The Energy Forum
10th Anniversary Conference
12th & 13th October 2009, The Waldorf Hilton, London
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Conference Agenda
Monday 12 October 2009, The Waldorf Hilton, London
Day One: Energy Generation: Security, Sustainability and Investment
Chair’s opening remarks

Jim Yeats
Head of Utilities for UK & Ireland, AccentureSESSION ONE: BRIDGING THE GENERATION GAP
KEYNOTE OPENING ADDRESS: A policy update from DECC

Jonathan Brearley
Director, Office of Climate Change and Director of Strategy, DECCSetting a global carbon policy: reaching international agreements and establishing a realistic framework

Omar Abbosh
Managing Director of UK & Ireland Resources Business, AccentureFinancing energy infrastructure in light of the credit crunch: is policy sufficiently supportive?

Ramón Fernández
Director, Finance, ScottishPowerCurrent UK energy policy: are all elements of policy pulling in the same direction?

Dr Michael Pollitt
Research Associate, Cambridge University Electricity Policy Research Group
Dr Michael Pollitt
Research Associate, Cambridge University Electricity Policy Research Group
Biography
Professional Experience
Dr Pollitt is a member of the editorial board of the Review of Industrial Organization. He is also a Research Associate of the Centre for Business Research (CBR) and a member of the Faculty of Economics. He was a board member and trustee of Viva Network, Oxford, from 1999-2004. Since 2000 he has been convenor of the Association of Christian Economists, UK.
Dr Pollitt has advised the ESRC, the Norwegian Research Council, the DTI, the World Bank and the European Commission. In 2007 Michael was appointed as an external economic advisor to Ofgem. He has also consulted for National Grid, AWG, Eneco, Nuon, Roche and TenneT.
Previous Appointments
Before coming to Judge Business School, Michael was a lecturer in applied industrial organisation at the Faculty of Economics, University of Cambridge, from 1994-1999. In the first half of 2003 Michael was a Visiting Associate Professor in the Department of Economics at MIT. From 2001-2005 Michael was co-leader of the Cambridge-MIT Electricity Project. In 2005 and 2006 Michael served as Acting Executive Director of the ESRC Electricity Policy Research Group.
Research Interests
Industrial economics, privatisation and regulation of utilities especially in electricity, the measurement of productive efficiency and the relationship between Christian ethics and best practice business behaviour.
Michael Pollitt is a member of the Energy & Environment research group, the Business & Management Economics research group and the Business & Management Economics teaching group
STRATEGIC PANEL DISCUSSION
- The economics of energy portfolios: how has the outlook for low carbon generation changed in light of the recession and volatile commodity prices?
- New build challenges: are legislative and regulatory frameworks adequately supportive?
- Is enough attention being focused on reducing energy consumption?
- Guaranteeing the necessary level of expansion in renewables: are more generous subsidies required?
- Is the UK going to meet environmental targets?
Refreshments
SESSION TWO: SECURING FUNDING IN A CAPITAL-CONSTRAINED WORLD
Energy and the credit crunch: the investor’s perspective

Kathie Child-Villiers
Managing Director, Power and Utilities, Resources & Energy Group, HSBCAssessing the prospects for investment in renewable energy

Ian Simm
Chief Executive Officer, Impax GroupQuestions and discussion
Lunch
PLANNING FOCUS: Changes arising from the Planning Act: towards a speedy and efficient planning regime

Sir Michael Pitt
Chairman, Infrastructure Planning Commission
Sir Michael Pitt
Chairman, Infrastructure Planning Commission
Biography
Mike graduated from University College London with a first class honours degree in Engineering. During the first half of his career he was involved in the planning, design and construction of transport and other infrastructure in this country and abroad, working for the private and public sectors. He has held senior posts in a variety of local authorities, including Director of Property and Director of Technical Services at Humberside. From 1990 to 2005 he was Chief Executive of Cheshire and Kent County Councils.
More recently, he has worked on a wide range of consultancy assignments, including a year long appointment as independent Chair of the Government’s review of the 2007 floods. He has been Chair of a number of other organisations including NHS South West, the GMC’s National Revalidation Programme Board, two companies and a charity.
Questions and discussion
SESSION THREE: IN CONVERSATION WITH OFGEM AND NATIONAL GRID
Adapting the transmission network to meet future challenges

Nick Winser
Executive Director – Transmission, National Grid
Stuart Cook
Senior Partner, Transmission & Governance, Ofgem
Stuart Cook
Senior Partner, Transmission & Governance, Ofgem
Biography
CARBON FOCUS
The effects of the carbon price on clean generation
- Is the EU ETS scheme providing any real incentive to invest in low carbon energy?
- Does the scheme require significant revision?
- Looking to 2013: how must companies prepare for Phase III?
- The road to Copenhagen: will the Emissions Trading Scheme go global?

