The following Statement was made in the House of Commons on
Thursday 30 March. “For much of the past 50 years, since the oil
crises of the 1970s, we have taken cheap, plentiful energy for
granted. Indeed, one of the catalysts for Britain’s economic
transformation over that period has been affordable, abundant
energy powering our homes, infrastructure, businesses and industry.
Yet today, this cornerstone of our prosperity is under threat.
Putin’s illegal war in Ukraine...Request free trial
The following Statement was made in the House of Commons on
Thursday 30 March.
“For much of the past 50 years, since the oil crises of the
1970s, we have taken cheap, plentiful energy for granted. Indeed,
one of the catalysts for Britain’s economic transformation over
that period has been affordable, abundant energy powering our
homes, infrastructure, businesses and industry. Yet today, this
cornerstone of our prosperity is under threat. Putin’s illegal
war in Ukraine and decades of overreliance on imported fossil
fuels have combined to push up energy prices. Even though we have
very little exposure to Russian gas, we have suffered the
consequences of volatile international energy markets. That is
why the Government have stepped in this winter to pay around half
of the typical household energy bill, and I am pleased to say
that that support was extended in the Chancellor’s recent
Budget.
The much bigger challenge long term is to bolster our energy
resilience as a nation, so that a tyrant like Putin can never
again hit the pockets of every family and business in Britain. We
must diversify, decarbonise and domesticate our energy supplies
to secure the cheap, clean power that Britain needs to prosper in
the future. That is why last month the Prime Minister created the
Department for Energy Security and Net Zero to give these two
closely entwined objectives—energy security and net zero—the full
and dedicated attention within government that they clearly
merit. It was a statement of intent to put energy security among
the Government’s top priorities. By doing so, we will bring
wholesale electricity prices down to among the cheapest in Europe
by 2035, drastically reduce carbon emissions and deliver the
long-term boost that our economy needs, using Britain’s unique
talents and assets to drive the energy transition.
Following the department’s launch just 50 days ago, I am pleased
to announce how the Government will be powering up Britain,
including through our energy security plan, which sets out the
steps we are taking to become more energy independent by powering
Britain from Britain, and through our net-zero growth plan, which
builds on the measures laid out in the net-zero strategy to keep
us on track to achieve our carbon budgets. That plan meets our
statutory obligations under the Climate Change Act 2008 to
respond to the Climate Change Committee’s annual progress report
from 2022 and sets out a package of proposals and policies that
will enable carbon budgets to be met, to ensure that Britain
remains the leader among the fastest decarbonising nations in the
world.
Before starting on the announcements, I thank my right honourable
friend the Member for Kingswood () for his excellent work in
this area, investigating how to deliver net zero in a way that is
both pro-growth and pro-business. In January, he submitted his
detailed report and recommendations to the Government. I can
confirm that we are partly or fully acting on 23 recommendations
of the independent review of net zero report’s 25 recommendations
for 2025. On behalf of the whole House, I thank my right
honourable friend again for his work.
Let me start on the announcements, if I may. As part of powering
up Britain, the Government are launching Great British Nuclear,
to put clean nuclear power at the heart of Britain’s energy
security and spearhead a busy programme of new nuclear projects,
starting with a competitive ‘down selection’ this year to choose
the best small modular reactor technologies. We are launching the
floating offshore wind manufacturing investment scheme, providing
up to £160 million to kick-start funding in port infrastructure
so that we can move forward with that exciting new technology,
and we are publishing plans for investing in carbon capture and
storage, a key area for cleaning up energy and one in which
Britain can lead the world.
To drive our hydrogen ambitions, we are announcing a shortlist
and funding for the first round of electrolytic hydrogen
allocation, with a second round to come, and setting out our
longer-term hydrogen plans. We are providing an extra £1 billion
for energy efficiency upgrades through the new great British
insulation scheme, and we are investing to speed up the market
for heat pump installation to decarbonise home heating and
leverage up to £300 million of overall funding, including private
funding.
This country is already ahead of the game when it comes to
decarbonising its economy. We are a global leader in offshore
wind power and currently have the world’s largest operational
offshore wind farm project, named after a town in my
constituency: Hornsea 2. We also have the second, third and
fourth largest offshore wind farm projects, but the measures we
are unveiling today will accelerate our transition, rolling out
existing technologies and bringing transformative new
technologies to market.
