Britain outlines plans for 2025 coal-power phase out

Reuters  |  LONDON 

(Reuters) - will set an emission limit on coal-fired power generators from Oct. 1, 2025, forcing them to close unless they are fitted with carbon capture technology, the said on Friday.

As part of its efforts to meet the country's climate targets, in 2015 announced it would end "unabated" coal-fired power generation - plants without technology to capture and store carbon emissions - by 2025.

The Department for Business, and Industrial Strategy (BEIS) fleshed the plan on Friday, saying it would set an emission limit of up to 450 grammes of CO2 for each kilowatt hour of produced to make sure polluting plants close.

Since introduced a tax on CO2 emissions from power plants in 2013, power generation has plummeted, with the country last year seeing its first day of coal-free power generation since the industrial revolution in the 19th century. [nL8N1HT2F7]

Around 6 gigawatts (GW) of coal-fired power capacity is currently in use, capable of powering around 6 million homes, but BEIS said that by the 2025 date it expects this to fall to just 1.5 GW and that other forms of generation will make up the shortfall.

With many of the country's nuclear power plants also set for closure in the late 2020s, and few new plants being built, the in 2017 first started payments under a capacity market, which pays plants to make available at short notice.

"Our assessment is that the Capacity Market will ensure that there is sufficient capacity in place to replace unabated units when they close," BEIS said.

has a legally binding target to cut emissions by 2050 to 80 percent below 1990 levels as part of a drive to counter global warming.

(Reporting by Susanna Twidale; Editing by Mark Potter and Adrian Croft)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, January 05 2018. 19:04 IST