º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Enterprise

SSE slashes investment and warns it won't meet 2030 net zero goal

The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's second-largest energy supplier said it will likely miss its target of reaching 50 terawatt-hours of renewable generation output by 2030 as it slashes investment

SSE said it had decided to cut capital investment by as much as £3bn over the next five years.

SSE, a leading energy company in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, has cast doubt on achieving its 2030 renewable energy target, marking another setback for the government's net zero ambitions.

The Perth-headquartered giant announced plans to slash capital investment by up to £3bn within the next five years, blaming macroeconomic uncertainty and planning hurdles, as reported by .

Consequently, SSE now anticipates falling short of its objective to reach 50 terawatt-hours of renewable generation output by the end of the decade.

"SSE Renewables has seen a significant growth in installed capacity and output over the last few years, however the changing macroeconomic environment and wider delays to planning processes mean the group has reduced its near-term capital investment expectations," the company explained.

"As a result, it is unlikely to meet its ambitious goal."

Net zero challenges

The challenges to net zero targets have been further highlighted by recent industry developments. Just days prior to SSE's announcement, Danish energy titan Orsted halted its plans to construct the 2.4GW Hornsea wind farm, one of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's largest, due to insurmountable cost pressures.

This follows Drax's earlier decision this month to put a hold on expanding its Scottish hydro-power plant, and ABF's move to idle a bioethanol facility in Yorkshire, citing government actions as detrimental, all of which point to potential complications in Energy Secretary Ed Miliband's aggressive net zero strategy.

Shadow Energy Secretary Andrew Bowie has voiced strong criticism over the Hornsea project's discontinuation, stating it "took the Ed Miliband – already mad – target of getting to clean power 2030, and left it in tatters.