Issue - meetings
DENBIGHSHIRE'S LOCAL AREA ENERGY PLAN
Meeting: 24/09/2024 - Cabinet (Item 5)
5 DENBIGHSHIRE'S LOCAL AREA ENERGY PLAN PDF 240 KB
To consider a report by Councillor Barry Mellor, Lead Member for Environment and Transport (copy enclosed) seeking Cabinet’s endorsement of the Denbighshire Local Area Energy Plan Main Report and Technical Report.
Additional documents:
- LAEP - Appendix 1 Local Area Energy Plan_Denbighshire 20240819, item 5 PDF 3 MB
- LAEP - Appendix 2 LAEP Technical_Report_Denbighshire 20240819, item 5 PDF 7 MB
- LAEP - Appendix 3 Well-being assessment LAEP, item 5 PDF 94 KB
- LAEP - Appendix 4 SPG 22 July 2024 Mins_LAEP excerpt, item 5 PDF 202 KB
- LAEP - Appendix 5 - Pertinent risks - LAEP, item 5 PDF 121 KB
- Webcast for DENBIGHSHIRE'S LOCAL AREA ENERGY PLAN
Decision:
RESOLVED that Cabinet –
(a) endorses the Denbighshire Local Area
Energy Plan (LAEP) Main Report and Technical Report (Appendix 1 and 2 to the report),
understanding that the LAEP actions assigned to Denbighshire County Council
were subject to securing and maintaining necessary funding, and
(b) confirms that it has read, understood and
taken account of the Wellbeing Impact Assessment (Appendix 3 to the report) as
part of its consideration.
Minutes:
The
LAEP was a data driven, whole energy system setting out a route for the local
area towards meeting net zero targets as part of a coordinated approach. Ambition North Wales were managing a contract
with consultants developing the LAEP for Denbighshire and other North Wales
counties and the plans would fall under the ownership of each local authority
in Wales. All LAEPs would be aggregated
to inform the development of the National Energy Plan. The LEAP had been reviewed by the Greener
Denbighshire Board, the Cross-Party Political Working Group (Climate Change and
Ecological Emergency), Strategic Planning Group and Communities Scrutiny
Committee and the report included that feedback. Next steps included a Members Briefing on the
LAEP, the development of a delivery/monitoring mechanism to progress LAEP
actions, and a review of the Plan in approximately five years’ time.
Cabinet
was advised that the LAEP included high-level indicative costs with actions
assigned to many organisations. The
actions assigned to the Council aligned with Climate and Nature Strategy and
were subject to securing and maintaining necessary funding. Delivery of the actions would be for a wide
range of stakeholders and subject to sufficient political and financial
support.
The
Head of Corporate Support Services: Performance, Digital and Assets and the
Climate Change Manager were also in attendance for this item.
Cabinet
considered the comprehensive report acknowledging the importance of the LAEP
and collaborative approach in delivering on the ambitions for net zero
targets.
Main
areas of debate focused on the following –
· whilst there was one Wellbeing Impact
Assessment (WBIA) covering the whole plan it was a high level assessment
focused on broad areas whereas individual projects would likely require a
further WBIA and suitability sized or specific feasibility study to identify
what needed to be done and the impacts
· questions were raised regarding the uptake of
particular energy systems in private properties, such as rooftop solar panels,
etc. and assurances sought that they were accurately captured to be included in
future reports. Officers confirmed that,
as part of the process, the Carbon Trust had used open source data to ensure
insulation in private properties was included as part of the baseline of the
report. However, the report had
highlighted the need for a level of monitoring and oversight of those energy
systems and as a North Wales region further work was intended to explore tracking
with the Welsh Government through Ambition North Wales to inform that work and
engagement with private home developers and private homeowners. The need to have mechanisms in place to allow
all people the opportunity to contribute was highlighted
· the fast pace of change was acknowledged and
given the number of different factors and variables feeding into the LAEP the
data that informed it would quickly change.
The intention was to review and update the LAEP in approximately five
years’ time as the 2030 target date for net carbon zero approached but there
would also be annual monitoring and links with regional energy strategies and
national policies which would be carried out much earlier and more
frequently
· much work had been planned in terms of both offshore and onshore windfarms and further work would be carried out to increase capacity of the grid to capture the extra electricity generated as a result. The difficulty moving forward in terms of storage of renewable energy was discussed and the need for more innovative approaches in that ... view the full minutes text for item 5