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National Grid to Adopt Carbon Budgets and Reduce Its Greenhouse Gas Emissions By 80%

Posted on: Friday, 18 April 2008, 09:00 CDT

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.

Over the next 12 months, National Grid will undertake a review of its operations following a protocol used by The Climate Registry, based on World Resource Institute (WRI) methodology. This will provide a detailed assessment of the carbon footprint for each National Grid business and enable managers to determine the most effective and economic ways of reducing emissions. Annual and five-year emissions targets, measured in tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent, will then be established for each business and integrated into the company's performance process alongside customer service, reliability, safety, operational and financial targets.

Adopting carbon budgets will allow National Grid to calculate a 'shadow price' of carbon and determine emissions costs for future design, construction and maintenance of its electricity and gas networks, management of its fleet and facilities, and any potential new investments. This will ensure the company is prepared for future legislation by properly accounting for the potential cost of emissions under a carbon tax or mandatory cap and trade scheme.

About National Grid

National Grid (LSE: NG; NYSE:NGG) is an international electricity and gas company and one of the largest investor-owned energy companies in the world.

National Grid owns the high-voltage electricity transmission network in England and Wales and operates the system across Great Britain. It also owns and operates the high pressure gas transmission system in Britain and its distribution business delivers gas to 11 million homes and businesses. National Grid also has a number of related businesses such as LNG importation and storage, land remediation and metering.

In the US, National Grid delivers electricity to approximately 3.3 million customers in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York and Rhode Island, and manages the electricity network on Long Island under an agreement with the Long Island Power Authority (LIPA). National Grid also owns over 4,000 megawatts of contracted electricity generation that provides power to over one million LIPA customers. It is also the largest distributor of natural gas in the northeastern U.S., serving approximately 3.4 million customers in New York, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Rhode Island.


Source: Business Wire

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