+44 (0)24 7671 8970
More publications     •     Advertise with us     •     Contact us
 
Loading...
{megaLeaderboard}
{normalLeaderboard}
News Article

Electricity generation under RO reached 23.4 percent in UK 2015-16

News

Ofgem E-Serve has published its Renewables Obligation (RO) Annual Report for 2015-16. The report shows:

"¢ RO-accredited stations generated 69.1TWh of electricity, equivalent to 23.4 percent of the total electricity supplied to the UK of 295.8TWh.

"¢ When the 5.6TWh of electricity generated by Feed-in Tariff installations is included this figure rises to 25.2 percent, an increase of 5.3 percentage points on last year.

"¢ 90.4 million Renewables Obligation Certificates (ROCs) were issued "“ more than the total UK supplier obligation of 84.4 million ROCs.

"¢ An equivalent of 33.7 million tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions were avoided through the scheme "“ a 14.4 percent increase on last year.

"¢ 6,724 generating stations were accredited under the RO, a small increase on the 6,658 stations accredited in 2014-15, bringing the total to 20,789 stations with a total capacity of 25.5GW.

"¢ RO accreditations were driven by micro Northern Ireland Renewables Obligation (NIRO) generators which comprised 6,308 stations accredited in 2015-16.

Introduced in Great Britain in 2002 and Northern Ireland in 2005, the RO supports the deployment of large-scale renewable electricity generating stations in the UK.

Accredited power stations are awarded Renewables Obligation Certificates (ROCs) based on the amount of renewable electricity they generate. These ROCs can then be sold directly to energy suppliers or to other third parties.

Suppliers submit ROCs to Ofgem E-Serve as proof that they have met their obligation under the RO to source a proportion of their power from renewable sources.

The overall Renewables Obligation is set by the Department of Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS). Individual suppliers' obligations are set by Ofgem E-Serve per the amount of electricity they supply to customers. In 2015-16 all suppliers met their respective obligations.

Any supplier which does not present enough ROCs to meet its obligation must pay into a buy-out fund instead. The level of supplier compliance using ROCs in 2015-16 was at 99.9 percent, the highest it has ever been. Consequently, this resulted in the lowest buy-out fund since the scheme began.

Generation technologies accredited under the scheme include: onshore and offshore wind, solar photovoltaic, fuelled (biomass, biogas).

Onshore and offshore wind combined received the largest share of ROCs, followed by fuelled stations and solar photovoltaic, which more than doubled when compared to 2014-15.

The Renewables Obligation has now closed to new solar PV generating capacity across Great Britain and new onshore wind across the UK. It will close to all other technologies in March 2017.

Ofgem E-Serve is the delivery arm of Ofgem, the Office of Gas and Electricity Markets, and administers the RO on behalf of BEIS in Great Britain, and on behalf of the Department for the Economy in Northern Ireland.

Schletter Group: 48 MWp Project in Italy
ENCAVIS Acquires Two More Solar Parks In Spain and Surpasses The Planned Expansion
Maximum profitability with KACO advanced technology for complex solar roofs
Enviromena wins contract to re-power three major solar farms ahead of the summer energy peak
New Swansea University Collaboration to Support Sustainable, Locally Manufactured Solar PV
New Swansea University Collaboration to Support Sustainable, Locally Manufactured Solar PV
Next2Sun Builds World's Largest Vertical PV Plant at Frankfurt Airport
DNV Publishes Bankability Study of Solcast Satellite Irradiance Data
Steel company SSAB switches to fossil-free energy in Italy with PV solution from Solnet
janom Investments enters the Croatian solar energy industry by investing in a 30 MW power plant project
Trina Solar Vertex S+ 505W n-type dual-glass modules enter mass production
BayWa r.e. and 3E sign partnership agreement for monitoring & analytics of global PV portfolio
Accelerating Spain's Energy Transformation: LONGi to supply Naturgy with 1 million modules in new deal
NTR announces corporate PPA with Almac Group to buy energy from Murley Wind Farm, Northern Ireland
Oxford PV sets new solar panel efficiency world record
Order Intake for the Construction of Wind Turbines in Turkey
Trilantic Europe acquires stake in AEROCOMPACT Group
Octopus Energy makes solar farm debut in Germany
Austria-based KOGA Energy, a solar EPC solutions provider, has kicked off.
Exus to acquire 625MW New Mexico solar portfolio
Capcora Accompanies SUSI Partners In Raising Senior Debt For a Polish Renewables Portfolio
Qualitas Energy acquires a 96 MW wind energy project pipeline in Germany
Nordex Group receives orders from the UK for approx. 150 MW
Trina Solar gains EPD certification from UL Solutions and EPDItaly for industry leading modules
Mandarin Oriental Hyde Park, London instals innovative solar tech to decarbonise heating
Efficiency First: The Road to Electrification
SCHLETTER Supplies Austria's Largest PV Roof System
E.ON partners with UK renewable heat innovator Naked Energy
Sonnedix signs innovative EUR500 million loan facility to finance construction of its renewable electricity pipeline in Europe and UK
Construction begins on Glennmont and Ørsted’s Borkum Riffgrund 3 offshore wind farm in Germany
ABB shores up reliable power supply at Southeast Asia’s largest floating solar plant
Sonnedix starts construction of 300MW UK solar PV portfolio

×
Search the news archive

To close this popup you can press escape or click the close icon.
Logo
×
Logo
×
Register - Step 1

You may choose to subscribe to the Solar + Power Magazine, the Solar + Power Newsletter, or both. You may also request additional information if required, before submitting your application.


Please subscribe me to:

 

You chose the industry type of "Other"

Please enter the industry that you work in:
Please enter the industry that you work in: