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Statutory Instrument

The Electricity (Class Exemptions from the Requirement for a Licence) Order 1997

Citation
S.I. 1997/989
As at
Sections
15
Section 1Citation and commencement

This Order may be cited as the Electricity (Class Exemptions from the Requirement for a Licence) Order 1997 and shall come into force on 31st March 1998.

Section 2Interpretation

(1) In this Order—

“ the Act ” means the Electricity Act 1989;

“additional group consumers within the 100 megawatt limit” has the meaning set out in paragraph C.2 in Schedule 3;

“consumer” means a person to whom electricity is supplied (whether or not he is the same person as the person who supplies the electricity);

“declared net capacity” in relation to a generating station has the meaning given to that expression in Schedule 1;

“domestic consumer”, in relation to any supply of electricity, means a consumer who uses not more than 20,000 kilowatt hours per annum;

“licensed generator” means the holder of a licence under section 6(1)(a) of the Act;

“licensed supplier” means the holder of a licence under section 6(1)(c) or section 6(2) of the Act;

“offshore installation” has the same meaning as in regulation 3 of the Offshore Installations and Pipeline Works (Management and Administration) Regulations 1995 ;

“ordinary share capital” has the same meaning as in section 832(1) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988 ;

“parent undertaking” shall be construed in accordance with section 258 of the Companies Act 1985 ;

“pooling and settlement agreement” means the pooling and settlement agreement to which a person generating or supplying electricity may be required to become party by the licence granted to him under section 6 of the Act; and

“qualifying group” means a group of two or more consumers which are all bodies corporate, and which either—

are each connected to each other, provided that no body corporate which is not connected to, or a parent undertaking in relation to, all of them is a parent undertaking in relation to any of them; or

are each related to each other, were related to each other on 31st March 1990 and were supplied with electricity on 31st March 1990 by the person seeking to fall within the class in question specified in Schedule 2 or 3.

(2) The following provisions shall have effect for the purposes of this Order.

(a) One body corporate shall be treated as associated with another if—

(i) one of them is a subsidiary of the other; or

(ii) both of them are subsidiaries of the same holding company;

and “holding company” and “subsidiary” shall have the same meaning as in section 736 of the Companies Act 1985 .

(b) One body corporate shall be treated as related to another if—

(i) one of them is a 75 per cent subsidiary of the other; or

(ii) both of them are 75 per cent subsidiaries of a third body corporate;

and “75 per cent subsidiary” shall be construed in accordance with section 838 of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988.

(c) One body corporate shall be treated as connected to another if—

(i) 50 per cent or more of the ordinary share capital of one of them is owned directly or indirectly by the other; or

(ii) 50 per cent or more of the ordinary share capital of each of them is owned directly or indirectly by a third body corporate;

and for the purpose of determining whether 50 per cent or more of the ordinary share capital of a body corporate is owned directly or indirectly by another body corporate the provisions of subsections (2) to (10) of section 838 of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988 shall apply in relation to this sub-paragraph as they apply in relation to subsection (1) of that section.

(d) A person shall be treated as generating electricity at any time if he is the operator of plant or equipment which at that time—

(i) is generating or capable of generating electricity; or

(ii) is not capable of generating electricity only by reason of the repair or testing of the plant or equipment.

(e) Premises shall be treated as on the same site as each other if they are—

(i) the same premises;

(ii) immediately adjoining each other; or

(iii) separated from each other only by a road, railway or watercourse or by other premises occupied by the consumer in question, by any other person who together with that consumer forms a qualifying group, or by the person seeking to fall within the class in question specified in Schedule 2 or 3.

Section 3Exemptions from section 4 of the Act

(1) Exemption is granted—

(a) from section 4(1)(a) of the Act to persons of the classes specified in Schedule 2; and

(b) from section 4(1)(c) of the Act to persons of the classes specified in Schedule 3.

(2) A person shall be treated as falling within any class specified in Schedule 2 or Schedule 3 notwithstanding that he generates electricity or, as the case may be, supplies electricity to premises in circumstances other than those specified in the description of that class if the generation or, as the case may be, the supply of electricity in those circumstances would, if taken on its own, be such that that person would fall within another class in Schedule 2 or, as the case may be, Schedule 3.

Section 4Conditions on exemptions

(1) The exemption granted by article 3(1)(b) to persons of Class C in Schedule 3 is subject to compliance with the condition specified in paragraph (2) below.

(2) Any person who supplies electricity to domestic consumers who are additional group consumers within the 100 megawatt limit shall do so at a price which does not exceed the maximum price specified in Schedule 4 to this Order.

Section 5Revocation

The Electricity (Class Exemptions from the Requirement for a Licence) ( No. 2) Order 1995 is revoked.

Section 1

The declared net capacity of a generating station which is driven by any means other than water, wind or solar power is the highest generation of electricity (at the main alternator terminals) which can be maintained indefinitely without causing damage to the plant less so much of that capacity as is consumed by the plant.

