Connect with us
Advertisement
Advertisement

Climate

Heat network funding extended to Wales as ministers promise lower bills and green jobs

Published

on

Households and businesses could benefit from cheaper, low-carbon heating under expanded UK Government scheme

HOUSEHOLDS and businesses in Wales are set to gain access to new funding for low-carbon heat networks, in a move ministers say will help cut bills, reduce reliance on fossil fuels and support clean energy jobs.

The UK Government announced on Monday (Apr 7) that the Green Heat Network Fund is being extended to Wales. The scheme, which already supports projects in England, will now back Welsh developments aimed at providing lower-cost heating through cleaner, centralised energy systems.

Ministers said the expansion would help protect consumers from volatile fossil fuel prices, while supporting the wider push for clean, homegrown energy.

The fund forms part of a wider programme expected to invest £195m a year in heat network projects across England and Wales for the rest of the decade.

Heat networks provide heating and hot water to multiple buildings from a central source. These systems can use low-carbon sources such as heat pumps, surplus heat from factories and data centres, or even energy recovered from sewage systems.

The UK Government said the move could create hundreds of jobs in Wales, with opportunities for engineers, architects and construction workers as the sector grows.

Energy Consumers Minister Martin McCluskey said: “We are determined to fight people’s corner in this crisis, as we recognise cost-of-living concerns will be at the forefront of people’s minds.

“Welsh households and businesses will be able to benefit from low-cost, low-carbon heat networks, protecting them from volatile fossil fuel prices we don’t control.”

Secretary of State for Wales Jo Stevens said: “The expansion of UK Government funding of low-cost heat networks to Wales is good news for billpayers and is just one of a range of measures we are taking to tackle the cost of living.

“We are lowering energy bills by up to £117 for households as well as reducing our reliance on imported fossil fuel to bring down bills and put more money into people’s pockets.

“Wales will also benefit from the new jobs that will be created in our growing green energy sector.”

Welsh Government Cabinet Secretary for Economy, Energy and Planning Rebecca Evans also welcomed the announcement.

She said: “As recent events have shown, it is vital that we reduce our reliance on fossil fuels and find new ways to heat our homes and buildings in a way which supports energy security and resilience.

“I’m pleased that organisations in Wales will be able to access this funding to support the development of heat networks, ultimately benefiting from lower heating bills.”

According to the government, there are already more than 500,000 heat network customers across Britain.

The announcement also follows recent changes to consumer protection rules. Earlier this year, Ofgem became the regulator for heat networks, bringing customers in England, Scotland and Wales more into line with those on traditional gas and electricity supplies.

Under the new arrangements, Ofgem can intervene where operators raise prices unfairly or provide poor service. Customers affected by outages may also be entitled to compensation through the Energy Ombudsman.

Aaron Gould, interim chief executive of ADE: Heat Networks, said Wales had strong potential for growth in the sector.

He said: “There is enormous potential for heat networks to grow in Wales, bringing low-cost, low-carbon heat, and jobs.

“Excellent work has been done by the Welsh Government to map priority areas, and align network plans with local ambitions. The government and sector in Wales is ready for massive growth, and extending GHNF to support these communities is a key step to a cleaner future.”

One example already backed in England is a £15m heat network in Sunderland, which will recover energy from a data centre to heat buildings across the city and is expected to create almost 300 jobs and apprenticeships.

 

Climate

Floating wind demonstration project off Pembrokeshire coast granted marine licence

Published

on

The Llŷr project could see up to ten floating turbines installed 35km off the coast, with power brought ashore at Freshwater West

A MARINE licence has been granted for a floating offshore wind demonstration project off the Pembrokeshire coast.

Natural Resources Wales has approved the licence for Llŷr Floating Wind Limited, allowing the Llŷr Floating Offshore Wind Farm Project to move forward.

The test and demonstration facility is proposed around 35km off the Pembrokeshire coast, off Linney Head, and is among the first demonstration-scale floating wind projects in Wales.

The scheme could include up to ten turbines, each reaching up to 300 metres above sea level, together with floating platforms, mooring lines and anchors.

Up to two offshore export cables, around 50km in length, are planned to bring electricity ashore at Freshwater West.

Ruth Jenkins, Head of Planning and Permitting Services and Marine Operations at Natural Resources Wales, said the organisation had a role to play in supporting the move towards clean energy while ensuring projects were developed responsibly.

She said: “At Natural Resources Wales, we have a unique opportunity to tackle the climate emergency across a range of sectors and industries. This includes using our licensing powers to support Wales’s transition to clean energy.

“As a regulator and advisor, we ensure energy projects are developed sustainably and with respect for the environment and local communities. At the same time, we play a vital role in enabling innovation in green energy, helping projects move forward safely and responsibly.

