Increasingly Noncompetitive Electricity Prices Threaten U.K. Paper Industry


Research conducted by the Confederation of Paper Industries (CPI), U.K., has highlighted a growing disparity in industrial electricity costs between the U.K. and other parts of the European Union, in particular Germany. The U.K. has the second most expensive industrial power in Europe, with grid supplied electricity to U.K. Paper Mills costing almost twice as much as that for German mills.
  
Much of this cost disparity arises from U.K. government taxation and climate change related costs, which now add around £20/MWh of electricity used—adding around a third to the total cost.

This increasing cost of U.K. electricity poses a real risk to the international competitiveness of electro-intensive industries such as paper. According to CPI, "the situation is compounded by the fact that industrial gas prices across the EU (including the U.K.) are roughly double that of some of our global competitors—notably the USA."
  
A package of measures is required to rebuild U.K. competitiveness, but CPI calls on the government to address one particular issue as a matter of urgency—escalating costs of the Renewables Obligation (R/O) and Feed-in-Tariffs (FiTS). "In 2014, the Chancellor promised additional support for electo-intensive industries to offset the cost of these measures. This support needs to be implemented immediately. Without urgent action, more energy intensive installations are likely to close with the consequent loss of jobs and wealth creation," CPI noted.

The research undertaken by CPI compared costs actually paid for electricity by industrial users in the different countries. It used data supplied by Member Companies that operate installations in both the U.K. and Germany and takes actual electricity costs drawn from bills after the application of all relevant charges that affect the price paid.
  
The results reveal that in 2011, the cost of grid electricity in the U.K. was only around 5% more than that actually paid in Germany—a differential that has grown rapidly, so that by 2014 the cost of electricity for U.K. electo-intensive industries had risen to around twice that paid in Germany.
  
A number of contributing factors, CPI pointed out, emerged during its research:
David Workman, CPI director general, said that "we can only reverse the decline of papermaking here in the U.K. if industry leaders decide that by investing here in the U.K., they can operate competitively—otherwise the rational decision is to invest elsewhere and export product to the U.K. With energy being one of the key production costs, internationally competitively priced electricity is a prerequisite for a successful industry. Current government policies are manifestly not delivering competitively priced electricity for industrial users—an unsustainable situation in the longer term."

For more information, contact Emma Punchard, director of communications.  

TAPPI
http://www.tappi.org/