Section 2

The declared net capacity of a generating station which is driven by water, wind or solar power shall be ascertained by the application of the formula

where—

A is the highest generation of electricity (at the main alternator terminals or, in the case of direct current generation, at the output terminals of the direct current to alternating current converter) which, on the assumption that the source of power is available uninterruptedly, can be maintained indefinitely without causing damage to the plant less so much of that electricity as is consumed by the plant; and

B has the value set out in the table as applicable to the particular description of station.

TABLE

A.1Class A: Small supply

For the purposes of Class A electrical power supplied by a body corporate which is associated with any supplier shall be treated as supplied by that supplier.

B.1Class B: Resale

For the purposes of Class B—

“Class C electricity” means electricity which is supplied by a person in circumstances such that he falls within Class C in this Schedule;

“relevant premises”, in relation to any reference to a supplier falling or seeking to fall within Class B, means the premises from which he supplies that electricity; and

“year” means a period of twelve months running from 1st April to 31st March.

B.2Class B: Resale

The conditions referred to in paragraph (2) of Class B are as follows.

(1) In respect of each relevant premises the supplier must not in the previous year have supplied from those relevant premises an amount of Class C electricity which is more than the lower of—

(a) 10 per cent of the Class C electricity supplied in that year to those relevant premises; or

(b) subject to paragraph (3) below, 250 megawatt hours of electricity.

(2) If during a year the supplier starts to supply Class C electricity from any particular relevant premises for the first time, at the time he starts to make such supplies he must reasonably expect that the total amount of Class C electricity supplied by him during the remainder of that year from those premises will be no more than the lower of—

(a) 10 per cent of the Class C electricity supplied in that year to those relevant premises; or

(b) the amount obtained by multiplying 250 megawatt hours by a percentage equal to the percentage of the year then remaining.

(3) If during the previous year the supplier started to supply Class C electricity from any particular relevant premises for the first time, the amount set out in sub-paragraph (1)(b) above shall be reduced to the amount which is obtained by multiplying 250 megawatt hours by a percentage equal to the percentage of the year remaining at the time he started to make such supplies.

B.3Class B: Resale

A supplier shall not, if and to the extent that it would lead to his falling outside Class B, be treated as supplying Class C electricity to any premises during a year in which the relevant premises are being supplied with electricity by licensed suppliers, unless he supplies more electricity in that year than the amount of electricity which is supplied to those relevant premises by licensed suppliers in that year.

C.1Class C: On-site supply

The following provisions have effect for the purposes of Class C.

(1) Electricity provided by a person in any half hour shall be treated as if it were generated by that person at a generating station at which he generates electricity and as the output of that generating station if it—

(a) is purchased by that person pursuant to the pooling and settlement agreement; and

(b) does not exceed the amount of electricity which he generates at that station in that half hour and which he is required to sell and does sell pursuant to that agreement.

(2)

(a) Where at any time the supplier in question and some other person generate electricity at the same generating station or provide the output of the same generating station, the generation of electricity by that other person or the provision of the output of that generating station by that other person shall be treated as the generation of electricity and the provision of the output of that generating station respectively by that supplier if that other person, being a body corporate, is associated with that supplier.

(b) Two or more generating sets which are operated by the same person or by bodies corporate which are associated with each other shall be treated as a single generating station if they are on the same site as each other (whether or not there is an electrical interconnection between any of them) but otherwise shall be treated as separate generating stations, and in this sub-paragraph—

(i) “generating set” means a combination of the plant and equipment that produces electricity and any other plant or equipment by which that plant or equipment is driven; and

(ii) generating sets shall be treated as being on the same site as each other if they are—

(aa) situated on the same premises as each other;

(bb) situated on premises which are immediately adjoining each other; or

(cc) situated on premises which are separated from each other only by a road, railway or watercourse or by other premises occupied by the supplier in question or by a body corporate which is an associate of that supplier.

C.2Class C: On-site supply

In Class C—

“additional group consumers within the 100 megawatt limit” means consumers described in paragraph (2)(c) of Class C;

“output” in relation to a generating station means the electricity generated at that generating station other than electricity consumed by the plant; and

“private wires” in relation to a generating station means electric lines owned by—

the supplier in question;

a consumer who receives a supply from the supplier in question from the generating station;

the owner, lessor or lessee of the generating station or of one of the premises to which a supply is made by the supplier in question; or

any of the persons described in paragraphs (i) to (iii) above jointly with any other of the persons described in those paragraphs,

provided that the owner of those wires is not a licensed supplier.

Section 1

The maximum price specified for the purposes of article 4(2) shall consist of two elements.

Section 2

The elements referred to in paragraph 1 are, in respect of electricity supplied to a consumer who takes supply in the authorised area of the public electricity supplier specified in column 1 below—

(a) for each unit sold the unit charge specified in column 2 below; and

(b) for each day on which electricity is available the daily availability charge specified in column 3 below,

in each case, inclusive of value added tax.

15 sections

Cite this legislation

The Electricity (Class Exemptions from the Requirement for a Licence) Order 1997 (legislation.gov.uk, OGL v3.0). Retrieved via LawPlayer, https://lawplayer.com/uk/act/uksi-1997-989

Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0.

OGL-3

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