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Utility Week 16th November 2018

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UTILITY WEEK | 16TH - 22ND NOVEMBER 2018 | 17 Policy & Regulation Speakers' views: George Day, head of markets, policy and regulation, Energy Systems Catapult "Whole systems can sound abstract and long term – if you want to develop a market, and want to innovate and sell hybrid heat pumps, Matt Rooney, engineering policy adviser, the Institution of Mechanical Engineers "You can learn from Australia on what not to do. What political instability does to carbon pricing where they had a plan for ETS, then they had a tax, then they with- drew the tax all in the space of a few years. It is an interesting case study to look at." David Joffe, acting head of carbon budgets, the Committee on Climate Change "I'd like to see increased focus on how we can use cheap renewables to accelerate the electrification of the transport and heat sectors during the 2020s, and not just wait until the 2030s and 2040s. What are the mechanisms by which we can pull that through?" Simon Virley, partner and head of energy at KPMG and former director general for energy at the Department for Energy and Climate Change "The system of long- term contracts for dif- ference we introduced in the power sector has helped reduce the costs of decarbonisa- tion by providing greater certainty for investors and thereby reducing the costs of capital. Theoreti- cally, the government could increase carbon taxes to achieve the same end result, but investors know that tax levels can be changed each year in the Budget. Grandfathered private law contracts tie government's hands and could prove a useful tool as we seek to decarbonise the heat and transport sectors." Andy Limbrick, environmental consultant, Energy UK "I think we need to establish a clear post- Brexit baseline for carbon pricing and make sure we main- tain strong cross- party agreement on the need to tackle climate change." then your market is going to be affected by the imbalance between gas electric- ity prices that we have now. Taxing gas when people haven't got an alternative is a problem, but the alter- native will not emerge unless something is done about the frame- work of incentives." Brought to you in association with

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