We are truly on the verge of a new industrial revolution, but
just like the first Industrial Revolution, investment will be key
to our success, delivering not just energy security and ambitious
reductions in carbon but the jobs, exports and productivity gains
of the future. With that in mind, we are publishing today a new
green finance strategy, which sets out a range of measures to
mobilise private investment in net zero. That will support the UK
in maintaining its position as a world-leading centre for green
finance, and it sets us on a pathway to becoming the world’s
first net-zero-aligned financial centre.
It is imperative that we do not just focus on reducing emissions
at home. The UK will work with international partners through the
green transition to share the benefits of an improved environment
that is good for business, because all economies need to take
decisive steps to reduce their emissions. Indeed, increased
investment in net-zero technologies globally will unlock
innovation and drive costs down, as well as create opportunities
for green UK exports—in carbon capture and hydrogen, for
example.
As such, today we are publishing two additional documents. The
first is the 2030 strategic framework for international climate
and nature action, which outlines our vision to halve global
emissions, halt and reverse nature loss, and build resilience to
climate impacts this decade. The second is the international
climate finance strategy, which details our commitment to £11.6
billion of international climate finance up to 2025-26, after we
pledged to double it. Both reinforce our climate leadership
during what is a critical decade for delivery, showing that
Britain is credible and committed to meeting its promises.
It is no exaggeration to say that Britain’s prospects as a
nation, our ability to compete as an economy, and our capacity to
decarbonise and tackle climate change all depend on energy
security. Now, with a dedicated department to deliver that vital
objective, we will not only wean ourselves off fossil fuel
imports but deliver cheaper, cleaner energy from domestic
renewables and nuclear, protecting British households from
turbulent international energy markets and creating hundreds of
thousands of green jobs to level up Britain in the process.
Making Britain an energy-secure, net-zero nation is one of the
greatest opportunities of our time. Today, we have shown how we
will grasp that opportunity for the benefit of everyone in this
country for generations to come.”
6.48pm
(Lab)
My Lords, the papers published before the Easter Recess
represent, as my friend said in the other place, a Groundhog Day of
reannouncements, reheated policy and no new investment. The
Government continue to fail to acknowledge the scale of the
climate crisis and the need for urgent action rather than baby
steps. The biggest indictment is an admission that the policies
announced do not deliver the promises made at COP 26 to meet the
UK’s 2030 climate target.
On emissions targets, despite saying that they are building on
their COP 26 presidency, the Government cannot say whether they
will meet the targets set in Glasgow. Meeting these targets is
crucial if we are to prevent catastrophic climate change, so can
the Minister now confirm that the Government will ensure that the
UK will meet the NDC emissions targets that they committed to at
COP 26?
The UK’s businesses operate at a disadvantage because of the
Government’s delay in responding to the Inflation Reduction Act
in the United States. Why are the Government delaying their
response, thereby putting us behind in the international race for
green jobs? Without clear support from the Government, British
businesses are struggling to transition to a low- carbon
economy.
The Government’s ban on onshore wind is preventing the UK cutting
bills and providing energy security. Polls show that British
people support onshore wind by a ratio of 20:1. The ban is
costing hard-pressed families approximately £160 a year on their
energy bills and leaves the UK dependent on expensive gas
imports. Can the Minister say when they will get a grip and end
the ban on onshore wind?
The Government’s track record on energy efficiency is appalling,
leaving uninsulated households with bills £1,000 higher than
those of properly insulated homes. Labour’s warm homes plan aims
to bring down bills for 19 million homes and to reduce reliance
on fossil fuels. Why will the Government not support it?
There is a range of other failures. There is the failure to
provide support for electric vehicle infrastructure. The new UK
emissions trading scheme lacks the necessary price signal to
drive emissions reductions. Setting 2030 as the date for phasing
out sales of new petrol and diesel cars is both later than other
countries and comes without a plan on how to achieve it. In
summary, the Government’s lack of real ambition puts the UK at a
major disadvantage in the drive towards a low-carbon future.
