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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 11 November 2015

11 Nov 2015 · S4 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Energy Storage Network
MacKenzie, Mike SNP Highlands and Islands Watch on SPTV

I am very grateful to Mr Salmond for that further information. Like midges, a lot of small Scotsmen are equally difficult to exterminate.

Energy storage is also used to provide a degree of energy security. The pumped storage facility at Cruachan provides the initial black-start power to jump-start the system in the event of a system-wide failure.

With the advent of renewable energy, with all its possibilities and opportunities, energy storage is even more critical. Critics of wind energy often make the self-evident observation that the wind does not blow all the time—they might not have talked to some of my constituents in Tiree. That is a backward-looking, Luddite view of centralised energy production, which fails to recognise that the current energy system is failing us.

The evidence of failure is in our high energy costs, with rates of fuel poverty of more than 30 per cent across Scotland and more than 50 per cent on some of our islands. The evidence of failure is in our spare capacity generation, which is at an all-time and dangerous low of 1.2 per cent, according to National Grid. The evidence of failure is in the UK Government’s enormous subsidy for the untried and untested European pressurised reactor at Hinkley Point, and in the UK Government’s desperation in bribing the Chinese to invest in such a risky venture.

The solution to the problem and the way forward is to embrace the possibility of clean, green renewable energy generation. Scotland has the possibility of generating many times our own energy requirements, and the variety of storage solutions is limited only by our ingenuity and our extraordinary capabilities for technological innovation—something that we Scots have been good at for generations. There is no single magic bullet. Pumped storage, hydrogen, flywheels, ever cleverer and bigger batteries, compressed air, electric vehicles and other new and emerging technologies all offer exciting energy storage solutions.

There are a number of reasons why we must increase both our renewable energy generation and, in tandem, our storage capability. We need to do so to meet our climate change targets; we need to do so because, as world energy demand continues to rise, we need to increase our energy security; and we need to do so because we have a huge competitive advantage in these technologies and, therefore, a huge economic opportunity both at home, in capturing this enormous resource, and abroad, in exporting our skills and the technologies that we develop—technologies and skills in which we are already well ahead of the rest of the world.

The only missing ingredient in bringing all this to fruition is the lack of political will from the UK Government, which needs to recognise, as Tom Johnston did, that what is good for Scotland can also be good for the rest of the UK. As we consider our constitutional future, we must remember that the aim of constitutional change is the delivery of good government, and an essential part of good government lies in enabling us to capture our economic opportunities, especially in sectors such as energy in which we have a huge competitive advantage.

We have already stood by and watched as much of our oil wealth has been squandered. It would be a tragedy if we were forced to watch the same thing happen to our renewable energy opportunity.

17:12  

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Elaine Smith) Lab
The final item of business today is a members’ business debate on motion S4M-14440, in the name of Mike MacKenzie, on the energy storage network. The debate ...
Mike MacKenzie (Highlands and Islands) (SNP) SNP
I am pleased to have secured this debate in order to shine a light on energy storage, because energy storage is an often forgotten and sometimes undervalued ...
Michael Russell (Argyll and Bute) (SNP) SNP
It would be useful for the member to know that the admiration for Tom Johnston spreads across the chamber. I seem to remember that a portrait of Tom Johnston...
Mike MacKenzie SNP
I am grateful to Mr Russell for that information. I had not realised that Tom Johnston’s portrait was in Bute house. In Tom Johnston’s wisdom he recognised ...
Alex Salmond (Aberdeenshire East) (SNP) SNP
Tom Johnston also tried to exterminate the Scots midge, but that was less successful. The point that I was going to make was that he took emergency legislati...
Mike MacKenzie SNP
I am very grateful to Mr Salmond for that further information. Like midges, a lot of small Scotsmen are equally difficult to exterminate. Energy storage is ...
Sarah Boyack (Lothian) (Lab) Lab
I thank Mike MacKenzie and congratulate him on securing the debate. It might not look like the most exciting issue that we will debate this week, but it is p...
Joan McAlpine (South Scotland) (SNP) SNP
I, too, congratulate my friend Mike MacKenzie on securing this important and timely debate. Last year, I was delighted to host an event in Parliament with H...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Lab
You need to close, please.
Joan McAlpine SNP
I am just finishing. During last week’s crisis, the price that National Grid paid to some generators reached £2,500 per megawatt hour when it is normally £5...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Lab
I must now ask members to keep to four minutes. Even if they do so, given the number of members who still wish to speak in the debate I am minded to accept a...
Alex Johnstone (North East Scotland) (Con) Con
One of the first things that I was ever taught in a science class was that energy can never be created or destroyed; it can only be changed from one form to ...
Claudia Beamish (South Scotland) (Lab) Lab
Does the member agree that the kind of pumped storage scheme that I see on the Falls of Clyde and across Scotland is a much better model than the centralised...
Alex Johnstone Con
I might have time later to get on to the subject of diversity of energy sources, which is something that I believe in. The other point that I wanted to make...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Lab
Please close.
Alex Johnstone Con
If we fail to be diverse in our energy sources, we run a much greater risk of that power not coming on. 17:28
David Torrance (Kirkcaldy) (SNP) SNP
First of all, Presiding Officer, I must apologise to you and Mike MacKenzie for not being able to stay until the end of the debate. I thank Mike MacKenzie f...
Liam McArthur (Orkney Islands) (LD) LD
I, too, congratulate Mike MacKenzie on securing this important debate and I join him in acknowledging and welcoming the work that Scottish Renewables has don...
Nigel Don (Angus North and Mearns) (SNP) SNP
I, too, thank Mike MacKenzie for bringing this important debate to us. I also thank him for the history lesson about Tom Johnston. I have a family connection...
Stewart Stevenson (Banffshire and Buchan Coast) (SNP) SNP
Other members have mentioned Tom Johnston, but one key aspiration that he had has not yet been referred to. He imagined that, with the building of hydroelect...
The Minister for Business, Energy and Tourism (Fergus Ewing) SNP
It has been an excellent debate, and I thank Mike MacKenzie for securing it. I very much welcome the Scottish Renewables paper “Energy Storage: The Basics”...
Sarah Boyack Lab
Will the minister take an intervention?
Fergus Ewing SNP
I would really like to make these points. I am very sorry but I need to make progress. That expert group should comprise senior officials and it should be s...