UK poised to lead G7 on clean electricity production

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Ambitious clean energy policies mean the UK could make stronger carbon reduction commitments when international targets are revised in 2025.

The UK is in a position to raise its international commitment, or Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC), to cutting carbon emissions by one to two percentage points at next year’s COP30 climate conference in Brazil thanks to ambitious clean electricity policies set in motion by successive governments, according to analysis by energy experts from Imperial.

At the upper end, this could see the UK jump from third place among the G7 nations to become the group’s leading clean electricity producer by 2030.

These projections are made in reports by Dr Iain Staffell and colleagues from Imperial’s Centre for Environmental Policy working independently via Imperial Consultants for the energy company SSE.

The researchers have analysed the impact of two recent clean energy policies on carbon targets: the British Energy Security Strategy introduced by the Conservative government in 2022; and the Clean Power Mission promised this year by the new Labour government.

They have also devised a clean electricity scorecard for the G7 nations, ranking their progress in decarbonising electricity over the past decades and their pledges for the future.

This is something no-one has done before, said Dr Nathan Johnson, the lead contributor to the studies. “We’ve taken data and targets that are difficult to interpret, and turned them into something that hopefully anyone can understand,” he says.

From third to first place

The Clean Electricity Scorecard has three simple, yet critical, metrics: the share of clean electricity; gross carbon intensity; and net carbon intensity. These are scored with a traffic-light system to represent falling behind (red), almost on track (amber) and on track (green).

Between 2010 and 2022, the UK jumped from last in the G7 to third in terms of clean electricity share. Commitments for 2030 announced when the UK last updated its NDC would see it remain in third place – almost on track in all categories – since the other G7 nations are making similar progress.

Clean Electricity Scorecard graphic
The UK's place on the Clean Electricity Scorecard under existing targets (CB6), with implementation of the British Energy Security Strategy (BESS), and with the Clean Power Mission (CEM).

Implementing the Conservative’s British Energy Security Strategy would have taken the UK to second place, above Canada, with a clean share of 93%. Labour’s new Clean Power Mission would take the UK to the top of the G7, above France, with a clean share of 97%. If these targets are achieved all of its metrics turn green.

This move is significant because of the rapid expansion of clean energy sources in the UK. “France and Canada have lots of nuclear and hydro power, but that’s a legacy, installed not because they were low carbon but because they were the cheapest way to meet demand for electricity at the time,” Dr Johnson explains. In contrast, the UK has rapidly decarbonised an electricity system built on fossil fuels.

Setting targets

The Imperial analysis also shows that implementing the two clean energy policies would give the UK scope to increase its NDC under the Paris Agreement on climate change, which is due to be updated at the COP30 climate conference in Brazil in 2025. 

“This work involved some quite dense modelling,” explains Dr Johnson. “We took the targets for renewable energy deployment and ran them through a power systems model, which tells us what this means for emissions and the kind of electricity generation sources that would be displaced by new wind and solar installations.”

Wind power projections

Solar and hydrogen graphicImplementing the British Energy Security Strategy would allow the UK to upgrade its 2030 commitment by 0.9 percentage points to a 68.9% reduction on 1990 levels. The more ambitious Clean Power Mission would allow the 2030 commitment to be increased by 2 percentage points to 70%. This represents an additional saving of 8-17 million tonnes carbon dioxide emissions each year. 

“We show that the UK’s latest commitments could meaningfully move the dial on its NDC,” says Dr Johnson. “Hopefully that will be an inspiration to other nations to do the same ahead of the next COP.” 

Getting the message out

SSE chose Dr Staffell’s group to carry out this work because of its ability to bring clarity to the complex business of energy systems. Alongside his research into sustainable energy systems, for example, Dr Staffell leads the Drax Electric Insights project, an interactive website and quarterly report also commissioned via Imperial Consultants that follows the supply, demand, price and environmental impacts of Britain's electricity. 

“We thought that Iain and his team would be well-placed to help us tell the story of the success that has happened in decarbonising the GB electricity system. Alistair McGirr Group Head of Policy and Advocacy, SSE

“We’d seen some of the work Iain and his team have been doing with data visualisation of quite complex trends in the British power system,” explains Alistair McGirr, Group Head of Policy and Advocacy at SSE. “We thought that they would be well-placed to help us tell the story of the success that has happened in decarbonising the GB electricity system, and how upcoming ambition could be translated into real-world action and hopefully encourage others to follow suit internationally.”

According to Dr Johnson, efforts to decarbonise electricity need to accelerate across all G7 nations. “The UK is in a good position, in that it needs to accelerate decarbonisation by a smaller factor than other nations, but it is still sizeable,” he says. And while ambition is important, it is action that counts. “Targets are only targets – what matters is actually meeting them.”

Main image courtesy SSE

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Ian Mundell

Ian Mundell
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