(LD)
My Lords, I do not in any way disagree with the noble Lord,
, but I have tried to be
positive about these reports; a whole suite of reports has come
out with this. I spent a little more time on the report entitled
Powering up Britain: Energy Security Plan, which I thought may be
the document that would get more to the heart of this. I also
found the 2030 Strategic Framework for International Climate and
Nature Actionparticularly interesting. These are a long read but
have a list of really good stuff. They mention areas that we have
debated here such as gas storage, grid connections, carbon
capture, energy efficiency and demand management. A few are
missing, but it is a very impressive list of subjects that this
House has considered during the passage of the Energy Bill, whose
Third Reading we await next week. It is a great list, but it is
five years too late—something like that.
I have a number of questions for the Minister. Small modular
reactors are listed in the energy security plan. When do we
expect them to come online? Going back to something we discussed
on the Energy Bill, the energy security plan mentions the core
responsibility of the future systems operator, or ISOP as we know
it. When is it actually going to be established so that it can
get on with its work? Those I have spoken to in National Grid ESO
are really champing at the bit, because they need to get on with
it, as this report says, but it is still not there because of the
slowness of the Energy Bill through Parliament.
On Sizewell C, which the report mentions, what lessons have we
learned from Hinkley C? There are all sorts of lessons to be
learned from budget increases and other issues relating to the
building of that. On planning, I am pleased to say that it talks
about trying to reduce planning periods, but in the debate on the
levelling-up Bill yesterday we discussed how the planning system
is core to delivering net zero. In fact, as both the Climate
Change Committee and the report asked, are the
Government going to embed net zero properly into the planning
system? As the noble Lord, , asked, will we really meet
not just the COP 26 obligations but the fourth carbon budget,
whose period just started, let alone the fifth? I do not believe
that these plans really do that.
What impressed me at the end of the energy security plan was a
whole long list of timetables. I hope that at DESNZ all the
senior officials and the Ministers sit around the table every
week and are driven by that plan. I suspect they might not
be.
Finally,I am very pleased that the 2030 Strategic Framework for
International Climate and Nature Action was published, but this
comes back to something the noble Lord, , said. In the introduction, I
read something that really quite excited me, and I thought, “Here
we get to the nub of it”. It says:
“Since the publication of the British Energy Security Strategy,
our Environmental Improvement Plan and our Net Zero Strategy, the
US has taken decisive action in allocating $370 billion for clean
energy and manufacturing in its Inflation Reduction Act. And the
EU has set out its ambitious plans to grow its green industries
through the Green Deal Industrial Plan”.
I then looked on to the next paragraph to find out what we were
doing. It went off completely on a different subject. When are we
going to understand what our reaction is going to be to those two
pieces of legislation in the United States and the EU—our major
investment competitors?
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for Energy
Security and Net Zero () (Con)
I thank the noble Lords, and , for their comments. I want
to thank the noble Lord, , slightly more than I want to
thank the noble Lord, , because he was slightly more
positive, but I thank them both for their comments anyway.
For too long this country has taken cheap, plentiful energy for
granted. If the war in Ukraine has shown us anything, it is our
decades-long overreliance on fossil fuels. Of course, we have all
seen their record prices, but the Government have stepped in to
help: we have been paying around half of a typical household’s
energy bills this winter, and that support has been extended. Our
longer-term challenge now is to bolster our energy resilience as
a nation so that never again can we be held hostage by tyrants
such as Putin, putting his hand into the pockets of every family
and business in this country.
This plan is about setting out a clear path and why we have to
diversify our sources of supply. We have to decarbonise them and
we have to move toward greater energy independence to secure the
cheap, clean energy that Britain needs to prosper in the future.
We are making considerable progress along that path, but we all
know that we have to do a lot more.
I will move to the specific questions I was asked. The noble
Lord, , asked me about onshore wind.
I have a funny feeling that the noble Baroness, Lady Hayman, is
going to ask me a similar question, so let me try to pre-empt
her. We have included onshore wind in our latest world-leading
contracts for difference scheme. We are currently consulting on
amending the National Planning Policy Framework so that local
authorities can better respond to communities when they wish to
host offshore wind infrastructure. A government response will be
issued in due course.
