Meeting of the Parliament 15 March 2016
I have raised extensively with the UK Government our concerns that its energy policy is putting security of electricity supply in the UK at serious risk. I have raised our concerns with Ed Davey and Amber Rudd. The First Minister raised them with the Prime Minister in a letter urging him to intervene to avert the premature closure of Longannet.
I am afraid that the Prime Minister would not lift a finger. To justify his inertia, he alluded to the stance taken by National Grid. At that point, National Grid had a very optimistic view about what was going to happen on the grid. I put the argument to National Grid that the coal-fired power station was going to come off the grid more quickly than it anticipated. The power stations that will close reasonably soon include not only Longannet but Fiddlers Ferry, Rugeley, Eggborough and Ferrybridge. That amounts to about 15 per cent of peak energy demand in Great Britain.
We believe that that is a very serious issue and that, frankly, the UK’s approach of introducing a new nuclear power station, some time towards the end of the next decade, does not cut the mustard.