Interview With SSE CEO Ian Marchant
Posted: 12 May 2013, 11:10
Just listened to an interview with the CEO of scottish and southern Energy, Ian Marchant, on BBC Radio Scotland. It's being repeated tonight, Sunday May 12th, on the BBC News Channel at 8.30, in the "Leading Questions" series.
The interview covers a lot of ground, from SSE's mis-selling fine, through to energy prices and his view on the future of energy in the UK. You certainly won't like everything you hear, but it's an interesting illustration of where the mainstream media are pitching the energy debate.
Some observations from the interview (not quotes, just the gist of his comments from my memory):
On the mis-selling; "Clearly people had higher expectations of the standards we should work to than we thought"
On the scope for renewables; "30-40 percent of total demand could be met by renewables"
On 'will the lights go out'; "Not now, but in the future if we don't act". (I wonder what future he meant; the future next winter, or the future in 20 years?)
On energy policy; "Wait for developments in Nuclear before commiting to this technology. Meanwhile, fill the gap with renewables and gas."
Hope this is useful/informative.
The interview covers a lot of ground, from SSE's mis-selling fine, through to energy prices and his view on the future of energy in the UK. You certainly won't like everything you hear, but it's an interesting illustration of where the mainstream media are pitching the energy debate.
Some observations from the interview (not quotes, just the gist of his comments from my memory):
On the mis-selling; "Clearly people had higher expectations of the standards we should work to than we thought"
On the scope for renewables; "30-40 percent of total demand could be met by renewables"
On 'will the lights go out'; "Not now, but in the future if we don't act". (I wonder what future he meant; the future next winter, or the future in 20 years?)
On energy policy; "Wait for developments in Nuclear before commiting to this technology. Meanwhile, fill the gap with renewables and gas."
Hope this is useful/informative.