Abstract:
This project explores how industry, policymakers and researchers understand the Government's proposed Reformed National Pricing model following the Review of Electricity Market Arrangements decision.
To understand how major stakeholders are considering these future changes, the UCL Centre for Net Zero Market Design and the UK Energy Research Centre (UKERC) co-convened a workshop to understand stakeholders' perspectives and opinions on RNP.
Bringing together 65 senior leaders from industry, policymaking, and academia, the full-day workshop held on November 13, 2025 at the University of London's Senate House reflected on the implications of retaining a single national electricity price. The workshop aimed to understand participants' views of RNP and how it should be applied to maintain the pace of system investment, ensure operational efficiency, and protect affordability and fairness for electricity consumers.
From this workshop, a briefing paper and a Full Report were published (View the briefing paper here).
The full report details the intentions of hosting this workshop and the full day's agenda. It also contains specific topic-by-topic explanations collating participants' perspectives on each reform addressed in the REMA Summer Update.
This information is supplemented by methodological information including a description of the pre-workshop survey undertaken and tools provided by the UCL Climate Action Unit to aid the collection of information from participants throughout the workshop.
Publication Year:
2026
Publisher:
UCL
DOI:
No DOI minted
Author(s):
Jansen, M., Blyth, W., MacIver, C., Rhodes, A. and Daly, M.
Energy Categories
Language:
English
File Type:
application/pdf
File Size:
887000 B
Rights:
Rights not recorded
Rights Overview:
Rights are not recorded within the edc, check the data source for details
Further information:
N/A
Region:
United Kingdom
Related Dataset(s):
No related datasets
Related Project(s):
No related projects
Related Publications(s):
Reformed National Pricing: Insights on UK Electricity Market Reform - Briefing Paper