Restructuring Agreements

Scottish & Southern Energy PLC 17 November 2003 Monday 17 November 2003 SCOTTISH AND SOUTHERN ENERGY plc RESTRUCTURING AGREEMENTS AND THE INTRODUCTION OF BRITISH ELECTRICITY TRANSMISSION AND TRADING ARRANGEMENTS (BETTA) Scottish and Southern Energy plc (SSE) has agreed in principle that two ' restructuring' agreements with ScottishPower plc should be terminated in April 2005 in order to help pave the way for the development of a genuinely single market in electricity transmission and trading in Great Britain. The agreement is expected to be completed by mid-December, and is subject to regulatory approval. The restructuring agreements were put in place when the Scottish electricity industry was privatised in 1991, separately from the privatisation in England and Wales. Two agreements between SSE and ScottishPower are presently due to continue beyond April 2005, when British Electricity Transmission and Trading Arrangements (BETTA) are expected to be introduced: • The Peterhead Agreement, under which ScottishPower pays a reducing capacity fee each year for the use of just over 750MW of the station's capacity, which typically produces around 1.5TWh of electricity a year. The fee is £27m in 2003/04 and will be £25m in 2004/05. This agreement was due to run until 2012. • The Hydro Agreement, under which ScottishPower pays a fixed flat fee of around £8m per annum and £13/MWh for up to 360,000 MWh of output a year. This agreement was due to run until 2039. The decision to terminate these restructuring agreements in April 2005 means that SSE will be able to deploy 642MW of additional efficient and flexible thermal generation capacity in BETTA, including the balancing market, thus optimising the use of its portfolio. In addition, SSE will gain access to 115MW of standby capacity, the importance of which is likely to be underlined by the need to make sure that the UK is able to meet future peak demand for electricity. SSE believes that there will be significant value in having this capacity to deploy in the market and that this value will be greater if wholesale electricity prices continue their recovery. Looking ahead, Peterhead's status as one of the lowest carbon thermal power stations in the UK means it should also be well-positioned for the introduction of the Emissions Trading Scheme in 2005. In addition to plant covered by the Peterhead Agreement, the hydro output previously made available to ScottishPower will now be available to SSE. The value of hydro power is also likely to be reinforced by developments in electricity markets over the next few years. Ian Marchant, Chief Executive of SSE, said: 'The establishment of a single set of arrangements for electricity transmission and trading in Great Britain is a welcome development. In the overall context of everything being done to pave the way for BETTA, the termination of these contracts makes sense. It resolves a potentially contentious issue which is a leftover from the Scottish privatisation, and I am confident that this is the right time at which to agree to end these agreements. In particular, we will benefit from being able to deploy these previously committed generation assets flexibly in the new single British market.' For further information please contact: Scottish and Southern Energy plc Alan Young - Director of Corporate Communications +44 (0)870 900 0410 Denis Kerby - Investor and Media Relations Manager +44 (0)870 900 0410 Financial Dynamics Andrew Dowler +44 (0)20 7831 3113 This information is provided by RNS The company news service from the London Stock Exchange

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