Exchequer Secretary (): Along with resurgent
demand for energy following the pandemic, Russia’s invasion of
Ukraine and weaponisation of gas supplies has driven UK wholesale
gas prices to record highs. Due to the composition and structure
of the UK electricity market, higher wholesale gas prices are in
turn driving higher wholesale electricity prices and leading to
exceptional returns arising to some electricity generators in the
UK.
Consistent with action taken in other countries, from 1 January
2023 the government is introducing a temporary 45% tax on
extraordinary returns made by some UK electricity generators. HM
Treasury will today publish on GOV.UK draft legislation, along
with an updated technical note explaining the policy in detail.
The levy will be applied to a measure of extraordinary revenues,
defined as revenues from selling periodic output at an average
price above £75/MWh. That is approximately 1.5 times the average
price of electricity over the last decade. It will apply to
revenues from electricity generation in the UK from renewable
(including biomass), nuclear, and energy from waste sources and
will be focused on the largest generators through a generation
threshold of 50GWH of annual output and a £10 million allowance.
This temporary measure is not designed to penalise electricity
generators. It is instead a response to the fact that, as a
result of exceptional and unforeseen geopolitical events, some
electricity generators are realising extraordinary returns from
higher electricity prices – higher prices that have imposed
substantial costs on households and business energy users and
necessitated the government to take unprecedented action with £55
billion to directly help households and businesses with their
energy bills. The government had previously considered a price
cap in response to the current crisis. We have instead adopted
this levy as a more proportionate approach. It leaves generators
– whose continued investment in the industry is vital to our
long-term energy security – with a share of the upside they
receive at times of high wholesale prices.
The levy will end on 31 March 2028. This reflects the possibility
that wholesale electricity prices remain elevated for a number of
years and the need for businesses to have certainty around the
measures the UK is taking in response. However, should the crisis
abate and prices fall below the benchmark price, the revenue
forecast from the levy will not materialise and consideration
would be given to the tax’s ongoing application.
Furthermore, responding to concerns that have been raised around
the tax’s duration and its impact on investment, the £75/MWh the
benchmark price will be indexed to CPI inflation from April 2024,
and relief will be provided for certain exceptional costs that
are reducing the degree to which generators are benefitting from
higher electricity prices.
Support for investment in renewables
The government is committed to decarbonising power systems by
2035 and reaching net zero emissions by 2050. Britain is a global
leader in renewable energy. Last year, nearly 40% of our
electricity came from offshore wind, solar and other renewables.
Since 2010, our renewable energy production has grown faster than
any other large country in Europe. We are committed to ensuring
that the UK remains one of the best places in the world to invest
in clean energy and have set stretching deployment ambitions,
including up to 50GW of offshore wind by 2030 and a fivefold
increase in solar by 2035. As we move towards these ambitious
goals, the government will seize the opportunities for growth
through the transition, creating the right framework to crowd-in
billions of pounds of new investment into the UK’s economy. That
includes:
- Our highly successful Contracts for Difference scheme
continues to bring more and more generation online, with our most
recent auction delivering a record capacity of almost 11GW. A
consultation for the sixth Contracts for Difference round was
published last week.
- The Offshore Coordination Support Scheme, which will provide
up to £100m of grants to energy projects to develop coordinated
options for offshore transmission infrastructure, was launched
earlier this month.
- Government also continues to work with the Offshore Wind
Acceleration Taskforce and other developers to identify and
address barriers to deployment. This includes reforming the
planning system, where government is acting to ensure that
consents are secured faster, and the risk of delays are reduced.
- We have heard calls for the tax system to provide
strengthened incentives for [long-term] investment in the
low-carbon electricity generation sector, including investment in
new capacity as well as investment needed to maintain and upgrade
existing capacity. The government continues to recognise the
value of capital allowances for supporting investment within a
sustainable fiscal strategy, and any further changes will be set
out at a future fiscal event in the usual way.
- Government is undertaking the Review of Electricity Market
Arrangements (REMA) which will assess how our power markets can
best deliver a low-cost, low-carbon and secure electricity
system, whilst reducing our exposure to international oil and gas
prices.