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Local Economic Solutions for Sustainability
Extending Localisation
Introduction
Manufacturing
and resources
Food
Retail
and local centres
Energy
Finance
Overarching
issues
Next
steps
LWM
Home
Localise West Midlands
The Warehouse
54-57 Allison Street
Digbeth
Birmingham
B5 5TH
Tel: 0121 685 1155
Fax: 0121 643 3122
Email: info@localisewestmidlands.org.uk
Registered in England and Wales as a company limited
by guarantee (not for profit) no: 6239211
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Extending Localisation
- an exploratory report
Energy
Cheap energy has been one of the drivers of globalised trade. Electricity
and gas are supplied by national 'grids'; both generation and transmission
of electricity are multinational in ownership. Oil is globally distributed.
Sources of energy for electricity have been oil, gas, coal and nuclear,
sourced internationally; with a small but growing renewables sector. There
is a small proportion of embedded renewables. Energy distribution systems
need to combine efficiency, stability and energy security.
Negative trends
- The UK's centralised grid system wastes two-thirds of the energy that
goes in, 65% in generation processes as waste heat, and just over 7%
in transmission.
- The present government seems committed to nuclear power, which would
not meet CO2 targets in time and diverts money away from potentially
huge programmes of energy efficiency and renewables.
- The West Midlands could not produce enough fuel crops within our ecological
or geographical footprint to continue our over-use of transport fuels.
- The Regional Assembly's Regional Energy Strategy states it cannot
meet the government's paltry 10% renewables obligation due to having
no coastline. Although the agenda has moved on considerably since this
strategy was written, it has not yet been updated.
- One barrier to maximising the potential of decentralised renewables
for electricity is efficient and readily available energy storage. This
needs further investigation. Also Feed-in tariffs.
- The installation of renewables in social housing on a large scale,
as happened at Summerfield, Birmingham, is not replicable without a
major change in the financing infrastructure as it took hefty amounts
of Neighbourhood Renewal Funding.
- Energy from Waste can damage resource efficiency by creating a demand
for burning materials that could be locally reused or minimised. See
also manufacturing section.
Positive trends,
good practice and opportunities
- While in the past, remote rural areas of the region being off the
gas grid may have been a disadvantage, there could be advantages in
that their abilities to think about alternative fuels and their community
fuel security are more practised.
- Particular for electricity, decentralised energy networks are more
efficient and have better financial benefits. A decentralised system
waste less in transmission and allows smaller generating plants to use
the heat locally (piped to homes and other spaces) as well as the electricity
generated. There are currently no offgrid networks such as the one at
Woking in the West Midlands but these could be encouraged. Birmingham
has installed two on-grid combined heat and power plants; this technology
is growing fast. Capturing and using heat where it is a by-product of
any other process (egg a manufacturing process) is also a feasible solution.
- Embedded renewables are efficient if the demand is right, as less
is wasted in transmission.
- Climate change bill commitments, Code for Sustainable Homes and the
energy performance directive all support a more efficient way forward.
- There are significant commitments to a low carbon economy in terms
of both technology and personal behaviour in the Regional Economic Strategy.
Agencies such as the Marches Energy Agency provide strong local expertise
in low carbon, localised energy systems.
- The emergence of Transition towns, community energy saving initiatives
and low carbon villages provides a massive vehicle for behaviour change.
- Public awareness from local energy supply: if people can see the production
of energy in their own community, it reduces the 'someone else's problem'
attitude that many have towards responsibility for the energy we all
use.
- Given our lack of coastline, the West Midlands's biggest renewables
asset is its potential for biomass particularly waste biodigestion:
biogas from sewage and food waste could replace the natural gas we currently
use - due to agriculture and high density centres of population. The
region has biogas expertise in the form of biogas company Greenfinch,
based in Shropshire. Unlike 'energy from waste' incineration, biodigestion
can take create a closed loop system and produce a natural soil conditioner
in the process.
- Eccleshall, Staffordshire, has a biomass power plant fuelled by locally
grown miscanthus; it was installed by Talbotts , a Staffordshire-based
specialist biomass company. Several West Midlands rural schools have
installed biomass burners and there is a fuel-crop-powered CHP plant
at Harper Adams Agricultural College.
- Rapeseed, as part of mixed, rotation farming, is being used to provide
biomass as a byproduct of the food crop, which minimises the fuel's
footprint.
- Biodiesel from used cooking oil is produced on a small scale within
the region and is an excellent re-use of resources, but risky and expensive
on a commercial basis according to a Birmingham study ; other biodiesel
production in the region is made from virgin oil sourced non-locally.
Production companies sited here could take more advantage of local materials
and markets.
- The Green New Deal approach provides funding mechanisms for energy
efficiency and local renewables.
- Decentralised power can be owned by the community more easily, which
again means some taking of responsibility but can also mean getting
the financial and security benefits.
- Rising transportation costs may make more localised manufacture of
renewable technologies more viable (this is also a pillar of the RES):
wind turbines could replace the area's automotive industry; solar photovoltaics
(including solar tiles) and similar.
- East Birmingham Community Energy Company has proposals for locally
owned renewables, including an innovative idea for low-cost solar 'hire
purchase'.
- Social enterprises around the region offer domestic energy efficiency
services at affordable prices. In particular, Birmingham Social Enterprise
Energy Network is delivering job creation within social enterprises
for delivering energy efficiency work for individuals and housing associations.
- Local ownership models: Embedded renewables are locally owned; community
ownership models of on-grid electricity generation are also sometimes
practicable. CHP plants such as those within Eastside and at Woking
tend to need a major backer and be outside the scope of pure community
ownership. For practical reasons it tends to work better that the community
own a share in a bigger renewables development. One of four wind turbines
on the proposed at Reeves Hill Wind Farm in Herefordshire is planned
to be owned by a community co-operative so that there is a community
stake. Energy4all provides the expertise on this.
Potential recommendations
- The region first needs to look at reducing demand for energy by means
of energy efficiency and after this at its own sources, which will mainly
be renewable sources and waste sources, supplying decentralised networks
for communities within the region.
- Best recommendations for tackling transport energy localisation involve
reducing inefficiencies of mileage, which is covered by other sectors
of this report. The role of biodiesel for the West Midlands within crop
rotation and ecological footprint should further be investigated.
- Work is needed on effective and practical community ownership models
to help increase the multiplier effect, awareness and social capital
from renewables and efficiency projects.
- Promote Green New Deal ideas locally and nationally as a strategy
for the current crises.
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