“Wales has enormous potential as a leader in renewable energy, and we’re committed to supporting the benefits that can come from these projects as we move towards net-zero targets.”

Natural Resources Wales is the Marine Licensing Authority on behalf of Welsh Ministers.

Full details of the marine licence granted for the Llŷr Floating Offshore Wind Farm Project are available on the NRW public register.

 

Continue Reading

Climate

Climate Corner: When the sea runs hot, the weather follows

Published

on

THE SEA is often treated as background. We look at heatwaves on land, at parched gardens, hosepipe warnings, pressure on hospitals, wildfires abroad and record temperatures in cities. But the ocean is where much of the climate story is really being written.

This week, European climate scientists reported that global sea surface temperatures outside the polar regions have hit record levels for this time of year. On June 21, data from the Copernicus Climate Change Service showed sea surface temperatures edging above the extraordinary records seen in 2023 and 2024.

That matters because the ocean is not just a passive victim of climate change. It is one of the main engines of the world’s weather.

Warmer seas put more moisture into the atmosphere. They help keep the air warmer for longer. They can add energy to storms. They can increase the risk of intense rainfall, flooding, marine heatwaves and disruption to wildlife. For coastal communities, fishing industries and anyone who depends on the sea, rising ocean heat is not an abstract statistic. It is a warning light.

The oceans absorb more than 90% of the excess heat trapped in the Earth system. That heat is mainly caused by the burning of fossil fuels such as coal, oil and gas. For decades, the seas have acted like a giant buffer, slowing the pace of warming on land. But that buffer comes at a cost.

The more heat the ocean stores, the more the whole climate system is pushed out of balance.

For Wales, this is not a distant concern. We have just seen an exceptional spell of heat. Cardiff Bute Park recorded 35.9C on June 25, setting a new Welsh June maximum temperature record. The same site also recorded an overnight minimum of 23.5C, a new record for both Wales and the UK.

Hot days are one thing. Hot nights are another. When temperatures do not fall properly overnight, people, animals, buildings and infrastructure get no chance to recover. That is when heat becomes especially dangerous for older people, young children, outdoor workers and those with health conditions.

The link between a warming ocean and weather in Wales is not simple. No single heatwave, storm or wet summer can be blamed on one measurement in the sea. Weather is always shaped by a mix of pressure systems, winds, ocean currents and natural patterns such as El Niño. But the direction of travel is becoming clearer. A warmer world loads the dice.

When the ocean surface is unusually warm, the atmosphere has more energy and more water vapour to work with. That can mean heavier downpours when rain does arrive. It can mean stronger marine heatwaves. It can affect fish, seabirds, plankton, shellfish and the wider food chain. Around our own coast, changes in sea temperature can influence where species live, how well they breed and how resilient marine habitats are to pollution, storms and disease.

This is why climate change should not only be discussed when there is a flood, a heatwave or a political row about net zero. It should be understood as a steady reshaping of the conditions we live with.

For Pembrokeshire, Carmarthenshire and Ceredigion, the sea is part of daily life. It supports tourism, fishing, ferry routes, wildlife, beaches, ports and coastal communities. Warmer seas may sound pleasant to some visitors, but they come with risks: more stress on marine ecosystems, changing fish patterns, increased coastal vulnerability and greater pressure on already stretched public services during extreme weather. There is also a danger that record-breaking weather becomes normalised.

The 2023 ocean temperature records shocked scientists. Then came 2024. Now those levels have been passed again. Each new record can make the previous one feel less remarkable, but the lesson should be the opposite. Records falling year after year are not a sign that we are adapting comfortably. They are a sign that the baseline is shifting.

The ocean has been buying humanity time. It has absorbed vast quantities of heat that would otherwise have warmed the land and atmosphere even faster. But the heat has not disappeared. It is in the system. It affects currents, storms, sea levels, ice melt and marine life. What happens at sea eventually comes back to shore.

There are still practical choices to make. Cutting emissions matters. Protecting saltmarshes, seagrass and coastal habitats matters. Planning for hotter summers and heavier rainfall matters. Supporting farmers, fishers, councils and emergency services to adapt matters. So does taking everyday heat risk seriously, especially for vulnerable people.

Climate change is sometimes presented as a future threat. But this week’s ocean temperature record is another reminder that it is already here, already measurable and already affecting the world around us.

The sea is speaking. The question is whether we are listening.

 

Continue Reading

Climate

Welsh waters, Westminster profits: Crown Estate row reignited in Wales

Published

on

PLAID CYMRU has renewed calls for the Crown Estate to be devolved to Wales after figures showed income linked to Wales rising from £8.7 million to £210 million in five years.

The party says the increase, described as a rise of around 2,300 per cent, shows that Welsh natural resources are generating huge sums while communities in Wales see little direct benefit.

