Yorkshire Electricity Explained

Yorkshire Electricity
Fate:Acquired
Successor:American Electric Power
Foundation:1948
Defunct:1997
Location:Leeds, England, United Kingdom
Industry:Electricity

Yorkshire Electricity was an electricity distribution utility in England, serving much of Yorkshire and parts of Derbyshire, Lincolnshire and Nottinghamshire.

History

Formed as the Yorkshire Electricity Board in 1948 as part of the nationalisation of the electricity industry by the Electricity Act 1947. The establishment of the company involved the amalgamation of 50 private and local authority power companies. The Yorkshire Electricity Board took over Scarcroft Lodge in north Leeds as its headquarters.[1]

Nationalised industry

The Yorkshire Electricity Board was responsible for the purchase of electricity from the electricity generator (the Central Electricity Generating Board from 1958) and its distribution and sale of electricity to customers. The key people on the board were chairman Arthur Bond (1964, 1967), deputy chairman R. H. M. Barkham (1964, 1967), and full-time member J. S. Yates (1964, 1967).[2]

The total number of customers supplied by the board was:[3] [4]

Yorkshire Electricity Board customers, 1949–89!Year!1948/9!1960/1!1965/6!1970/1!1975/6!1978/9!1980/1!1985/6!1987/8!1988/9
No. of customers, 1000s1084153916471737181518511853190319291946
The amount of electricity, in GWh, sold by Yorkshire Electricity Board was:

Post privatisation

Yorkshire Electricity Board was privatised in 1990 as the Yorkshire Electricity Group plc.

In June 1993, Homepower stores were opened across the Yorkshire region.[5] Homepower was the retail arm of the company which was a joint venture with East Midlands Electricity.[6] At its peak, Homepower employed 900 people and had 130 stores.[7] This part of the company was sold off in 1996.

In 1997 the company was acquired by American Electric Power (AEP) and Public Service Company of Colorado (part of Xcel Energy) in a deal worth £1.5 billion.[8] In 2001 Innogy plc bought 94.75% of the company in a deal worth £1.8 billion.[9] The company was subsequently split into two entities, one a supply company, the other a distribution utility. The distribution company (Yorkshire Electricity Distribution Limited) was disposed of to CE Electric UK in 2001 in exchange for the supply business of Northern Electric. Northern Powergrid is now the licensed distribution network operator for the Yorkshire region. In 2002, the company divested itself of its Leeds Headquarters as most staff and processes had been transferred to the Midlands headquarters of npower by that time.

Innogy was itself taken over by RWE. The supply company now trades as npower.

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Williamson. Howard. YE pull plug on Scarcroft. 9 February 2017. Yorkshire Evening Post. 2 May 2002. en.
  2. Electricity Council publicity brochure 1964 and 1967
  3. Book: Electricity Council. Handbook of Electricity Supply Statistics 1979. Electricity Council. 1980. 0851880762. London. 58 63.
  4. Book: Electricity Council. Handbook of Electricity Supply Statistics 1989. Electricity Council. 1990. 085188122X. London. 51 56.
  5. Web site: Electrical stores run out of juice. marketingweek.com. Marketing Week. 9 February 2017. 17 February 1995.
  6. Web site: Hinchcliffe. David. Homepower (Closure) . Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 9 February 2017. 11 June 1996.
  7. News: Hotten. Russel. Yorkshire Electricity to cut 1,000 jobs: Final redundancy figure could. https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220507/https://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/yorkshire-electricity-to-cut-1000-jobs-final-redundancy-figure-could-be-higher-still-as-company-1411040.html . 7 May 2022 . subscription . live. 9 February 2017. The Independent. 2 July 1994.
  8. News: Sabbagh. Dan. Innogy buys Yorkshire Electricity. 9 February 2017. The Telegraph. 28 February 2001. en.
  9. News: NPower firm buys Yorkshire Power. 9 February 2017. BBC News. 27 February 2001.