The noble Lord, , also mentioned the US
Inflation Reduction Act. Of course, we are well aware of the
action taken by international partners to accelerate their own
uptake of green technologies. They are getting to the party a bit
late, but I am pleased to see that they are finally going in the
same direction. We continue to engage with them on this. Although
the Act is significant, the race for green tech started decades
ago here in the UK, with the rest of the world now playing
catch-up, adopting many of the same mechanisms, such as contracts
for difference, that we came up with seven or eight years
ago.
We will not go toe to toe with our partners in a subsidy race; I
have not noticed any commitments from the Labour Party to do this
either. Instead, we will double down on our global leadership in
clean technologies to tackle climate change, using a range of
levers from smart regulation to market frameworks and targeted
investments. Noble Lords will also have seen, in the green
finance strategy published at the same time as the plan, a lot
more information on our very ambitious plans to mobilise
considerable amounts of the private investment we will need.
The noble Lord, , also asked me about our 2030
NDC. We remain firmly committed to delivering our international
commitments under the Paris Agreement, including the 2030 NDC.
While countries are not due to start reporting to the UNFCCC on
progress towards meeting the NDC until 2024, we have already
quantified proposals and policies to deliver by 2030 a reduction
in emissions of 67% compared to 1990 levels, providing a great
majority of the savings required for our NDC target of a 68%
reduction by 2030.
The noble Lord asked me about energy efficiency and referred to
some vague Labour plan. I would be delighted to see what Labour’s
plan in this area actually is. I did see a half-baked press
release last week, which was presaging a great announcement, but
I do not think that that announcement ever happened. If it did, I
certainly did not notice it. What I saw was not a plan at all; it
was a wish list, without any numbers attached to it. I will tell
the noble Lord exactly what this Government are doing.
When Labour left office in 2010, 14% of UK homes were at EPC
level C or above. It is now 47%, and it will be over 50% by the
end of next year. The Government are committed to improving the
energy performance of homes across the country. I refer again to
the new Energy Efficiency Taskforce that we have established to
drive improvement. The Chancellor set a target of 15% energy
reduction improvements by 2030, for which £6 billion of new
funding will be made available from 2025 to 2028, in addition to
the £6.6 billion already allocated in this Parliament. This is a
key ask from many in the industry, providing long-term funding
certainty, supporting the growth of supply chains and ensuring
that we scale up delivery over time. In addition, we are still
committed to the four-year, £4 billion ECO expansion, and noble
Lords will have seen the announcement of the Great British
Insulation Scheme and its additional £1 billion of funding.
Moving on, the noble Lord, , asked me about nuclear and
SMRs. I hope that presages that the Liberal Democrats might
support us on nuclear in the future. This is well-established
technology. We have invested £210 million with Rolls-Royce to
develop SMRs in the UK. They are well established and we want to
be world leaders in this. Realistically, it will be at least the
end of the decade before they are rolled out. This is another
world-leading green technology from which the UK can prosper.
7.02pm
(CB)
My Lords, I declare my interests as set out in the register. The
Minister presaged a question about onshore wind, which was one of
the things left out of the Powering Up Britain document. He
half-answered the question in anticipation, but he said that the
consultation results will come “in due course”. Could I tempt him
to be a little more specific than that, because we have been
making progress very slowly on this issue? It feels rather like a
can being kicked down the road and a wasted opportunity.
This document contains aspirations, intentions and objectives
that are widely supported around the House. The concerns are
about the pace, scale, impetus and coherence of delivery. I want
to talk particularly about the issues that we debated in your
Lordships’ House on Monday, when amendments to the Energy Bill
were passed. None of those amendments in any way ran counter to
the objectives set out by the Government. In ending emissions
from coal, in making sure that we have a comprehensive energy
efficiency policy, in building and encouraging community energy
schemes, and in giving Ofgem, the regulator of this sector, a
responsibility for implementing net zero, none of them was
revolutionary or counter to government policy. All will help with
this issue of scale, pace and delivery. My plea to the Minister
is that he and colleagues think very carefully, after Third
Reading in this House and before the Bill goes to another place,
about whether those amendments could assist, rather than in any
way impede, the Government in what they are trying to do.
(Con)
As I suspect the noble Baroness knows, I am afraid that I cannot
give her a direct answer on the date of the consultation
response. That is just the way that government works: the
consultation response will come when it comes. Even if it were
happening tomorrow, I would not be able to presage it, because it
has to go into the Downing Street grid and through all those
processes. I will endeavour to let her know as soon as it becomes
available.
