NICOLA STURGEON was told she may need to “find a new customer” for Scotland’s excess renewable energy in the event of a breakaway from the UK.
The leader of the Scottish National Party (SNP) has claimed another vote “is the will of the country” and reaffirmed that it is a “matter of when not if”. She also sent a message to Prime Minister Boris Johnson for “picking a fight with the democratic wishes of the Scottish people” after a fourth consecutive victory in the Scottish Parliament election. But should she be successful, Mrs Sturgeon faces potentially losing a huge partner in the energy sector.
Electricity formed a key part of the first independence battle as Scotland boasts one of the most favourable conditions in Europe for harvesting wind energy.
The Scottish government’s 2014 independence proposal stated that a single UK-wide market for each of electricity and gas should continue.
But the Government argued that it saw no basis to justify continued cost-sharing of a single integrated market and stated the arrangement “could not continue in its current form” – essentially cutting ties.
Former UK Energy Secretary Ed Davey told BBC Radio Scotland’s Good Morning Scotland programme: “I think Britain’s single energy market – where we are integrated as we are now, where energy flows across the border very easily – that makes our energy more secure, it keeps costs down and it will enable us to go green, to go low carbon.
“Split that up and all those benefits go.
“As secretary of state for energy and climate change for the whole of the UK, I really care about what is happening in Scotland.
“If I am no longer secretary of state for energy in Scotland I have to put the interests of consumers in England and Wales and Northern Ireland first.”
Commenting on the situation at the time, risk analyst Adam Leech noted: “The crucial issue is not what Scotland does at home, but whether it can maintain its impact in the UK from the outside.
“If so, it can continue to sell the renewable energy it doesn’t need to the rest of the UK.
If not, it may need to find a new customer.”
The Government warned that household energy bills would increase by at least £38 and annual household bills could increase by up to £189 if the full cost of supporting renewable energy projects fell to Scottish bill payers.
But the Scottish Government refuted the claims and former Secretary for Rural Economy, Fergus Ewing, even claimed that England’s lights “would go out” without Scotland’s renewable energy.
The SNP said that a single UK-wide market for each of electricity and gas was the only logical step forward.
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