, said that the demand for electricity in Britain will increase by 50% by 2035, and double by 2020, as heating, transport, and industry turn more to electric power to decarbonise.

The report stated that this could require nationwide investment of 37-50 billion British Pounds ($47-$63 Billion) in the distribution system between today and 2050. This would be at least twice the current levels of price control.

It added that while the timing of this new demand is uncertain, if you wait for it to manifest, you risk investing too late and creating bottlenecks.

Scottish and Southern Electricity Networks Distribution (SSEN), a subsidiary SSE, welcomed this report and hoped that its findings would be reflected in the next round price controls set by the regulator Ofgem starting in 2028.

The company stated that it "shares the NIC's belief that any impact on consumer bills will be minimal" and that this efficient additional investment would help to lower costs for consumers in the long term.

(source: Reuters)