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The Autumn Budget is a missed opportunity for the
Government to show their support to the renewable energy
deployment and clean growth
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· The
Budget lacked clarity on issues including alternative support for
decarbonising heat post 2020/21
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· The
Government freezing of the CPS rate could have a detrimental
impact on the industry
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· Energy
Capital Allowance withdrawals for shows a lack of Government
support to the industry
The Chancellor’s Autumn Budget released today acts as a missed
opportunity for the Government to show their support and
commitment to the renewable energy industry and for continued
leadership on clean growth.
The budget lacked clarity on a number of issues facing the
industry including alternative support for decarbonising heat
post 2020/21, support for less developed technologies and a route
to market supported by the Government.
A further worrying announcement for the industry is the Budgets
statement on Carbon Pricing, a greatly anticipated area of the
Budget. The Government are freezing the CPS rate in order to
lower the Carbon Price Floor. REA analysis believes that this
could be detrimental to the sector with the potential of coal
being reintegrated back into the UK’s energy mix.
The REA welcomes the Government’s plans to introduce a tax on the
production and import of plastic as well as the £20 million
pledged to reducing plastic waste and boosting recycling.
The REA is disappointed with the withdrawal of the Energy Capital
Allowance (ECA) for technologies on the Energy Technology List
and Water Technology List from April 2020 to be channelled into
an ‘Industry Energy Transformation Fund’. This is a further
missed opportunity for the Government to show their support for
the industry.
James Court, Policy and External Affairs Director at the
Renewable Energy Association said:
“It is frustrating that another Budget comes and goes, yet
the opportunity for the UK to be a genuine leader in crucial
future technologies slips by. There is huge support for
renewables across the country, parliament, and even within
government, yet the Treasury continues to stymie the potential
growth in this sector.
“Next to nothing in this budget will help build clean energy
infrastructure we so desperately need, and in parts actively
harms the industry. Carbon Prices frozen, tax allowances for
energy products scrapped, and a continued block to market for the
cheapest forms of electricity.”