- Emissions reduction target raised to 80% by 2050
- Ground-breaking initiative linking carbon budgets with performance
- Carbon reductions at the core of operational decision-making to encourage ‘bottom-up’ employee involvement
National Grid today announced it is to increase its target of reducing company-wide greenhouse gas emissions from 60 per cent to 80 per cent by 2050.
It also unveiled its intention to adopt new carbon budgets across its UK and US electricity and gas businesses from April 2009, integrating them into the management of its day-to-day business operations and company performance process, to help achieve this target.
National Grid’s Chief Executive, Steve Holliday, said:
“Minimising our impact on the environment while delivering safe, secure and economic supplies of energy to customers is not an option, it is a must. And the two have to be tackled together. We have already reduced our greenhouse gas emissions by 35 per cent, but we need to do more. Adopting carbon budgets and integrating them into our business performance process will encourage our employees to identify new ways to achieve the challenging 80 per cent reduction target, and ensure emissions reductions remain at the heart of our operational decision-making.”
Under its current UK regulatory price controls and US rate plans, National Grid already has a variety of features that enhance environmental performance. These include regulatory incentives schemes targeted to reduce emissions associated with gas and electricity assets, gas distribution mains replacement programmes in UK and US, and replacement of certain gas transmission compressor units in the UK with more efficient electric compressors. Ongoing emissions reductions and the use of more energy efficient plant and equipment are, in the longer term, expected to drive down the life-cycle costs of our assets.
Ian A. Bowles, Secretary, Massachusetts Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs, said: