Jobs To Go At Fidder's Ferry As Most Units 'To Close'

Published 3rd Feb 2016

SSE have announced three of it's four power units at the Fidder's Ferry Power Station is likely to close this April - but hasn't said how many jobs will be affected.

The company say that compeition from other forces of electricity and the advanced age of the station are behind the move.

In a statement SSE said:

"Although a final decision has not yet been taken, SSE's expectation is that (subject to consultation) it is likely to close three of the four units from 1 April 2016 and it is informing the market accordingly," the company said in a statement.

If it decides to shut down the units, the company will face a penalty of around £33m for breaching a capacity delivery agreement. The company says that redudancies will be investibale.

Paul Smith, SSE Managing Director, Generation, said Fiddler’s Ferry power station had made a big contribution to the UK’s energy supplies for over 45 years, but the economic realities of running the ageing plant at a loss could no longer be ignored. He said: “We are fully aware of the impact this will have on our colleagues, their families, and the community and our priority is to support staff during the consultation process. “The reality is the station is ageing, its method of generating electricity is being rendered out of date and it has been and is expected to continue to be loss-making in the years ahead. “Sustaining for too long loss-making power stations would undermine SSE’s ability to invest in modern generation plant in the UK.” Fiddler’s Ferry failed to secure a contract for electricity provision in 2019/20 in the recent Capacity Market Auction in December 2015. Three of its four units have a Capacity Market contract for 2018/19 but the economic outlook in the generation market has changed substantially since it was awarded and it is projected to incur unsustainable losses even with this contract. The regulations of the Capacity Market mean SSE will make a payment of around £33m to the Government if a decision to terminate its Transmission Entry Capacity (TEC) and cease commercial operations is taken. Paul Smith said: “The fact it makes more sense for SSE to contemplate making a substantial payment in lieu of the capacity agreement relating to Fiddler’s Ferry in 2018/19 demonstrates just how economically challenged Fiddler’s Ferry has become - its losses are unsustainable. “However our commitment to UK generation remains strong: this winter we have restored 1,135MW of gas-fired generation capacity to commercial operations and since 2008 we have invested £1bn in thermal electricity generation plant in this country and want to invest more in the future.”

The UK has committed to ending coal-fired electricity generation by 2025 at the latest as it moves to cleaner forms of generation to meet climate change targets. SSE has committed to reduce the carbon intensity of its overall electricity generation by 50 percent between 2006 and 2020 and has a long-standing objective to move its electricity generation from coal and gas to gas and renewable sources of energy.