Ed Miliband’s Net Zero drive will trigger financial crash, former chief scientific adviser warns

The warning is attributed to Professor Michael Kelly, a Professor of Technology at the University of Cambridge. He previously served as a chief scientific adviser to the UK government (in the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills under the coalition government around 2010-2015, focusing on engineering and infrastructure issues).

In the article, Kelly argues that Ed Miliband’s aggressive push for Net Zero- particularly the rapid decarbonization of the electricity grid and the “Clean Power 2030” ambitions- will lead to a financial crash.

He is quoted directly: “Net zero will lead to financial crash and a lot of this investment to date will be abandoned. It’s an impossible program which will crash.”

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Ed Miliband’s Net Zero drive will trigger financial crash, former chief scientific adviser warns.

It follows predictions electricity prices could be even higher in 2030 than during the height of the Ukraine energy crisis.

Michael Kelly, Professor of Technology at the University of Cambridge and a former Government chief scientific adviser, said the scale and cost of rebuilding the UK’s electricity grid is so vast the country is heading for an economic crash once the full impact of expensive energy triggers an inevitable backlash from households and businesses. GBN has the story.

His warning comes after Chris O’Shea, chief executive British Gas owner Centrica, said household electricity prices are on course to exceed the peak reached after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

“Our projections show that the UK energy system will be one where by 2030 the electricity price will be higher than it was at the peak of the Russian invasion of Ukraine,” Mr O’Shea said. “A third of the cost of that electricity (by 2030) will be wholesale costs, and the other two-thirds will be system costs.”

At the height of the crisis, average annual electricity bills surged from £717 in 2021 to around £1,200 in 2023. Today, the energy price cap stands at £1,758 for a typical dual-fuel household. Energy debt has climbed from around £1.8billion to nearly £5billion.

Mr O’Shea insisted rising costs are not purely down to climate policy.

“Those system costs aren’t net zero costs, he said. “They are addressing years and years of underinvestment and whether we went for net zero or new fossil fuels, we would need to incur those system costs.”

Professor Kelly disagreed and instead blamed Net Zero. He said, based on his own calculations, the total cost of transforming the National Grid to support a net-zero energy system could reach £1.4trillion over 30 years — equivalent to roughly £50 billion every year. Even if the UK could secure the finance and materials, Professor Kelly calculated, the country does not have the skilled and professional human resources to get halfway to completion by 2050.

He also highlighted problems obtaining new high-voltage transformers that control power nationwide, which are in short supply worldwide. He said: “We have a three-year waiting list for high-performance transformers for the grid, and the total grid upgrade will cost £1.4trillion over 30 years. Where will that money come from?”

Prof Kelly said his estimate includes:

  • £700 billion for substations and local distribution upgrades
  • £500 billion for new power generation
  • £200 billion for transmission infrastructure

Read the full story here.


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