Dr Bill Kyte
Senior Advisor – Climate Change, E.ON and Chief Advisor, International Climate Policy, EURELECTRICQuestions and discussion
Refreshments
SESSION FOUR: THE FUTURE FOR FOSSIL FUELS
Gas security of supply: responding effectively to a changing market

Steve Gordon
Commercial and Regulation Manager, ScottishPower
Steve Gordon
Commercial and Regulation Manager, ScottishPower
Biography
Steve has over 20 years experience in the UK energy sector, particularly in the gas market, and has worked in a variety of roles in a number of areas across the gas supply chain. Steve has been involved in the development of competition since market opening and joined Scottish Power at the time the revised gas trading arrangements were being introduced.
Steve is currently
Vice Chairman of the Gas Forum - the organisation that represents all gas shippers and suppliers, a director of the Gas Industry Safety Group, Chairman of the AEP's Gas and Electricity Committee UK Representative on gas issues within Eurelectric
Spotlight on gas: ensuring a secure future

Sean Waring
Managing Director, InterconnectorThe rise and rise of King Coal? Examining the development of CCS

Professor M. Mercedes Maroto-Valer
Director, Centre for Innovation in Carbon Capture and Storage
Professor M. Mercedes Maroto-Valer
Director, Centre for Innovation in Carbon Capture and Storage
Biography
Prof Mercedes Maroto-Valer is the Director of the Centre for Innovation in Carbon Capture and Storage (CICCS) at the University of Nottingham. She is also the Head of Fuels and Power Technology Research Division of the Faculty of Engineering and Professor in Energy Technologies.
CICCS, based within the Faculty of Engineering and funded by EPSRC; is an international, interdisciplinary leading centre for research at the interface between science and engineering; inspiring and delivering innovation and technological advances required for the wider deployment of Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS). The team leads several cross-disciplinary research programmes directed towards real world commercial applications, and receives funding from RCUK, Technology Strategy Board, Royal Society, industry and European Community. CICCS research programmes cover all the range from blue sky research to proof of concept and patent development leading to commercialisation.
Prof Maroto-Valer has over 200 publications, holds numerous prestigious international prizes and leading positions in professional societies, editorial boards and acts regularly as reviewer for journals and funding agencies. She has organised and chaired sessions at numerous international conferences. She is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry (FRSC).
CARBON FOCUS and KEYNOTE CLOSING ADDRESS: The effects of the carbon price on clean generation

Dr Bill Kyte
Senior Advisor – Climate Change, E.ON and Chief Advisor, International Climate Policy, EURELECTRICQuestions and discussion
Chair’s closing remarks and end of Day One
Tuesday 13 October 2009, The Waldorf Hilton, London
Day Two: Energy Supply: Profitability, Efficiency and Affordability
Chair’s opening remarks

Fiona Gibson
Senior Executive, AccentureSESSION ONE: RUNNING A SUCCESSFUL SUPPLY BUSINESS IN CHALLENGING TIMES
KEYNOTE OPENING ADDRESS: Managing volatility, protecting customers: effectively managing risk in supply

Martin Lawrence
Managing Director – Energy Sourcing and Customer Supply, EDF EnergyHow must retail operations evolve to ensure a sustainable, profitable future?

