New Power

Expert information for all those invested in the UK's energy future

Main menu

Skip to content
  • Home
  • Free newsletter
  • EnergyPlace
  • Contact
  • Agenda
  • Meet our sponsors

Sub menu

What is New Power?

New Power is a specialist report for anyone with an interest in the UK energy industry. We look in-depth at all the issues that have to be addressed to rebuild our industry – moving from a our centralised high-carbon power system to one that will provide heat and power securely, affordably and with minimal carbon dioxide emissions.

Why do you need New Power?

The UK energy sector is beginning unprecedented change. Over the next 20 years, more than 40GW of power generation capacity must be built to replace our ageing fossil fuelled and nuclear power stations. It is estimated that more than £100 billion will be spent on plant and related infrastructure – faster build-out than ever before. Our in-depth analysis, news and industry tracking data is your key to unlock this complex and fast-changing industry.

Contact

[email protected] [email protected] [email protected]

Flash update

Industry code bodies – download our quick guide

by New Power • May 9, 2017 • Comments Off

  • Tweet
  • Share 0
  • Reddit
  • +1
  • Pocket
  • LinkedIn 0

Download our quick guide to industry codes and code administrators: Code bodies – a summary

Join the debate:

Code adminstrators facing major industry change call on Ofgem for leadership

For industry codes, form should follow function and the customer comes first

More debate on energy industry codes: Electralink wants ‘simplified and competitive approach’

The energy industry should have a one-stop code shop

  • Tweet
  • Share 0
  • Reddit
  • +1
  • Pocket
  • LinkedIn 0

Post navigation

← Gas engines ‘could be transplanted overseas’ despite Capacity Market penalties if Triad benefits are not grandfathered
Demand Turn-Up: has procuring less than planned “killed it before it got going”? →

Coming up in New Power:

DATA offshore wind power project monitor;
ANALYSIS cash-out reform and its interactions; looking forward to IED
Further out, we'll be looking into constraint costs and the capacity market – contact us if you have comment

Categories

  • Editor's blog
  • EnergyPlace
  • Flash update
  • Longread
  • News
  • Perspective
  • Sponsored post

Advertisement

Recent comments

  • James Hewitt on CCC Seventh Carbon Budget: the industry responds
  • John Daglish on ESNZ Committee opens inquiry into energy bills
  • Jack Spruill on Public Accounts Committee raises concern over lack of targets and public benefits in ‘unproven’ CCS programme

Copyright © 2025 New Power. All Rights Reserved.