GreenWeek Volume 21, November 1 | Page 6

News review In brief Sustainable Investment Name change REpower Systems SE, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Suzlon Group – the world’s ?fth-largest manufacturer of wind turbines – will change its name in 2014 to be called Senvion. REpower has been using its name under licence since 2001. The rights belong to a Swiss company that is now using this name itself. Therefore the external corporate design will be gradually changed. The Hamburg-based wind turbine manufacturer will now identify itself using the new brand image worldwide. Sustainable Industry DECC cuts its own energy bills Energy Ministers have slashed their Whitehall department’s energy bill from £222,845 in 2011 to £182,482 in 2012. The ?gures were revealed in a written answer to Parliament by Greg Barker. Sustainable Living No to fracking In response to the concerns of local residents, the London borough of Brent has followed the lead of Brighton Council by banning fracking. Sustainable Industry Dusty future As drylands of the world become even drier, water will not be the only resource in short supply. A new study suggests that as the climate becomes more arid, nitrogen in the soil will decrease and phosphorus will increase. Both are essential for plant growth, but need to be present in the right quantities. The study suggests that people who depend on those ecosystems for crops, livestock forage and fuel will ?nd their resources increasingly restrained. In Arizona, the projected decrease in plant production could magnify the impact of dust storms, which have been increasing in recent decades. 6 GreenWeek Nov 1, 2013 Sustainable Politics DECC distances renewables from green levy roll-back row Scramble to reaf?rm that support for renewable energy is secure By Stuart Qualtrough E nergy Ministers have the scrambled to distance Government’s ?nancial backing for renewable energy from the ongoing row on rollingback energy ef?ciency levies. DECC reaf?rmed the Coalition’s target of trebling support for renewable energy by 2020. And Energy Secretary Ed Davey said he would “?ght like a tiger” to protect subsidies for renewables. RenewableUK welcomed separate comments made by Energy Minister Baroness Verma in the House of Lords when she said no one in Government is “talking about changing support for largescale renewables or Feed-in Tariffs”. Director of External Affairs for RenewableUK Jennifer Webber said: “It was pleasing to see a Government minister go on record to give this assurance to the industry that the support for renewables is not under threat from this Government. We have recently had reviews on the support needed by each technology and there’s no need to revise that.” Baroness Verma’s comments followed con?rmation from DECC that support for renewables would not fall within the scope of the upcoming levy review, which will Cash support for renewables is not under threat from Government review feed into the Autumn Statement. A statement said: “The Government is looking at how to get people’s energy bills as low as possible to help hard-pressed families. We’ve already increased competition, brought new players into the market to offer consumers real choice, and the most vulnerable are getting direct help with their bills this winter. We’ll continue this work to make sure consumers are getting a good deal. “No one is talking about changing investment incentives for renewables, such as the Renewables Obligation, Contracts for Difference and Feed-in Tariffs, which are essential for investor con?dence in the renewables sector and our commitments to a low-carbon economy. Between now and 2020, the support we give to low-carbon electricity will increase year-on-year to £7.6bn – a tripling of the support for renewable energy.” STA CEO Paul Barwell said: “Credit to the Secretary of State Ed Davey’s of?ce for being very quick to reassure us that investment in renewables is safe. While the public political wrangles have been frustrating, some of the media reporting has been inaccurate – and inaccurate reporting can create real damage for investors.” Overheard “The Government has so far responded to the risks inherent in fracking by cutting the budget of the environmental regulator and effectively allowing companies to mark their own homework when it comes to monitoring” Leila Deen, Greenpeace Energy Campaigner “I am not going to give up on renewable energy. They are not going to touch it” Ed Davey draws his battle lines against the Conservatives in a Guardian interview