Jim MacDonald
Commercial Director of Retail, E.ON U.KBuilding a profitable energy product portfolio whilst protecting the environment and ensuring affordable energy

Matthew Harwood
Director of Strategic Market Development, ScottishPowerAdvisory session
PANEL DISCUSSION
- Factoring price volatility into the energy equation
- Demand and debt: how will the recession continue to affect the supply business?
- The bottom line: how can companies drive profitability in retail operations?
- Has Ofgem’s price probe put unnecessary pressure on the industry?
- Innovation in products and tariffs: which offerings have proved most successful?
- Customers, pricing and the press: are communication strategies adequately robust?
Questions will be taken from the audience throughout the panel discussion

Martin Lawrence
Managing Director – Energy Sourcing and Customer Supply, EDF Energy
Jim MacDonald
Commercial Director of Retail, E.ON U.K
Matthew Harwood
Director of Strategic Market Development, ScottishPowerRefreshments
SESSION TWO: ACHIEVING OPERATIONAL EFFICIENCY IN A CUSTOMER-CENTRIC ENVIRONMENT
Understanding and serving customers: the aggregator’s perspective

Ann Robinson
Head of Consumer Policy, Uswitch.comUnderstanding and serving customers in niche supply areas

Kanat Emiroglu
Managing Director, British Gas Business
Kanat Emiroglu
Managing Director, British Gas Business
Biography
Kanat is Managing Director of British Gas Business on 1 August 2009. Before that, he was responsible for the SME Energy Business within British Gas Business. He joined Centrica plc in 2002 and headed up the Group Strategy and Planning function until 2005.
British Gas Business is a £4m energy and energy services provider which is part of Centrica plc
Prior to Centrica, Kanat spent 5 years in Procter & Gamble in pan-European marketing roles and R&D. He also worked as a corporate strategy consultant for 2 years.
Kanat, has an MBA from INSEAD, has worked in the USA and various European countries, speaks Turkish and German.
Putting customers at the heart of operations: the role of technology

Ross Taylor
Managing Director, E.ON UK
Ross Taylor
Managing Director, E.ON UK
Biography
Ross Taylor is the UK Managing Director of E.ON IS, delivering shared infrastructure services and enterprise applications across the company. E.ON is one of the world’s leading power and gas companies.
E.ON want to change the way people think about energy - where we get it from, how it is brought to customers, how it is used and how it feels to be a customer of an energy company.
Ross joined the company in 1996 and has established and managed shared services and IT delivery both in the UK and overseas. He took his current role in 2005 and is responsible for the delivery of infrastructure services and enterprise applications within E.ON in the UK, Nordic, Italy as well as E.ON’s functional Trading and Renewables businesses .
Questions and discussion
Lunch
REGULATION FOCUS: An update from Ofgem: the changing face of energy retail regulation
An in-depth discussion of Ofgem’s immediate and longer-term objectives. Topics covered will include smart metering, fuel poverty, pricing, competition and the consumer.

Andrew Wright
Managing Director – Markets, OfgemQuestions and Discussion
SESSSION THREE: DELIVERING A SMARTER FUTURE FOR METERING
PANEL DISCUSSION: Smart meters: trials and tribulations on route to a full roll-out
- A roadmap to 2020: is the policy framework sufficiently clear and supportive?
- Interoperability: what minimum standards must be met?
- Lessons learnt from the EDRP: what technical and practical barriers have been encountered?
- Will DNOs achieve the full potential benefits of a roll-out?
- What is the scope for innovative tariffs based on data from smart meters?
- How have customers reacted to the new technology and have their behaviour patterns changed?
Questions will be taken throughout the panel discussion

Andrew Wright
Managing Director – Markets, Ofgem
Ashley Pocock
Director - Home Technology, EDF Energy
David Casale
Chief Executive Officer, UtilitaRefreshments
SESSION FOUR: SUPPORTING AND PROTECTING CUSTOMERS FOR POSITIVE CHANGE
Integrating Corporate Responsibility into business practice

Anita Longley
Head of Corporate Responsibility, RWE npowerCONSUMER DEBT FOCUS: Creating a responsible debt management strategy

Steve Hayfield
Director, Customer Services, EDF EnergyProtecting vulnerable customers: ensuring a unified response to fuel poverty

Maria Wardrobe
Director of Communications, National Energy ActionPANEL DISCUSSION
- What are the fastest and most economical ways to reduce energy usage amongst customers?
- Are customers sufficiently engaged with energy efficiency?
- Will efficiency initiatives have a great enough impact without government mandate?
- Should all UK homes be insulated? If so, how should the cost burden be shared?
- The long-term impact of rising energy prices on fuel poverty
- How can companies discern fairly between the truly fuel poor and those who choose to avoid payment?
Chair’s closing remarks and end of conference
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