***ENDS Friday 22 June***
I have only just learnt of this consultation which proposes a new household planning fee for extensions and alterations including microgeneration of £100-£200 and new classes of business planning fee for energy developments. It is not spelled out what fee will apply to micro-hydro. The business class for energy developments is divided into Wind Farms and Other. The new minimum fee for Other proposed is £1000 for the first 100 sqare meters based on "site size or floor space". There is no clarification of how this would apply to hydro schemes. This is almost three times the current charge. I have drafted a response to this consultation and invite additional comments on Blog page. Please also submit your own responses here: Fees for Planning Applications 2012 Start date 28/03/2012 - End date 22/06/2012.
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The Environment Agency (England and Wales) have released some of their internal documents which provide guidance to their staff in carrying out abstraction and impoundment licensing processes. I am publishing this list on the mha website here as it is not currently available for access on the EA website and may be useful for applicants, particularly those with high head sites which are not currently covered in the external EA guidelines "GPG1". A consultation has been announced by Gemserv, who run MCS, on guidelines for assessing competencies of individual installers and installation companies. Micro Hydro is covered in the consultation. The consultation ends at 5pm 9 July 2012.
*MCS certification is not available or planned for micro hydro products and installers (though some installers and products have been registered with MCS under "transitional arrangements"); the current DECC Feed-in tariff consultation (see earlier entries) is, however, still considering whether MCS will have some role in certification for micro hydro. I have heard from the Environment Agency (EA) that they plan a further limited consultation on flow standards before finalising the consultation process on the Hydropower Good Practice Guidelines (GPG) on which work started 15 months ago.
As a result of the delay in revising the guidelines, the EA has decided that only the present GPG1 low head guidance (link currently here) will apply until further notice. More details and advice on licensing of high head schemes are on the Blog page. The EA have also said that they will provide access to all the documents currently being used by EA staff for permitting hydropower so as to avoid confusion when applications for licences are being prepared and discussed. The position regarding “high head” schemes remains unclear in the mean time. The EA advise that early contact should be made to their local staff as part of the pre application process. They will use their local knowledge and expertise to advise on local environmental requirements. In the absence of EA guidelines for high head schemes, the publicly available guidelines provided by the Scottish Environment Protection Agency (SEPA) may provide a useful starting point for discussions. While there has been no decision by the EA to adopt these standards, they have been considered during the consultation process as candidates for use for schemes in England and Wales. For this purpose I would suggest that “high head” schemes are taken to be those involving diversion of water into a penstock with a net head of 10m or more. The SEPA guidelines are available at this link: http://www.sepa.org.uk/water/idoc.ashx?docid=eb64480b-e4d8-434a-82fe-f8a6490d6676&version=-1. In particular they contain checklists in “Annex A to Part A” (page 5) to assess provisionally acceptable schemes and to indicate standards where SEPA believe there is some risk. The proposals covered by this Scottish Government Consultation on Proposals for an Integrated Framework of Environmental Regulation have the potential to improve regulation of micro hydro schemes in Scotland. Given current delays in reforming regulation for England and Wales, this may also in due course have an impact on the Environment Agency's procedures.
Follow these links for the consultation proposals and the response form. I shall post a draft mha response on this page and invite comments from members before final submission. The Scottish Government's introduction follows: "The proposals outlined in this consultation will deliver a simpler legislative framework which will enable SEPA to focus greatest effort on the environmental problems that matter most. It will provide a more consistent range of enforcement tools so that, proportionate and effective action can be taken against those who would damage the environment." . . . . "We are inviting written responses to this consultation paper by 4 August 2012. Please send your response with the completed Respondent Information Form . . . . to: [email protected] or Environmental Quality Division Scottish Government Area 1-H Victoria Quay Edinburgh EH6 6QQ Responses may also be faxed to 0131 244 0211. We would be grateful if you could clearly indicate in your response which questions or parts of the consultation paper you are responding to as this will aid our analysis of the responses received. We aim to issue a report on this consultation process before the end of 2012." Contact: Neil Ritchie Address: 1-H North, Victoria Quay, Edinburgh Email:[email protected] Telephone: 0131 244 7250 I have submitted this response to the consultation - thank you to all those who have contributed.
I have updated the draft of 21st February and am inviting comments from mha readers on this page before final submission by 26 April. This is probably the last opportunity for several years to improve the conditions for potential micro hydro developments so please make your comments here or, if lengthy, send me an email. This is so that there is some indication of the support or otherwise from the mha members and others with an interest in micro hydro. The final draft of the mha response can be downloaded here. Thank you for your input. Ofgem have issued updated guidance for generators here
Members of the Micro Hydro Association and other Hydro industry stakeholders attended a meeting with DECC on 29th March to discuss implications of DECC's proposals for the Feed-in Tariff scheme from October 2012 as set out in the current consultation. I will be posting further information before the consultation closes on 26th April.
11 March 2012 - Updated links for access to flow data and river levels for UK watercourses - see Technical Information section of the Useful Information page
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