Conservatives announce new plans to drill in the North Sea to cut bills by £200
|
Today [Monday 30th March 2026], as Kemi Badenoch visits
Aberdeen and an oil rig in the North Sea, the Conservative
Party is going further in its pursuit of cheap energy with new
plans to cut bills. The Party has already set out plans to axe
costly green levies and taxes which push up everyone's bills,
including the Renewable Obligation subsidy and the Carbon Tax on
electricity generation, to lower electricity costs for families and
businesses. Now, facing external...Request free trial
Today [Monday 30th March 2026], as Kemi Badenoch visits Aberdeen and an oil rig in the North Sea, the Conservative Party is going further in its pursuit of cheap energy with new plans to cut bills. The Party has already set out plans to axe costly green levies and taxes which push up everyone's bills, including the Renewable Obligation subsidy and the Carbon Tax on electricity generation, to lower electricity costs for families and businesses. Now, facing external energy shocks from the ongoing war in the Middle East and a Labour Prime Minister that is too weak to stand up to Ed Miliband's Net Zero ideology, the Conservatives are setting out new measures to ease the cost of living. The new Conservatives' Cheap Power Plan would remove VAT from household energy bills for the next 3 years, providing immediate relief for consumers, and with an average saving of £94 per household per year. This measure is designed to give the British public a cushion against external shocks and the security of lower bills immediately whilst we Get Britain Drilling, increasing our domestic oil & gas production to raise tax revenue. The Cheap Power Plan will be funded by scrapping various taxpayer-funded Net Zero schemes, including Ed Miliband's GB Energy, heat pump subsidies, and abolishing the Renewable Obligation subsidies currently being funded through general taxation. Increased oil and gas production in the North Sea will generate billions of pounds in tax revenue which can be used to reduce the tax burden and ease the cost of living. We are calling on the Labour Government to introduce our plan immediately, putting the British public first as prices rise and consumers pay the price for Starmer, Reeves and Miliband's recklessness. To bring bills down, the Conservatives' new Cheap Power Plan will:
Households are under pressure from global energy shocks and rising prices, and the UK already has the highest energy prices in the developed world. That is why the Conservatives would take VAT off energy bills for the next three years, allowing relief for consumers whilst we introduce our policies to unlock cheaper energy from increased domestic production. Removing VAT from domestic energy bills would provide immediate, visible relief, cutting a further £94 from the average household's costs based on forecasts for the July 2026 price cap – which is why we are today calling on Labour to do this immediately. This is a straightforward, practical step that would put money back into people's pockets without delay.
The Carbon Tax makes up around a third of the wholesale price of electricity and makes electricity artificially expensive. It was designed to drive coal off the system, but since we no longer use coal and we need gas as reliable power to keep the lights on, it simply pushes up the price of gas, wind, solar, and nuclear too. Gas remains essential to keeping the lights on and balancing intermittent renewables. Axing the Carbon Tax on electricity generation will deliver immediate relief, cutting bills by around £75 for the average household and reducing costs right across the economy.
This green levy pays massive subsidies to wind developers, with some wind farms paid up to three times the market price of electricity, funded through extra charges on everyone's bills. Labour's November 2025 Budget temporarily moved 75 per cent of the Renewable Obligation subsidy levy from domestic bills into general taxation from 2026 to 2029. That may show up as a reduction on the face of the bill, but it does not remove the cost of these extortionate subsidies from the energy system. Labour's policy simply moves the cost from someone's energy bill to their tax bill. Labour's change also does nothing to reduce the cost of this renewable subsidy scheme to businesses like cafes, pubs, restaurants, and small manufacturers, as the temporary cut only applies to households. We would scrap the Renewable Obligation subsidies entirely, with the 25% which remains on household bills saving £22, and freeing up money that the Chancellor is currently using to pay them through general taxation.
The Labour Party claim that more drilling in the North Sea won't take a penny off bills. This is nonsense. The British oil and gas industry could provide billions of pounds of tax revenue that the Government could use to cut taxes and cut bills. The industry just needs the Government to get out of the way and let them drill. The Conservatives are campaigning to Get Britain Drilling. Britain relies on oil and gas for around three-quarters of its energy needs, and we will need oil and gas for decades. Choosing not to produce oil and gas here in Britain won't mean we use any less, we will just import more gas from foreign countries instead – sending jobs, tax revenue and investment abroad while Britain's economy suffers. Making LNG and shipping it to the UK also means higher emissions. This was a terrible idea before the war in Iran, but Labour blocking domestic energy production during an energy supply crisis is unforgivable. Others are not following suit. Last year, Norway's Labour Government drilled 49 wells in the North Sea. For the first time since 1964, Britain drilled no wells. The Conservative Party are calling for an end to Labour's ban on new oil and gas licences, an end to the Energy Profits Levy which is blocking investment, and for the Government to use those tax revenues to cut bills. Taken together, our plan would take £200 off energy bills on average over the rest of the Parliament. Labour promised to cut household energy bills by £300, but bills have risen by £73 since taking office and they are set to increase further because of Ed Miliband's Clean Power 2030 target. The UK has already halved its emissions since 1990, reducing emissions by more than any other major economy. But global emissions are rising and countries like China are not following our lead. Continuing down this path of higher energy bills, job losses, and lower economic growth will make us a warning, not an example, to the rest of the world. We must put cheap, reliable energy and a stronger economy first. This approach reflects the Conservative Party's commitment to delivering the cheap, reliable energy families and businesses need to power a stronger economy. In contrast to Reform, the Conservatives' Cheap Power Plan is fully funded, with a clear plan of where savings will be made. Kemi Badenoch MP, Leader of the Conservative Party, said: “I know families and business owners across Britain will be very worried about how the global energy crisis will impact them. That's why I find it appalling that Labour's solution is to tax working people to fund a bailout for those on benefits. “By drilling in the North Sea and scrapping Ed Miliband's crazy green taxes, our Cheap Power Plan would reduce bills by £200 for everyone. “Only the Conservatives have the plans and the team to deliver cheap energy, a stronger economy and a stronger country. Claire Coutinho MP, Shadow Energy Secretary, said: “Labour promised to cut energy bills by £300 but they are still higher than when they took office. Instead, Ed Miliband is blocking drilling in the North Sea during an energy crisis and Rachel Reeves is hiking taxes on working families to pay the energy bills of those on benefits. “The Conservatives would use extra tax revenue from our plan to Get Britain Drilling in the North Sea to cut taxes and ease the cost of living. Our Cheap Power Plan would scrap VAT on energy bills and cut bills by £200 for every family.” “Ed Miliband is taxing industry into the ground and making everyone poorer through higher bills. We have to put cheap energy first.” ENDS
Notes to Editors:
The Conservatives will take VAT off domestic energy bills for the next three years:
The Conservatives will Axe the Carbon Tax on electricity generation:
The Conservatives will scrap Ed Miliband's old renewable subsidies:
The Conservatives will Get Britain Drilling, backing North Sea oil and gas and using the revenues to cut the cost of living for households:
The Conservative Party will back the North Sea:
Labour and Reform do not have a plan to cut energy bills for business:
Energy bills are up by £73 under Labour:
|
