British families and businesses have been more exposed to
inflation and economic pressures because of the Conservatives’
failure over thirteen years on energy, new analysis by the Labour
Party has revealed.
Throughout 2023, the UK has suffered from the highest sustained
level of inflation of any major economy in the world. Part of the
reason for why the UK has been so badly hit is because our
economy is more vulnerable to global energy shocks due to 13
years of failed energy policy.
Since September 2021 and the beginnings of the energy price hit,
energy bills for British families have risen by 62%, considerably
more than in any other G7 country. This has been in a large part
due to the Conservatives’ failure over the last decade to invest
in clean energy, which would have made Britain less exposed to
rising fossil fuel prices and the manipulations of dictators like
Putin.
The Conservatives’ decision to ban onshore wind in 2015 has
inflated energy bills by £180 a year for every family in England
and made the UK more exposed to the global market.
Labour has proposed concrete solutions to each of the
Conservatives’ supply-side failures on energy, to bring down
costs for hardworking families. Labour’s mission to make the UK a
clean energy superpower will save families and businesses £93
billion over the rest of the decade, cutting bills and easing
cost pressures.
MP, Labour’s Shadow Climate and Net Zero Secretary,
said:
“Every family and business across Britain is paying the price for
the Conservatives’ failure to protect our energy system from
global shocks.
“Rishi Sunak is just the latest in a long line of Tory Prime
Ministers who have worn down our economic security.
“The only way to end the cost of living crisis for good is to get
rid of and elect a Labour government.
Labour will bring down the cost of energy and cut bills by making
Britain a clean energy superpower.”
Ends
Notes
Inflation in the UK is currently the highest in the G7 (8%
compared to a G7 median of 5%). Energy bills for British families
have risen by 62%, much more than in any other G7 country.
-
Failure to invest in clean energy
- Under the Conservatives, barriers to clean energy have
hindered capacity, driving up prices. High energy prices
contribute to higher prices for other goods, as the last two
years have demonstrated.
-
Increase in consumer price of energy since
September 2021
|
CAN
|
DEU
|
FRA
|
GBR
|
ITA
|
JPN
|
USA
|
|
14.5%
|
37.6%
|
28.2%
|
62.3%
|
52.8%
|
7.9%
|
14.1%
|
-
The Conservative ban on onshore wind has raised bills
by £180 a year for every family in England. It crashed
the market by 97 per cent and has resulted in 7GW of lost
capacity - equivalent to two nuclear plants - since being
implemented in 2015.
- The last Labour Government gave the go-ahead for new nuclear
sites in 2009, but under the Conservatives none have yet got up
and running. The Government’s dither and delay has denied us
clean, reliable power.
-
It currently takes around 13 years to develop a new
offshore wind farm, with up to four of those years
spent fighting through the planning system. The time taken to
approve major national infrastructure projects has risen under
the Tories from two and half years to well over four.
- As businesses seek to move ahead in the industries of the
future, the queue for grid connections is growing out of
control, with more than £200 billion worth of privately funded
projects stuck. New grid connection dates are now being
offered for 15 years’ time, in the late 2030s.
- UK electricity generation per person is significantly lower
than in comparable countries – the lowest in the G7 except Italy
(which has also suffered from high energy price inflation).
- This has left the UK with some of the highest electricity
prices of any major economy. Even before
Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine, UK businesses faced the
highest electricity costs in the G7, having soared by 72
per cent between 2010 and 202123; a £3.5 billion per year energy
premium compared to our competitors.
- Since September 2021, when Labour first announced its Green
Prosperity Plan to invest in energy security and lower
bills,energy bills for British families have risen by
62%, much more than in any other G7 country. (The median
G7 increase was 28%). If bills had risen at the typical rate,
families would be saving £500 a year off their energy bills.