- Source: Energy Act 1983
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The Energy Act 1983 (c. 25) is an act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom which amended the law to facilitate the generation and supply of electricity other than by Electricity Boards. It also obliged Electricity Boards to adopt combined heat and power schemes. It gave statutory status to the Electricity Consumers' Council. The Act defined the duties of persons responsible for nuclear installations and penalties for a breach of those duties.
Background
The Conservative government of the 1980s wished to stimulate the operation of market forces. The Energy Act was an attempt to realise this by encouraging competition in the electricity industry. As the Secretary of State for Energy, Nigel Lawson, stated in Parliament, the Energy Act ‘carries forward the Government's approach to the nationalised industries and the public sector generally. It is our aim, first, to stimulate the operation of market forces and to encourage competition; secondly, to remove artificial constraints on the private sector; thirdly, to open up the possibility for consumers of a choice of supplier; fourthly, to spur the massive State-owned corporations to greater efficiency; and, fifthly, further to diversify the country's sources of energy supply’. But he emphasised that the Act ‘is not concerned with the privatisation of the existing nationalised electricity supply industry’; that would come at the end of the decade. The Act also encouraged the development of industrial combined heat and power schemes.
Energy Act 1983
The Energy Act 1983 (1983 c. 25) received Royal Assent on 9 May 1983. Its long title is ‘An Act to amend the law relating to electricity so as to facilitate the generation and supply of electricity by persons other than Electricity Boards, and for certain other purposes; and to amend the law relating to the duties of persons responsible for nuclear installations and to compensation for breach of those duties’.
= Provisions
=The Act comprises 38 Sections in 3 Parts and 4 Schedules
PART I Electricity
Private generation and supply
Section 1 Removal of restrictions on supply etc.
Section 2 Notice of construction or extension of generating stations
Section 3 Nuclear-powered generating stations
Section 4 Hydro-electric generating stations in Scotland
Section 5 Private generators and Electricity Boards
Section 6 Charges for supplies by Electricity Boards
Section 7 Charges for purchases by Electricity Boards
Section 8 Charges for use of transmission and distribution systems
Section 9 Disputes as to offers under section 5 etc.
Section 10 Further provisions as to charges under sections 7 and 8
Section 11 Arrangements between Electricity Boards
Section 12 Meters to be of approved pattern
Section 13 Duty of Boards to supply
Section 14 Inspection and testing of lines etc.
Miscellaneous and general
Section 15 Amendments relating to meters
Section 16 Regulations relating to supply and safety
Section 17 Charges for availability of supply
Section 18 Purchases by Electricity Boards from local authorities
Section 19 Combined heat and power
Section 20 Abolition of rights of entry
Section 21 The Electricity Consumers' Council
Section 22 Functions of other bodies in relation to Electricity Consumers' Council
Section 23 Offences
Section 24 Regulations: general
Section 25 Amendments
Section 26 Interpretation of Part I
PART II Nuclear Installations
Section 27 Limitation of operators' liability
Section 28 General cover for compensation
Section 29 Carriage of nuclear matter
Section 30 Provisions supplementary to sections 27 to 29
Section 31 Reciprocal enforcement of judgments
Section 32 Meaning of "excepted matter"
Section 33 Extension to territories outside United Kingdom
Section 34 United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority
PART III General
Section 35 Financial provisions
Section 36 Repeals
Section 37 Commencement
Section 38 Short title and extent
Schedules
Schedule 1 Electricity : Amendments Relating to Meters
Schedule 2 The Electricity Consumers' Council
Schedule 3 Electricity : Minor and Consequential Amendments
Schedule 4 Enactments Repealed
Effects and consequences
The purpose of the Part I of the Act was to promote competition in the domestic electricity market by encouraging private generation and supply. It entitled private generators of electricity to sell their electricity to the local electricity board. It thereby gave them a guaranteed market. It also allowed them to use the public transmission and distribution system.
The Oil and Gas (Enterprise) Act 1982 had opened up the public gas supply system to competition from the private sector. The pipelines of the British Gas Corporation were used to transmit and distribute other suppliers' gas. The Energy Act 1983 extended this approach into the supply of electricity. It was recognised that the Energy Act 1983 did not have a significant effect. It did not lead to an increase in private power generation. However, it did set the scene for more radical reforms at the end of the 1980s including the privatisation of the electricity industry implemented from 1989.
Part II of the Act updated the Nuclear Installations (Amendment) Act 1965, which had subsequently been consolidated into the Nuclear Installations Act 1965. Over the years the penalties prescribed by the Acts had lost much of their value through inflation. The purpose of the 1983 Act was to restore the real value of the amounts of compensation that the 1965 Act provides for damage caused by nuclear incidents.
Part III of the Act repealed the whole of the Electric Lighting Act 1888 (51 & 52 Vict. c. 12) and amended certain sections of the Electric Lighting (Clauses) Act 1899 (62 & 63 Vict. c. 19).
Subsequent legislation
Sections 1 to 26 of the Energy Act 1983 were repealed by the Electricity Act 1989.
Schedules 1 to 3 of the Energy Act 1983 were repealed by the Electricity Act 1989.
See also
Oil and Gas (Enterprise) Act 1982
Electricity Act 1989
Timeline of the UK electricity supply industry