On 31 May 2023, Ofgem opened an investigation into whether Drax Power Limited (“Drax”) was in breach of annual profiling reporting requirements relating to the Renewables Obligations (“RO”) scheme and other related matters.
The investigation focussed on the data governance and controls Drax had in place to inform its reporting of profiling data to Ofgem in order to comply with its obligations under the Renewables Obligation Order 2015 (“ROO”).
The investigation concluded that there was an absence of adequate data governance and controls in place that had contributed to:
Drax has engaged constructively with the case team during the investigation and will continue to engage with Ofgem in this regard following closure of the investigation and as a result:
Annual profiling data is the reporting of ‘additional biomass characteristics’ and is not used for the issuing of ROCs. During this investigation, Ofgem did not find any evidence to suggest that Drax have been issued with ROCs incorrectly. The investigation did not find any evidence suggesting that Drax does not meet the government’s threshold that a minimum of 70% of biomass must come from sustainable sources in order to receive scheme funding.
Ofgem’s full case closure statement is available here: Ofgem investigating Drax Power Limited's compliance with reporting requirements relating to the Renewables Obligation | Ofgem
Ofgem Chief Executive Jonathan Brearley said:
“This has been a complex and detailed investigation. Energy consumers expect all companies, particularly those receiving millions of pounds annually in public subsidies to comply with all their statutory requirements.
“There are no excuses for Drax’s admission that it did not comply with its mandatory requirement to give Ofgem accurate and robust data on the exact types of Canadian wood it utilises. The legislation is clear about Drax’s obligations – that’s why we took tough action.
“Drax has accepted that it had weak procedures, controls and governance which resulted in inaccurate reporting of data about the forestry type and sawlog content being used. It has agreed to make a significant payment of £25m to our voluntary redress fund and carry out an independent external audit of its global profiling data reporting.
“This report will be submitted to Ofgem for our independent assessment and findings published, so the conclusions are fully transparent. While Ofgem currently has no reason to believe there have been further instances of non-compliance we won’t hesitate to act if required.”