The Crown Estate manages much of the seabed around Wales, England and Northern Ireland, including areas leased for offshore wind developments. Its profits are paid to the UK Treasury, rather than being retained directly in Wales.

Plaid Cymru’s Ceredigion-Penfro branch said: “Crown Estate profits are up 2,300% but Welsh communities see no benefit.”

The issue has become increasingly topical as Pembrokeshire and the wider west Wales coast are being promoted as key locations for the next generation of floating offshore wind in the Celtic Sea.

Supporters of devolution argue that Wales should have control over the revenue generated from its coastline, seabed and natural resources, with profits reinvested in local infrastructure, ports, skills, transport and public services.

They also point to Scotland, where the Crown Estate has already been devolved. In Scotland, revenue from Crown Estate assets is managed north of the border and contributes to Scottish public finances.

Plaid Cymru says Wales should be treated in the same way.

The party argues that, as offshore wind expands, Wales risks seeing major energy infrastructure developed around its coastline while the financial rewards continue to flow to Westminster.

The Crown Estate has benefited significantly from offshore wind leasing in recent years. Across the UK, the estate has reported profits of more than £1 billion for a third consecutive year, with offshore wind continuing to play a major role in its income.

In Wales, the political argument is sharpened by the scale of potential development in the Celtic Sea.

Ports such as Milford Haven and Port Talbot are expected to play a major role in supporting floating offshore wind, with politicians and industry leaders saying the sector could bring thousands of jobs and major investment.

However, campaigners say Wales must secure more than construction work and supply-chain promises. They argue that long-term control of Crown Estate revenues would allow Wales to build a lasting national benefit from renewable energy.

The UK Government has previously resisted calls to devolve the Crown Estate in Wales. Ministers have argued that Crown Estate profits are returned to the Treasury and used for public spending across the UK.

Opponents of devolution also say Wales already receives funding through the wider UK funding settlement, and that changing the Crown Estate model could add complexity at a time when major energy projects need certainty.

But calls for change have continued to grow, particularly as the value of offshore wind leases has increased.

For Plaid Cymru, the issue is now being framed as a question of fairness.

The party says Wales is being asked to host nationally important renewable energy infrastructure while having limited control over the income generated from its own natural resources.

With the Senedd election approaching, the future of the Crown Estate is likely to remain a major political dividing line.

For campaigners, the argument is simple: if Welsh waters are helping to generate hundreds of millions of pounds, Welsh communities should see the benefit.

For the UK Government, the current system keeps Crown Estate revenue within the UK-wide public finances.

The debate now turns on whether Wales should continue under that arrangement, or follow Scotland in taking control of Crown Estate assets for itself.

 

Continue Reading

Crime12 hours ago

Teacher stabbing trial: The first week of evidence

Jury hears accounts of alleged planned classroom attack, teacher’s fear she was dying, and boy’s words after leaving school A...

Community14 hours ago

Haverfordwest Castle refurbishment reaches new heights as roof goes on

Major milestone reached in project to transform historic gaol building into flagship visitor attraction A MAJOR milestone has been reached...

Business2 days ago

Pembrokeshire lands £98m share of Wales marine energy boom

New industry report says county has received the second highest level of marine energy investment in Wales, supporting more than...

Crime2 days ago

First aider tells jury teacher was “crying, shaking” after classroom stabbing

A SCHOOL first aider has told a jury that teacher Vicki Williams was “crying, shaking” and in “complete shock” after...

Crime2 days ago

Teacher feared she was dying after Milford Haven classroom stabbing

A TEACHER allegedly stabbed in the head at Milford Haven Comprehensive School told a jury she feared she was dying...

News2 days ago

Farage to resign as MP and fight Clacton by-election amid finance row

NIGEL FARAGE has announced he will resign as MP for Clacton and stand again in the by-election he intends to...

Crime3 days ago

Teacher tells jury there were ‘no issues’ with accused pupil hours before ‘stabbing’

Milford Haven teacher gives evidence as trial of 15-year-old continues at Swansea Crown Court A TEACHER allegedly stabbed at Milford...

News3 days ago

Major incident stood down after fire at Impala Terminal in Milford Haven

Fire involved decommissioned oil tank containing residual crude oil and around 60 cylinders A MAJOR incident declared during a fire...

News3 days ago

Large fire breaks out at Impala Terminal in Milford Haven

Black smoke seen for miles as emergency services respond to incident at former Puma Energy site A LARGE fire has...

Crime3 days ago

Prosecution outlines ‘planned attack’ as Milford Haven teacher stabbing trial opens

Jury hears teenager allegedly brought kitchen knife into school before teacher was stabbed in the head THE JURY in the...

Popular This Week