The government is preparing a major publicity campaign to promote the planned
introduction of a new carbon cap-and-trade scheme that will impact over 5,000 UK
organisations from 2010.
Speaking at the
Corporate
Climate Response (CRC) conference in London, environment minister Phil
Woolas said that the government would roll out a major "information and
awareness campaign" before the end of the year designed to raise awareness of
the legislation and ensure public and private sector managers are well prepared
for its introduction.
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"Although two years may seem like it is a long way off, in business planning
terms it is not," he said, adding that the extension of mandatory carbon trading
to impact "mid-sized organisations", including hotels, supermarkets, hospitals
and Whitehall departments, would force
"carbon
management" principles into many organisations for the first time, affecting
"hundreds of thousands of employees and millions of customers".
The upcoming awareness campaign is expected to be followed in early 2009 by a
major
Defra
programme to identify which organisations use over 6,000MW of electricity a year
- roughly equivalent to electricity bills of over £500,000 - and as such are
legally obliged to enter the CRC.
"Every half hourly meter in the country will be written to as part of a
reconciliation process to determine whether it is above the threshold or not,"
explained Ray Gluckman of consultancy
E
nviros, which is working with Defra on the implementation of the scheme.
Woolas advised however that there was not a huge amount execs could do
currently to prepare for the CRC as the government is still trying to "put the
jigsaw together" and finalise the legislation.
But other speakers at the event advised that firms could and should act early
to prepare for the CRC by recording and reporting their energy use and
instigating strategies to enhance energy efficiency.
Defra is currently requiring larger firms to measure, record and report their
energy use for calendar year 2008 to help to set an accurate base line from
which to calculate emission caps in the first full year of the scheme in 2010.
In addition, Jim Butler, head of marketing strategy at energy giant
EDF,
said that "early birds" would prove the "winners" under the CRC. "Those sites
that will win will be well organised with their data, will know whether they are
in or outside the scheme, and are planning now," he added.
Officials from Defra also confirmed that many energy saving measures
undertaken now will be accounted for when organisations' energy performance is
assessed under the CRC.
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