The amendments to the Energy Bill were of course disappointing. I
noticed that there were no big majorities in favour of any of
them, but we will look at them closely and respond in due
course.
(GP)
My Lords, we face a difficult situation, with recess intervening
and us now having a short period to interrogate 44 documents,
which, as Carbon Brief calculated, comprise 2,840 pages. The
timing was unfortunate, although it was forced by the 2022 High
Court ruling that the net-zero strategy is unlawful—the deadline
was at that point.
I will pick on one specific point. The energy security plan notes
that the Government opened in October 2022 a new licensing round
for oil and gas projects, and that 115 projects have bid, with
the first licences expected to be awarded in the next quarter of
this year. There is no mention in the energy security plan of the
climate compatibility checkpoint, which was devised and announced
by the Government in 2021. This was meant to ensure that any new
oil and gas licences would be awarded only if they were in line
with the UK’s net-zero goals. Can the Minister tell me if the
climate compatibility checkpoint still applies and is being used
by the Government?
(Con)
On the two questions from the noble Baroness, first, as usual,
she is dead wrong in her statement about the High Court action.
It did not rule that the Government’s plans are unlawful; in
fact, the High Court clearly made no criticism whatever about the
substance of our plans, which are well on track. During the
proceedings, the claimants themselves described them as
“laudable”. The independent Climate Change Committee described
the net-zero strategy as
“an ambitious and comprehensive strategy that marks a significant
step forward for UK climate policy”.
The court simply wished to see more detail on our plans. I am
pleased to say that the Carbon Budget Delivery Plan, which we
published alongside Powering Up Britain, provides that detail and
sets out a package of proposals and policies that will enable
carbon budgets to be met, ensuring that Britain remains the
leader and among the fastest-decarbonising nations in the
world.
The answer to the noble Baroness’s question about oil and gas
licences is that the climate compatibility checkpoint remains,
but I make no apologies about this whatever. During the
transition, we still have a requirement for oil and gas in the
UK; the only question is whether we get it from British resources
or from Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the US or somewhere else. Do we want
to be paying British tax and employing British workers or for
that money to be exported? That is the question that faces
us.
(GP)
My Lords, if no one else is going to stand up, I will come back
to the Minister on a different, broader and more conceptual
point. I am very tempted to respond to the previous answer, but I
will not.
The Committee on Climate Change said that we should be shifting
from looking at territorial emissions to consumption emissions.
The fact is that a great deal of manufacturing has been offshored
in recent decades and emissions are currently being counted
against other countries on a territorial basis, while we are
consuming the goods made from them. Are the Government planning
to follow the recommendations of the Committee on Climate Change
and move from measuring territorial emissions to consumption
emissions?
(Con)
It is a complicated question. We have no plans to. We will
measure our emissions on the same basis that everybody else does.
Nevertheless, I concede to the noble Baroness that she makes a
valid point about carbon leakage and the extent to which we have
driven many energy-intensive industries out of the UK and Europe,
but we still use the products that many of them produce. These
are produced not in Europe and the UK any more but in other parts
of the world, often in more carbon-intensive manners.
There is a difficult policy question facing us and the EU: how do
you address that if other countries do not have ambitious plans
like ours to decarbonise but you still need the products? Do you
look at mechanisms such as carbon border adjustment mechanisms,
which the EU is looking at? Intrinsically, we are in favour of
free trade, so we do not want to go down that avenue. A far
better strategy is to try to persuade other countries to adopt
similarly ambitious plans to ours.
(GP)
My Lords, given the fact that this is a really important issue
and I do not see anyone else rising, I will rise once again. The
Government have committed to a fully decarbonised electricity
power system by 2035. The Committee on Climate Change has said
that their plans need urgent reform to achieve that goal. Can the
Minister assure me that he is highly confident that we are on
track for that 2035 goal for electricity?
(Con)
Yes, we believe that we are on track. There is a diversity of
sources of supply, including our world-leading offshore wind
procedures—we have the first, second, third and fourth largest
offshore wind farms in the world—and the rollout of new nuclear
and solar. All of that will contribute to our ambitious plans to
decarbonise our electricity sector by 2035.
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