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[A-List] UK corporate state: Powergen
Sooner or later it will dawn on someone somewhere that this really is not
the way to govern the business of electricity generation...
Powergen closures send shock waves through energy market
By Michael Harrison, Business Editor
The Independent, 10 October 2002
Powergen, the UK's third-biggest electricity producer, yesterday announced
the closure of a quarter of its generating capacity, blaming the collapse in
wholesale prices and the Government's lack of a long-term energy policy.
The company, now part of the giant German utility group E.ON, is mothballing
its Killingholme gas-fired plant in Lincolnshire and the Isle of Grain
oil-fired station in Kent, resulting in a reduction in capacity of 1,800
megawatts.
Paul Golby, Powergen's chief executive, said that since the introduction of
the new electricity trading arrangements or Neta 18 months ago, wholesale
prices have fallen by 40 per cent. "This situation is simply not
sustainable. The market is bust," he added.
Powergen's action follows the collapse of the UK's biggest electricity
producer, the nuclear generator British Energy, which is only being saved
from insolvency by an emergency £650m cash injection from the Government.
Powergen mothballed one of the two 450 megawatt units at Killingholme
earlier this year and yesterday it said it was withdrawing the second one
along with the two 675 megawatt units at Grain.
The two power station closures will reduce Powergen's capacity by 26 per
cent and cut its share of the market to about 7 per cent. However, only 85
jobs will be affected.
Mr Golby said Powergen would "continue to review our options in light of
these difficult market conditions" - a clear hint that it could reduce
capacity still further.
He also called on the Government to bring forward the publication of its
energy review, which is not due to appear until early next year. "What the
market needs is a long-term energy policy which delivers all of the
Government's objectives, not just lower prices," Mr Golby said. "This is a
problem which is facing everybody, not just British Energy. If companies
like mine are to invest in future generation such as renewable energy then
we need to have healthy sustainable businesses. The market, at the moment,
just does not allow that to happen."
The current price of wholesale electricity is 13p to 15p a unit compared
with the 18p it costs to produce electricity from gas and nuclear stations
and the 22p price that would be required to justify building new gas-fired
capacity.
Although the UK has about 22 per cent more generating capacity than it
needs, even on the coldest winter day, ministers have been warned that there
will be a shortage of capacity in the longer term unless they act now to
give generators the incentive to build new plants.
Mr Golby said that as a first measure the Government should accelerate the
closure of the ageing fleet of Magnox nuclear reactors operated by the
state-owned British Nuclear Fuels and provide incentives for generators to
build replacement capacity.
E.ON paid £5.1bn for Powergen 18 months ago and took on a further £4.5bn in
debt, taking the cost of the deal to £9.6bn. The takeover also brought with
it the US electricity company LG&E and 3.5 million retail customers in the
UK.
Powergen has offset its generating losses partly by selling wholesale
electricity to its retail arm at cheap prices, increasing the profitability
of its supply business. But Mr Golby said Powergen was still exposed because
it generated twice as much electricity in the UK as it supplied through its
retail arm.
- Thread context:
- [A-List] Pakistan: more stable than you think,
Michael Keaney Thu 10 Oct 2002, 12:11 GMT
- [A-List] UK corporate state: unhealthy accumulation,
Michael Keaney Thu 10 Oct 2002, 12:08 GMT
- [A-List] UK corporate state: Powergen,
Michael Keaney Thu 10 Oct 2002, 12:05 GMT
- [A-List] Iraq: that old supergun thing, again,
Michael Keaney Thu 10 Oct 2002, 12:02 GMT
- [A-List] US/Russia tensions: Iraq,
Michael Keaney Thu 10 Oct 2002, 12:01 GMT
- [A-List] EU integration struggles: Ireland & Nice Treaty,
Michael Keaney Thu 10 Oct 2002, 11:59 GMT
- [A-List] EU integration struggles: Turkey,
Michael Keaney Thu 10 Oct 2002, 11:57 GMT
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