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Wind power cut Northern Ireland’s gas spend by £243m in 2023

21 January 2024 06:03

News Letter has published an article saying Northern Ireland wind turbines also saved approximately 920 kilo tons of carbon last year, equivalent to the amount of carbon produced by 200,000 homes. Caliber.Az reprints the article.

A new report has revealed that in 2023, Northern Ireland spending on gas was cut by £243 million by local wind energy generation.

The figures come from Wind Energy Ireland’s Annual Report and a new analysis published by energy specialists Baringa entitled Cutting Carbon Cutting Bills: Analysis of gas savings delivered by wind farms in 2023.

The Baringa analysis found that, without wind energy, Northern Ireland would have had to spend an additional £176 million on gas, most of which would have been imported, for power generation and an extra £68 million on carbon credits to burn that gas.

They also estimated Northern Ireland wind turbines saved approximately 920 kilo tonnes of carbon last year, equivalent to the amount of carbon produced by 200,000 homes.

The latest figures from the Department for the Economy’s Electricity Consumption and Renewable Generation in Northern Ireland: Year Ending September 2023 showed that 47.4 per cent of total electricity consumption in Northern Ireland was generated from renewable sources. Of this, 83.8 per cent was generated by wind.

Director of RenewableNI, Steven Agnew, said: “Northern Ireland was able to reduce the reliance on fossil fuels last year because of investment in renewable energy in the previous decade. In 2016 we connected 400MW of new renewable generation but only 86MW of large-scale generation has been connected this decade.

“Investment in the sector has stalled. The Accelerating Renewables report revealed 82% of global developers considered Northern Ireland an unattractive investment location for renewables. More than $350 billion of capital has poured into renewable infrastructure investment around the world in the first half last year yet Northern Ireland has attracted virtually nothing.

“Two years ago, the final act of the Assembly was passing the Climate Bill making it a legal obligation to have 80% renewable generation by 2030. Unfortunately, nothing has changed since then. Planning timelines, grid investment and a route to market remain barriers to development.

“As more generation becomes available consumers will have increased energy security and protection from volatile fossil fuel prices, as well as cutting our carbon emissions.

“An Accelerating Renewables Taskforce needs established urgently to ensure NI gets back on track for meeting its renewables target.”

Caliber.Az
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