1 John Barnes Environment and Sustainability Director United Utilities Water and Climate Change: United Utilities Perspective
Mar 26, 2015
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John BarnesEnvironment and Sustainability Director
United Utilities
Water and Climate Change: United Utilities Perspective
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Presentation Overview
• Brief Overview of UU• The impact of climate change of the provision of water
services• Adaptation – the impact on our activities and our response• Mitigation – our strategy and plan
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Water and Climate Change – a starting point
“The economy is a wholly owned subsidiary of the environment”
Herman Daly, 2005
“The effects of climate change will be felt everywhere …In the UK the effects will be mainly mediated through water, with increases in the number of both flood and drought incidents expected”
H.M Treasury 2006
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Introduction to UU
– We are the UK’s largest listed water & wastewater company
– Turnover of £2,386.8 million (2005/6)
– Market capitalisation of £6,507 million
– We provide services to over 27 million people worldwide
– Employing 8,000 people
– £10 billion invested in the UK between 1989-2005
– Between 2005-2010, £3.5 billion will be invested by UU in its water, wastewater and electricity networks – that works out at more than £20 per second
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UK operations
Welsh WaterAsset management and operation, £1.5bn over 15 years
United Utilities£3.5bn capital investment programme covering water, wastewater and electricity distribution over 5 years.
Southern Water £750m capital programme delivery
Scottish Water£1.4bn capital programme delivery and PFIs
Northern Gas Networks15% equity owner, asset management and operation, 36,000km network
Serve close to
30% of the UK
population
8,000 employees
Contracted to deliver £5bn of capital
investment projects across the globe
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How Climate Change will impact the north west – water services
• Wetter winters with more intense rainfall
• Hotter and drier summers but with intense rainfall
• Longer droughts, more severe droughts and more frequent droughts
Thirlmere Reservoir, Lake District
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Responding to the impact on our activities - water
2035 estimate – shortfall in supply of some 10% or around 200 million litres of water every day
Measures to address this:• Reduce demand for water (leakage control and customer efficiency)• Increase supply of water (small scale new resource development and greater network integration)• Key proposal is the East-West link to move water from Prescot to Bury linking Lake District and Welsh sources
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How Climate Change will impact the north west – wastewater services
• Increased flooding incidences• Increased CSO discharges• Reduced final effluent discharge dilution• Increased blockages
Carlisle Wastewater Treatment Works – January 2005
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Responding to the impact on our activities - wastewater
Traditional approach, to build our way out of this problem, will not work. Focus must be on:
– Education – awareness that flooding can not be eliminated but must be managed,
– Make public true levels of risk of flooding from all sources
– Planning input – mandatory that all new development be drained on a sustainable basis e.g. green roofs, rainwater recycling, SUDS
– Responsibility – Reduce the number of stakeholders involved in urban drainage to 2 – the regulator and a single operator
Green roofs (above) and detention ponds (below)
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Planning Our Response
• Adaptation - a long term problem that demands a long term answer
• Planning for its consequences needs to begin right now• We are including our intentions in our regulatory plans for
2010 to 2015 .• These plans will be influenced by the UKCIP rainfall
scenarios to be released next year
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UU’s carbon strategy and plan
There are four key strands to our carbon management strategy:
• Seeking to achieve a net 5% reduction on the 2005/06 baseline for our “owned” carbon emissions by 2012 (with projected rises this is actually a reduction of 8% overall)
• Continuing our reduction of emissions beyond 2012 in line with the long-term government targets set for 2050
• Influencing the external environment to support the achievement of these aims
• Pursuing a vision of making carbon an integral part of the way we do business
But what is the context for setting this direction?
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Providing context – UU’s carbon footprint
UU-owned emissions split by source
72%
20%
4%
3%
1%
Net Grid Electricity Consumption
Process Emissions
Other Fuel use
Transport Fuels
Rail and Air Travel
• 2006/7 emissions - directly responsible for 472 thousand tonnes of CO2 equivalent using one-third of one per cent of all UK electricity
• A further 1.57 million tonnes that we don’t directly own but can have an influence over.
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Providing context – emission projections
• UU’s operational carbon footprint has nearly doubled since 1990• This is a direct consequence of £10 billion of investment in assets to
deliver environmental and customer improvements
Graph of emissions – 1990 - 2050
UU Group GHG emissions 1990 - 2050
0
100000
200000
300000
400000
500000
600000
1990 1994 2000 2005 2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 2035 2040 2045 2050
Year
To
nn
es o
f C
O2e
Actual carbon emissions (1990-2005) and projections to 2020
Linear reduction of 60% from 1990 baseline
Impact of mitigation activities to 2020
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Delivering our carbon strategy – to 2012
• A 8% gross reduction in CO2e emissions by 2012
• £22m investment in increasing CHP yield by 80%
• UU home to one quarter of all sewage gas CHP sites (23 in total)
• Improving pump energy efficiency
• 18% reduction through green energy supply contracts
Delivery of one 2.4 MW CHP engine to Davyhulme WwTW
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UU’s (and the industry’s) challenge – the journey to 2050 and a 60% reduction
• UU carbon emissions baseline (2005/6) 488,000 tCO2e
• Climate Change Bill targets 60% reduction on 1990 levels by 2050
• For UU, this equates to 122,000 tCO2e
• To meet that target equals a reduction of 366,000 tCO2e
• The diagram illustrates what abatement strategies could be adopted, with what impact and at what price
488,000 tCO2e
122,000 tCO2e
CHP and IPM = 38,000 tCO2e
Cost = £37m
Cost = £??
Wind = 80,000 tCO2e
Cost = £80m
Low carbon technology
= 80,000 tCO2e
170,000 tCO2e = TBD
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Delivering our carbon strategy – to 2050
• On the journey to 2050, aim to halve owned emissions from current
levels by 2035
• require energy neutrality in wastewater operations
• reduced pumping in water network
• tackle problems at source
• appropriate financial instruments
• on-going research into renewable generation and low carbon technology
• promoting water efficiency
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Delivering Our Strategy through influencing others – our customers
• Power Shower Study
joint project with Liverpool John Moores University
electric showers better than mixer or pumped showers
water saving showerheads
• Better information
• For customers, making the link in the minds of our customers that there is a carbon footprint associated with the provision and use of water
– Reduced heating of water (about 8 x water cycle footprint)
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Delivering our strategy – stakeholder challenges
• For Ofwat and the Environment Agency, crucial to strike the balance between the on-going delivery of aquatic environmental improvements and the airborne (i.e. carbon) consequence
• For Ofwat, creating the framework to encourage investment in greenhouse gas mitigation
– Financial instruments such as incentives– Minimising the impact of the enhancement programme– Reducing the footprint of the existing assets/maximising
energy recovery
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Delivering our strategy – the role of employees
• Employee engagement is crucial to change behaviour
• Our employees can provide many ideas on reducing carbon emissions
• Changed business processes are needed to embed carbon into decision making e.g. inclusion of cost of carbon into PR09 planning
• Sector first in appointing full-time Carbon Manager to lead plan delivery
• Carbon communications plan (both internal and external) in place to promote our carbon management agenda