Call for national strategy to cut demand for electricity

POLITICAL parties in Scotland should commit to a national strategy to help businesses and consumers reduce and manage their demand for electricity, environmental and energy groups have said.
A concerted strategy would mean Scotland could avoid the need to build expensive new fossil fuel power stations. Picture: Michael GillenA concerted strategy would mean Scotland could avoid the need to build expensive new fossil fuel power stations. Picture: Michael Gillen
A concerted strategy would mean Scotland could avoid the need to build expensive new fossil fuel power stations. Picture: Michael Gillen

WWF Scotland and Edinburgh-based company Flexitricity have stressed that implementing a concerted strategy regarding electricity consumption would mean Scotland could avoid the need to build expensive new fossil fuel power stations and more rapidly cut climate emissions.

The groups also asserted that such a strategy must go beyond energy efficiency, and include measures to increasingly tap into the vast existing “invisible” power network of industrial, commercial and public sector organisations.

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Demand response measures would allow energy users such as universities, banks, supermarkets and datacentres to act as “virtual power plants.” By voluntarily lowering their demand for electricity, these businesses and organisations would help avoid the need to turn on conventional power stations.

Gina Hanrahan, climate and policy officer at WWF Scotland, said:”It’s far cheaper to reduce our electricity demand than it is to build new power stations that are only used for short periods of time.

“If we want to cut consumer bills and lower climate emissions then demand reduction must be a central part of any future energy strategy. Scotland’s political parties need to commit to a national strategy to help consumers and businesses cut their demand for electricity by at least 1 per cent a year to 2030.

“The public might be surprised to learn that their local supermarket, university or business could already be part of a small but rapidly expanding network of ‘virtual power plants’. However, by using ‘smart grid’ technology to temporarily lower the electricity consumption, unnoticeably, at hundreds of smaller locations we can avoid the need to switch on massive polluting fossil fuel power stations.

Alastair Martin, chief strategy officer of Flexitricity, said: “We used to think of electricity purely in terms of nuclear, coal and gas. It’s now time to think of renewables, energy efficiency and demand response. The technology needed to create a low-carbon, low-cost and secure electricity future is already there.

“Scotland is already the European leader in demand response. By committing to a comprehensive strategy to reduce energy demand, Scotland can increase its competitiveness while making best use of its indigenous renewable resources and alleviating fuel poverty.”

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