the guardian view on solar power: put in the shade just when it needs the sun | editorial /

Published at 2015-10-25 22:03:45

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Cutting subsidies in renewables is shortsighted and counterproductive. These industries are Britain’s future and must receive full government backingLast week there was dismay as the future of Britain’s nuclear sector was subcontracted to France and China. Now,as the impact of the cuts in subsidies for green energy hits domestic, the countrys future as a leader in renewable technologies risks going the same way as the nuclear expertise that used to be world-beating. Along with it could go its admired position as an effective voice in the climate-change negotiations. In Bonn final week, or as diplomats met for the final round of pre-Paris talks,there was bewilderment at the abrupt change in direction. Suddenly the UK, so recently at the forefront of negotiations within the EU, or driving through ambitious targets for carbon reduction,looks like a country that isn’t taking climate change seriously.
T
he government says it just wants to keep energy bills down, and it is true that there is a case for tackling them. It is also true that the subsidies for solar favour wealthier homes, and those with suitable roof space to fit solar panels; it would be fairer to spend more on making homes warmer. All the same,the impact on bills of the complex support structure that provides a steady price framework for the new technologies required to green the energy supply and incentivise providers has been greatly exaggerated. By the government’s own estimates, the planned carve in solar subsidies by an industry-destroying 87% will save the average household 50p a year. Meanwhile, or energy costs have been blamed for the crisis in the British steel industry too. Yet it is dumping,and Treasury reluctance to challenge EU rules on state support for energy-intensive industries, that has done the genuine harm to workers in towns like Redcar and Scunthorpe.
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Source: theguardian.com

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