What is Cambridshire's potential for renewable energy? - Duncan Price

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Duncan Prince from Camco explains how the CRIF project is looking into more detail to identify the technical constrains and hard facts about providing renewable energy locally. This presentation identifies a range of different technologies that could generate energy locally.

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Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study

Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework

Duncan Price, Director, Camco

Presentation to Councillors 28/09/11

Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study

Cambridgeshire’s challenging carbon objectives

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What is Cambridgeshire's potential?

Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study

Cambridgeshire is progressing well

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Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study

Modelling renewable energy deployment potential

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Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study

Deployment options for renewable energy

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Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study

Renewable electricity potential is very large

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Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study

Renewable heat constitutes the greater challenge

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Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study

S. Cambs and Hunts have largest resource

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Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study

District heating potential lies in Cambridge and Huntingdon

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Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study

Substantial infrastructure is needed

Number of installations associated with delivery of each scenario

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Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study

Significant investment opportunity

Investment potential for each scenario in £millions

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Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study

Energy efficiency and renewable energy can close the carbon ‘gap’

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Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study 12

Conclusions

• Cambridgeshire is doing well – especially renewable electricity

• There is potential for more – solar, biomass, heat pumps, wind

• All technologies are needed – heat and electricity

• Somewhere between medium & high scenarios delivers by 2031

• Also closes carbon gap to meet pro-rata 4th carbon budget

• Significant investment potential – up to £6.1 billion for high scenario

Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study 13

Thanks

Duncan Price

DirectorCamco

t: +44 (0)20 7121 6150 m: +44 (0)7769 692 610e: duncan.price@camcoglobal.com

172 Tottenham Court Road LondonW1T 7NS United Kingdom

www.camcoglobal.com

Renewable energy delivery pathways

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There are three delivery pathways

Community Public Sector Commercial

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Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study 15

What is the potential for each pathway?

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0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

1400

1600

Public sector Community Commercial

Dep

loym

ent po

tential (GWh)

Deployment potential by pathway

Wind >=6 turbines

Wind <=5 turbines

Biomass

ASHP

GSHP

SWH

PV

Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study 16

Community deployment potential

• PV• 145MWp, 1,150,000m² of panels

• 460 non-residential buildings and 30,400 houses (14%)

• Solar water heating• 42,600m² of panels on 8,500 houses (4%)

• Heat pumps• 43,000 or 15% of houses

• Wind• 75MW or 30 turbines

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Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study 17

Vision for community delivery pathway

• Communities have strong incentive to invest in renewable energy• Effective hard and soft incentive mechanisms

• Minimisation of risks and barriers to implementation

• Communities have access to a range of funding sources• Availability of applicable finance options for a range of project types

• Gaining access to existing and new funding sources

• Communities are maximising learning from leading practice• Demonstration case studies of successful community energy schemes

• Access to quality impartial ‘self-help’ guidance and information

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Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study

Vision for community delivery pathway

• Communities are managing energy projects effectively• Identification of governance methods and relative benefits of each approach

• Range of delivery options identified

• Investment and delivery opportunities are clearly communicated

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Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study 19

Public sector deployment potential

• PV• 39MWp, 300,00m² of panels

• 180 non-residential buildings and 7,500 houses (18%)

• Solar water heating• 8,400m² of panels on 1,700 houses (4%)

• Heat pumps• 8,100 or 20% of houses

• Wind• 27MW or 11 turbines

• Biomass• 14 installations of 1.5MW

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Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study 20

Vision for public sector pathway

• Public sector is maximising value of its own hard assets• PV on roofs of offices, schools, hospitals, leisure centres

• PV in social housing – own stock, ALMO and with housing association partners

• Appropriate wind development on public sector assets

• Provision of anchor loads for district heating and CHP

• Renewable energy transition plan for each building

• Demonstration projects for advanced technologies and new approaches

Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study 21

Vision for public sector pathway

• Public sector is maximising value from its soft assets• Planning policies – LDF, LDO, s106, CIL

• Enabling mechanisms – community energy fund, grant funding

• Public sector led development – de-risking projects, early project promotion

• Political engagement – FIT, RHI and Green Deal policy certainty, tariffs, etc.

• Market development – awareness raising, pipeline development for Green Deal

Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study 22

Vision for public sector pathway

Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study 23

Commercial deployment potential

• PV• 160MWp, 1,300,000m² of panels

• 3,200 non-residential buildings

• Solar water heating• 8,300m² of panels on 1,700 or 20% of buildings

• Heat pumps• 200 or 3% of buildings

• Wind• For wind parks ≤5 turbines, 28MW or 11 turbines

• For wind parks ≥6 turbines, 375MW or 150 turbines

• Biomass• 14 installations of 1.5MW

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Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study 24

Vision for commercial delivery pathway

• Investment opportunities are clearly identified• Technical, economic and deployment potential based on WP1

• Benefits of growth agenda are articulated

• Preconditions are clearly understood by public and private sector + community

• Public sector is facilitating investment• Establishing clear public policies and protocols to provide market certainty

• Engaging in constructive dialogue with community

• Using its own assets to lever wider opportunities

Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study 25

Vision for commercial delivery pathway

• Investment is flowing, projects being developed• Cambridgeshire seen as county with good renewable energy development

potential

• Cambridgeshire demonstrated to be investor-friendly

• Supply chain is in place, levels of risk and return meet minimum commercial requirements

• Constructive dialogue, community benefiting and accepting

Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study 26

Vision for commercial delivery pathway

Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study 27

PV deployment potential

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Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study 28

Wind deployment potential

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Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study 29

What will the pathways look like or include?

• Compelling vision of what can be achieved

• Shared understanding of barriers and risks to implementation

• Cambridgeshire benefiting from up to £6.5bn of investment

• Local businesses are providing goods and services to the sector

• Leading county where people choose to invest

• Consistent and pro-active policy framework is adopted

• The public sector takes the lead

• Project plan for shared decision making

Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study

Cambridgeshire’s challenging carbon objectives

30

Cambridgeshire Renewables Infrastructure Framework baseline study 31

Thanks

Duncan Price

DirectorCamco

t: +44 (0)20 7121 6150 m: +44 (0)7769 692 610e: duncan.price@camcoglobal.com

172 Tottenham Court Road LondonW1T 7NS United Kingdom

www.camcoglobal.com

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