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PRESS RELEASE: AD industry calls for low-carbon CfD scheme to support small-scale renewables

  • Anaerobic digestion (AD) trade body ADBA makes call on day that Feed-In Tariff ends
  • AD has potential to generate 75 terrawatt hours of energy
  • ADBA also calls for AD not to be excluded from future CfD auctions

 

On the day the Feed-In Tariff (FIT) has ended, the trade body for the UK’s anaerobic digestion (AD) industry has called on the government to introduce a bespoke low-carbon Contracts for Difference (CfD) scheme to support small-scale renewable technologies.

AD plants generate renewable electricity, heat, and natural fertiliser by treating organic wastes and energy crops. They also offer a range of other benefits including greenhouse gas mitigation from avoided waste emissions, income diversification for farmers, and energy and food security.

The UK’s AD industry currently has capacity to power 1.2 million households, offering flexible, baseload power, but has the potential to generate 75 terrawatt hours of energy with the right support. Ofgem’s latest quarterly report, published in December, showed that the FIT had supported 290 megawatts of AD capacity.

Charlotte Morton, Chief Executive of the Anaerobic Digestion & Bioresources Association, said:

We agree with government that small-scale, low-carbon electricity generation should compete independent of direct subsidy and on its own merits on a level playing field with other electricity-generation technologies. To ensure it can compete with other generation technologies, AD must therefore no longer be excluded from applying to future CfD auctions.

 

Beyond this levelling of the playing field, we’re calling on government to develop a bespoke, small-scale, low-carbon CfD auction mechanism to encourage competition in the small-scale sector and recognise the additionality that AD can provide in the form of greenhouse gas mitigation, agricultural diversification, and energy and food security.

 

An initial government intervention would be required to structure such a mechanism and ensure parity with larger power generators and the fossil-fuel technologies that still get favoured through the Capacity Market.

 

This bespoke auction would help provide a route to market for AD plants producing renewable electricity and offset the ending of the FIT, under which tariff levels had been insufficient to incentivise the building of new AD facilities for quite some time.

 

AD can make an important contribution to meeting a range of climate and energy goals (not least decarbonisation and energy security) but it’s vital for this contribution to be recognised and supported by government.

ENDS 

 

Notes for editors 

Anaerobic Digestion & Bioresources Association (ADBA) website: www.adbioresources.org 

ADBA is the trade association for the anaerobic digestion (AD) industry in the UK and companies and organisations working on novel technologies and processes that compliment the anaerobic digestion process and products. With our members we promote the economic and environmental benefits of AD in the UK.

We represent organisations from many sectors including: AD operators, AD developers, AD equipment providers, water companies, farmers, food & drink retailers, waste companies, universities and more.

 

Contact details 

Chris Noyce, PR & Parliamentary Affairs Executive, ADBA 

T: 020 3176 5441      E: chris.noyce@adbioresources.org 

Website: www.adbioresources.org 

Twitter: @adbioresources 

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