The Future Energy Scenarios framework, which sets out a broad and deep analysis of the road to a net zero energy system, is a crucial resource for energy industry planning. Here, Regen associate director Ray Arrell summarises the main themes emerging from the 2024 FES.

The Electricity System Operator (ESO) has this week launched the 2024 edition of the Future Energy Scenarios (FES) framework, a broad and deep analysis of the road to a net zero energy system. The framework sets out three pathways to decarbonise the energy system by 2050, alongside a counterfactual that doesn’t meet our carbon targets. The pathways have varying levels of electrification or hydrogen, and of flexibility in how end consumers use power.

You can read the main FES 2024 pathways report here.

The FES is a crucial resource and framework for energy industry planning. The Regen team, for example, uses it to inform the assumptions in the more ‘bottom-up’ Distribution Future Energy Scenarios (DFES) we carry out with distribution network operators (DNOs) to guide local network planning. We will be digesting the outcomes and assumptions in the new FES pathways in the weeks ahead – however, a few key headlines are starting to emerge.

A clearer ‘pathway’?

In a welcome move, the ESO has framed the FES as a move towards a set of narrower pathways (rather than broader scenarios), aiming to provide some clarity on the uptake of well-established technologies and solutions, while still reflecting ongoing uncertainties for how we are to decarbonise industries and homes.

For example, a central, shared pathway for electric car take-up has now been modelled across the three net zero scenarios out to 2040. This reflects the increasing market share of EVs that can be seen across the UK.

Shifting from a world of broad scenarios to aid planning, towards a clearer central pathway that we invest for, with sensitivities, is an important step to delivering on our ambitious targets.

What about a new government?

Due to the timing of a new Labour government, the FES 2024 pathways may not fully/directly account for the party’s 2030 clean power commitments and targets for the offshore wind and solar sectors.

The Electric Engagement and Holistic Transition pathways do assume an ambitious deployment of renewable energy technologies. However, the details of the new government policies will inevitably change both the speed of deployment and mix of technologies. For example, we can expect a resurgence of onshore wind development in England (off the back of the removal of planning restrictions).

Regen’s Accelerating Clean Power paper sets out the steps that the new Labour government can take to set out the future power system through actions on the grid, market reform, planning policy and ensuring a just transition to clean power. Our Progressive Market Reform for a Clean Power System paper sets out detailed proposals for how this can be enabled through a progressive market reform package that reduces investment and implementation risk.

The challenge of adapting industry planning to changing government policy is a useful reminder as we shift to a Strategic Spatial Energy Plan that any energy plan, pathway or scenario will need to evolve and adapt as circumstances change.

Technologies where FES has made significant changes

The new FES has also made some significant shifts in its assumptions on key technologies, in particular:

  • The growing pipeline of electricity storage projects has been reflected in a significantly increased near-term projection of grid-scale storage in all pathways. If the proposed reforms to connection policy and queue management are implemented effectively, a number of projects could move through to build-out and connection in the next few years.
  • The pace of heat pump adoption has been reduced, reflecting economic challenges and evolving policy support currently facing consumers. However, ESO has stressed the need to accelerate progress on the support for heat pumps, irrespective of pending government policy decision points on hydrogen for heating.
  • There is an increased focus on the role of blue hydrogen to decarbonise ‘hard-to-electrify’ industry sectors. However, questions remain about the readiness and economic viability of CCUS technology and hydrogen storage at the scale required.

FES and the new National Energy System Operator

NESO coordination
The FES is one part of a wider programme of strategic network planning that will be led by NESO, alongside the Centralised Strategic Network Plan and Strategic Spatial Energy Plan.| Source: ESO

The FES report also highlights that as the National Energy System Operator (NESO) is established, its core objective as the strategic energy system planner will ensure that the FES pathways work in tandem with both the Centralised Strategic Network Plan and the Strategic Spatial Energy Plan processes. In addition to this, as the role, governance and day-to-day activities of the Regional Energy Strategic Planners are bottomed out across 2024, the FES pathways will need to continue to consider and adapt to regional outcomes and priorities for decarbonisation.

This joined-up approach will be essential to plan our energy system for net zero effectively. Regen will continue to work closely with distribution networks and the ESO to ensure that project pipelines, local stakeholder input and local area energy plans are continually reflected in our DFES analysis, and that a feedback loop between the annual FES pathways and DFES deep-dive assessments is maintained.

 

Regen will continue to delve into the detail of the FES 2024 pathways – in particular focusing on how the national pathway will play out in local places across the UK and how the assumptions fit with the bottom-up evidence from the market on what projects are being developed.

To find out more about our work in this space, please contact Ray Arrell, associate director.

 

 

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