Sat, May 09, 2026
Text Size
Thursday, 19 May 2016 08:33

ADBA warns 10% FIT capacity for new AD plants wasted – “shocking waste of renewable electricity”

New Ofgem figures – analysed by by the Anaerobic Digestion and Bioresources Association (ADBA) – have revealed that the Feed-in Tariff available for new AD plants could be even more heavily restricted than first thought.

The new FIT scheme has quarterly ‘caps’ on maximum deployment for each technology, which are set at 5MW for anaerobic digestion. An application for a plant which breaches the cap is counted towards the next quarter – but any capacity unused is simply lost.

This is despite the government’s consultation response saying that “any unused capacity for a particular technology and degression band from one quarter simply gets added on to the next quarter.”

Over 10% of 2016 FIT allocation for AD plants is set to be wasted

On 13 May Ofgem released data on the FIT deployment indicative queue, which shows the level of FIT capacity the scheme is likely to waste in the second, third and fourth quarters of 2016. Although these figures and application places in the queue may alter if any applicants withdraw their plants, at present more than 2.38MW of the FIT’s total installed capacity is due to be lost. This is over 10% of the year’s allocation for AD.

Tariff period two has 1024kW wasted capacity, tariff period three 424kW, and tariff period four 487kW. Ofgem did not release data for tariff period one but have told ADBA that of the 5.8MW cap 445kW was unused and is therefore not being carried over.

“A shocking waste of MWs worth of renewable electricity”

Charlotte Morton, ADBA’s Chief Executive, commented:

“The FIT deployment cap of 20MW per year for AD is already constraining much needed baseload capacity, failing to recognise our industry’s ambition. Not rolling over unused capacity from one tariff period to the next is salt in the wound and a shocking waste of MWs worth of renewable electricity which DECC has already accounted for.”

ADBA says the figures released by Ofgem show the scale of wasted capacity but future quarters could see far more MW of wasted potential – the Association is now calling for DECC to urgently review this situation.

ADBA has now written to Department of Energy and Climate Change to raise the impact of this interpretation of the FIT regulations, and seek a resolution which will allow the industry to continue to develop at least at up to the 20MW cap.

News Showcase

Sign up to receive the Waterbriefing newsletter:


Watch

Click here for more...

Login / Register




Forgot login?

New Account Registrations

To register for a new account with Waterbriefing, please contact us via email at waterbriefing@imsbis.org

Existing waterbriefing users - log into the new website using your original username and the new password 'waterbriefing'. You can then change your password once logged in.

Advertise with Waterbriefing

WaterBriefing is the UK’s leading online daily dedicated news and intelligence service for business professionals in the water sector – covering both UK and international issues. Advertise with us for an unrivalled opportunity to place your message in front of key influencers, decision makers and purchasers.

Find out more

About Waterbriefing

Water Briefing is an information service, delivering daily news, company data and product information straight to the desks of purchasers, users and specifiers of equipment and services in the UK water and wastewater industry.


Find out more