ENERGY WHITE PAPER
- Government sets out historic plans to clean up our
energy system and keep bills affordable as we transition
to net zero
- Energy White Paper will unleash a green economic
recovery by supporting up to 220,000 jobs over the next
decade across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern
Ireland
- keeping consumer bills affordable, especially for the
vulnerable and lowest income households, at the centre of
plans
The UK government today set out ambitious plans to clean up
our energy system, support up to 220,000 British jobs, and
keep bills affordable as we transition to net zero by 2050.
Building on the Prime Minister’s Ten Point Plan for a Green
Industrial Revolution, the Energy White Paper sets out
specific steps the government will take over the next
decade to cut emissions from industry, transport, and
buildings by 230 million metric tonnes – equivalent to
taking 7.5 million petrol cars off the road permanently –
while supporting hundreds of thousands of new green jobs.
We will put affordability at the heart of the UK’s decisive
shift away from fossil fuels by boosting competition in the
energy retail market to tackle the ‘loyalty penalty’ –
longstanding customers who pay more than new ones – and by
providing at least £6.7 billion in support to the fuel poor
and most vulnerable over the next 6 years.
Business and Energy Secretary said:
Today’s plan establishes a decisive and permanent shift
away from our dependence on fossil fuels, towards cleaner
energy sources that will put our country at the forefront
of the global green industrial revolution.
Through a major programme of investment and reform, we
are determined to both decarbonise our economy in the
most cost-effective way, while creating new sunrise
industries and revitalising our industrial heartlands
that will support new green jobs for generations to come.
At every step of the way, we will place affordability and
fairness at the heart of our reforms - unleashing a wave
of competition so consumers get the best deals possible
on their bills, while protecting the vulnerable and fuel
poor with additional financial support.
With this long-term plan, we are turning climate ambition
into climate action - putting the UK firmly on the course
to net zero to end our contribution to climate change as
we build back greener.
Alongside the Energy White Paper, the government has also
confirmed that it is to enter negotiations with EDF in
relation to the Sizewell C project in Suffolk as it
considers options to enable investment in at least one
nuclear power station by the end of this Parliament. If the
project proceeds, it could create thousands of new jobs
during construction and operation.
This is the next step in considering the Sizewell C
project, and negotiations will be subject to reaching a
value for money deal and all other relevant approvals,
before any final decision is taken on whether to proceed.
The successful conclusion of these negotiations will be
subject to thorough scrutiny and needs to satisfy the
government’s robust legal, regulatory and national security
requirements.
Emma Pinchbeck, Chief Executive at Energy UK, said:
Today’s White Paper reveals the scale and opportunity of
the energy transition, with aims in it to at least double
the amount of clean electricity produced today, start
making our homes warmer and greener, and help the switch
to electric vehicles.
The energy industry will do our bit to innovate,
supporting our customers so that they benefit from the
net zero transition and investing in the green
infrastructure we need – but clear policies from
government help us do that. This is what the White Paper
– and other publications over the next year – should
provide.
Rain Newton-Smith, Chief Economist at the Confederation of
British Industry, said:
The Energy White Paper is an important next step in our
plans to reach our net zero emissions target. Action is
needed now, and the welcome focus on job creation around
the country, developing sustainable low-carbon
industries, and ensuring the transition is fair for
consumers will all help us achieve our ambitious climate
goals.
Business stands ready to deliver the investment and
innovation needed to turn ambition into reality, and the
proposals outlined in the Energy White Paper will give
business further confidence to deliver new
infrastructure, including electric vehicle charging,
renewable power generation and low-carbon upgrades to
people’s homes.
, Chief
Executive at Renewable UK, said:
Today’s white paper provides greater clarity to the
companies investing across the UK to deliver our net zero
emissions target. Wind and renewable energy will be at
the centre of our future energy system, providing the
clean electricity and green hydrogen we need to
decarbonise our economy. The next generation of onshore
and offshore wind farms will bring tens of billions of
pounds of investment to support a green recovery and
create thousands of jobs across the country as we
transition away from fossil fuels. To meet the goals set
out in the white paper, it’s clear that we have to
double-down on renewables as the main source of energy
for our homes, transport and industry.
Core parts of the Energy White Paper backing our ambitious
plans include:
- Supporting up to 220,000 jobs in the next 10 years.
This includes long-term jobs in major infrastructure
projects for power generation, carbon capture storage and
hydrogen, as well as a major programme of retrofitting
homes for improved energy efficiency and clean heat.
- Transforming the UK’s energy system from one that was
historically based on fossil fuels to one that is fit for a
net zero economy, changing how we heat our homes and
travel, doubling our electricity use, and harnessing
renewable energy supplies.
- Keeping bills affordable for consumers by making the
energy retail market truly competitive. This will include
offering people a simple method of switching to a cheaper
energy tariff, and testing automatically switching
consumers to fairer deals to tackle “loyalty penalties”.
- Generating emission-free electricity by 2050 with a
trajectory that will see us have overwhelmingly
decarbonised power in the 2030s. Low carbon electricity
will be a key enabler of our transition to a net zero
economy with demand expected to double due to transport and
low carbon heat.
- Establishing a UK Emissions Trading Scheme (UK ETS)
from 1 January 2021 to replace the current EU ETS at the
end of the Transition Period. It increases ambition on
reducing emissions, and provides continuation of emissions
trading for UK businesses and certainty on how they
operate.
