Utility Week

UTILITY Week 11th September 2015

Utility Week - authoritative, impartial and essential reading for senior people within utilities, regulators and government

Issue link: https://fhpublishing.uberflip.com/i/568088

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 2 of 31

UTILITY WEEK | 11TH -17TH SEPTEMBER 2015 | 3 Leader Ellen Bennett This week 4 | Seven days 6 | Interview Mark Horsley, chief executive, Northern Gas Networks 9 Policy & Regulation 9 | News Support for Corbyn is a wake-up call 10 | Utility Week Lobby The Labour leadership contest 12 | Market view Five easy steps to improve Eco 14 | Analysis Independent suppliers respond to the CMA provisional findings 15 | Analysis Drax makes a stand and takes the Treasury to court 19 Finance & Investment 19 | News Hinkley Point C faces further delays 20 Operations & Assets 20 | High viz Northumbrian Water's Guisborough upgrade 21 | Pipe up Jane Gray 22 | Market view How smart meters will help fight energy theft 23 | Analysis The creation of heat as a high-value service 25 Customers 25 | News Ofgem blamed for half-hourly metering delay 26 Community 26 | Event Utility Congress 2015 28 | Charity WaterAid at World Water Week 31 | Disconnector Utilities are still fine public servants Win or lose, Jeremy Corbyn has radically changed the political landscape this summer, reintroducing a le-wing narrative that has been missing from UK politics since New Labour rose to power in the 1990s. Whatever your colours, and whatever the result of the weekend's leadership election, there's no denying that the re- emergence of the hard le has profound implications for utilities (see Lobby, p10). The most obvious area of debate will be around Corbyn's per- sonal desire to renationalise UK infrastructure, including energy companies (although he's been uncharacteristically quiet on water). There are additional implications around the potential strengthen- ing of union power that will be of interest to those running utilities. Undoubtedly, a Corbyn victory would spook investors. But it's not all bad: Corbyn's new political narrative can be seen as an opportunity for the sector. Throughout 25 years of privatisation, regulated energy and water businesses have remained fiercely driven by the very public service ethos that Corbyn advocates. He would take issue with their financing model, but here too they have a strong story to tell. Take CKI, the Hong Kong-based family investor behind Northern Gas Networks, UK Power Networks and Northumbrian Water. NGN chief executive Mark Horsley praises them to the skies in this week's interview (see p6), echoing claims from other utility leaders about CKI and other overseas investors, that we simply wouldn't have the quality of public services we have today without them. For understandable reasons, such investors have hitherto preferred to stay in the shadows – but perhaps now is the time to tell their story. It's a slightly different conversation on the liberalised energy supply side of the market. As Nigel Hawkins explains (see p11), a full privatisation would be near-unaffordable – but a price control, say, would be relatively easily achievable. This is not a million miles away from the backstop tariff proposed by the CMA this summer, and while it's a long way from a free market, it's not necessarily a disaster for private investment, which elsewhere favours the certainty of a regulated return. A leadership contest is a long way from an election and even if Corbyn wins this weekend, the prospects of a Red revolution in Number 10 are distant. But as the UK's political debate changes colour and tone, utilities have nothing to be ashamed of, and nothing to fear from a public debate. Ellen Bennett, Editor ellen.bennett@fav-house.com GAS 6 | Gas Mark Horsley, chief executive, Northern Gas Networks 19 | News Act now to drive gas storage investment WATER 20 | High viz Northumbrian Water's Guisborough upgrade 28 | Charity WaterAid at World Water Week ELECTRICITY 15 | Analysis Drax makes a stand and takes the Treasury to court 19 | News Hinkley Point C faces further delays 25 | News Ofgem blamed for half-hourly metering delay ENERGY 9 | News Support for Corbyn is a wake-up call 10 | Lobby The Labour leadership contest 12 | Market view Five easy steps to improve Eco 14 | Analysis Independent suppliers respond to the CMA provisional findings 22 | Market view How smart meters will help fight energy theft 23 | Analysis The creation of heat as a high-value service Knowledge worth keeping Visit the Downloads section of Utility Week's website http://www.utilityweek.co.uk/ downloads Schneider Electric: Modicon M580. It's a revolu- tion. Everytime. http://bit.ly/1FZogqK Cognizant: Using Predictive Analytics to Optimize Asset Maintenance in the Utilities Industry http://bit.ly/1cBKZP0

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Utility Week - UTILITY Week 11th September 2015