Decrease electricity prices to stay competitive, steel industry urges new Government

Electricity costs for UK steel manufacturers are more than twice that of French and Spanish producers, research from UK Steel reveals.

Trade organisation UK Steel released a new analysis this week showing that over the past three months, the UK’s electricity wholesale price is more than double the cost of French and Spanish electricity. 

The data shows an alarming new trend in industrial electricity costs, and the organisation says that it is critical that the new Government resolves the problem.

The UK’s steel industry is heavily reliant on electricity, and this demand will only grow as new Electric Arc Furnace technology comes online. 

With a switch to EAFs, it is expected that the sector’s electricity consumption will roughly double, making electricity prices paramount. Price data shows that UK producers faced average wholesale prices of almost £66 per megawatt-hour (MWh) in the past three months compared to France’s £27/MWh and Spain’s £28/MWh.

Steel production and processing is an incredibly energy-intensive process, and the high electricity consumption can represent up to 180 percent of steel producers’ Gross Value Added (GVA) in the UK. 

The previous government introduced the British Industrial Supercharger in April of this year, which reduced policy costs (such as renewable levies and the Capacity Market levy) and partly lowered network charges. 

However, UK steelmakers still face substantially higher wholesale costs than key competitors and network charges 10 times higher than in France. Higher electricity prices negatively affect the industry’s competitiveness, ability to attract investment, and decarbonisation journey.

To maximise the value of the investments in new EAF steelmaking, the UK steel industry will need affordable electricity supplies. UK Steel says that the next Government will need to find solutions to this challenge, where key competitors face dramatically lower input costs.

UK Steel's Energy and Climate Change Policy Manager, Frank Aaskov, says: “The steel industry is the foundation of the UK’s manufacturing and economic strengths. We must not lose sight of how important electricity costs are in the move to green steel as we fully switch to electric arc furnace technology to secure steel for our nation.

“The UK steel industry cannot continue to face electricity prices that are more than double what our main European competitors benefit from. UK Steel data shows that wholesale electricity prices in the UK have been double the French and Spanish wholesale prices in recent months.

“For the UK steel industry to prosper and deliver on its decarbonisation targets, a new Government must deliver the lowest electricity prices in Europe.”

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