- Continuing to explore a range of financing options for
new nuclear with developers including the Regulated Asset
Base (RAB) funding model, which could help secure private
investment and cost consumers less in the long run. Given
the scale of the financing challenge, we will also consider
the potential role of government finance during
construction, provided there is clear value for money for
consumers and taxpayers.
- Delivering ambitious electricity commitments through
our world-beating commitment to deliver 40GW of offshore
wind by 2030, including 1GW of floating wind, enough to
power every home in the country – while attracting new
offshore wind manufacturers to the UK.
- Investing £1 billion in state-of-the-art carbon capture
storage in four industrial clusters by 2030 – sucking
carbon out of industrial processes to stop emissions
escaping to the air. Four low carbon clusters will be set
up by 2030, and at least one fully net zero cluster by
2040, stimulating the market to attract new investors and
manufacturers to reinvigorate our industrial heartlands.
- Kick-starting the hydrogen economy by working with
industry to aim for 5GW of production by 2030, backed up by
a new £240m net zero Hydrogen Fund for low carbon hydrogen
production.
- Investing £1.3 billion to accelerate the rollout of
charge points for electric vehicles in homes, streets and
on motorways as well as up to £1 billion to support the
electrification of cars, including for the mass-production
of the batteries needed for electric vehicles. The rollout
has levelling up at its heart, and will support economic
growth across the UK - including in our strong
manufacturing bases in the Midlands and the North East -
while supporting the 169,000 jobs in our world-leading
automotive sector.
- Supporting the lowest paid with their bills through a
£6.7 billion package of measures that could save families
in old inefficient homes up to £400. This includes
extending the Warm Home Discount Scheme to 2026 to cover an
extra three quarters of a million households and giving
eligible households £150 off their electricity bills each
winter. The £2 billion Green Homes Grant announced by the
Chancellor has been extended for a further year in the Ten
Point Plan.
- Moving away from fossil fuel boilers, helping to make
people’s homes warmer, whilst keeping bills low. By the
mid-2030s we expect all newly installed heating systems to
be low carbon or to be appliances that we are confident can
be converted to a clean fuel supply.
- Supporting North Sea oil and gas transition for the
people and communities most affected by the move away from
oil and gas production, ensuring that the expertise of the
oil and gas sector be drawn on in developing carbon capture
and storage and hydrogen production to provide new green
jobs.
Plans to create jobs through the Energy White Paper build
on the unprecedented £280 billion support package that has
been provided as part of the government’s Plan for Jobs to
safeguard jobs in every region and nation of the UK, with
support now extended until March 2021. This builds on the
nine million jobs already protected through the furlough
scheme, £13 billion provided for the self-employed, and
billions of pounds in tax deferrals and grants for
businesses.
Kick-starting the process of ensuring fairness and
affordability for bill-payers will be a series of
consultations in spring 2021 to create the framework to
introduce opt-in switching, consider reforms to the current
roll-over tariff arrangements, and a call for evidence to
begin a strategic dialogue between government, consumers
and industry on affordability and fairness.
The UK ETS will promote cost-effective decarbonisation,
allowing businesses to cut carbon where it is cheapest to
do so, promoting innovation and growth for UK businesses.
It will be the world’s first net zero carbon cap and trade
market, and a crucial step towards achieving the UK’s
target for net zero carbon emissions by 2050.
The scheme is more ambitious than the EU system it replaces
- from day one the cap on emissions allowed within the
system will be reduced by 5%, and we will consult in due
course on how to align with net zero. This gives industry
the certainty it needs to invest in low carbon
technologies.
Notes to editors
- The Energy White Paper builds further on the Prime
Minister’s Ten Point Plan for clean energy, transport,
nature and innovative technologies, as part of our plans to
forge ahead with eradicating its contribution to climate
change by 2050, particularly crucial in the run up to the
COP26 climate summit in Glasgow next year. In the run up to
COP26 we will bring forward a series of sectoral
strategies, and our overarching Net Zero Strategy, which
will set out more detail on how we will meet our net zero
target and ambitious carbon budgets.
- The plan – which is part of the PM’s mission to level
up across the country - will mobilise £12 billion of
government investment to create and support up to 250,000
highly-skilled green jobs in the UK, and spur over three
times as much private sector investment by 2030.
- At the centre of the Ten Point Plan are the UK’s
industrial heartlands, including in the North East, North
West, Yorkshire and the Humber, West Midlands, Scotland and
Wales, which will drive forward the green industrial
revolution and build green jobs and industries of the
future.
- The government will also continue to engage with other
developers with interest in the UK new nuclear market. This
includes by creating an Advanced Nuclear Fund of up to £385
million to support the development of Small Modular
Reactors and to support research and development into more
advanced nuclear technologies, such as advanced modular
reactors, as these technologies progress towards
commercialisation.
- The government is open to linking the UK ETS
internationally in principle and we are considering a range
of options, but no decision on our preferred linking
partners has yet been made.
- The government has already legislated to establish the
new UK ETS, and the technical system underpinning the
scheme is in final stages of development and on track to be
ready on time.
- The UK ETS has been designed by the UK government
jointly with the Scottish Government, Welsh Government and
Northern Ireland Executive.