2004 League Table
WhichGreen exists to help you choose the best green supplier you can, so you have the best chance of actually making a difference with your electricity bill.
At WhichGreen, we believe the best way to measure who's green and who's not is to look at who's building new sources of renewable energy. After all, only by building new capacity can we hope to reduce carbon emissions and fight climate change.
Some energy companies are far bigger than others, so we thought the best way to measure a supplier's green credentials was to look at how much new build they were developing per customer.
That works out as a simple measure: how many pounds each supplier spent per customer per year building new sources of green energy. And that's how we built this league table.
New generation is based upon the date the renewable project was accredited by Ofgem.
Every year we collect the statistics and update the table. This table was the first WhichGreen produced and is based on new renewable energy capacity which came online in 2004.
We'll leave you to draw your own conclusions.
WhichGreen 2004 League Table
| Rank | Supplier | £ / Customer |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ecotricity | £901.64 |
| 2 | Powergen | £9.58 |
| 3 | npower | £7.2 |
| 4 | ScottishPower | £4.46 |
| 5 | Scottish & Southern | £0 |
| 6 | EDF Energy | £0 |
| 7 | Green Energy UK | £0 |
| 8 | Good Energy | £0 |
£'s/Customer figures are based on each supplier's total expenditure on building new renewable energy capacity divided by the average number of customers. Data was sourced from suppliers and/or OFGEM, BWEA, DTI.