- Landmark conference in London will bring together
international governments and industry leaders on energy security
- Conference will take place in the Spring, to boost
international co-operation and support countries to speed up the
deployment of clean and resilient energy infrastructure
- Builds on government efforts to bolster UK energy security,
including accelerating renewables and nuclear, and supporting
North Sea oil and gas production
The UK will host a new global energy security conference next
year, bringing together countries from around the world to shore
up critical energy supplies and make the system more resilient to
shocks.
Energy Security Secretary will invite senior government
ministers and industry bosses to the landmark London Energy
Security Conference, around the time of the second anniversary of
the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
The war in Ukraine, and other historic shocks such as the oil
crisis of the 1970s, show how interconnected global energy
security and critical supply chains are, with the impacts hurting
consumers the world over. To prevent this happening again, the UK
is convening this new Conference to enhance international
cooperation and build global resilience against these shocks.
The conference will take place in the Spring and focus on:
- Building energy resilience nationally and
internationally
- Speeding up the deployment of clean and resilient energy
infrastructure
- Advancing technologies and innovation to promote greater
energy independence
- Cooperating internationally to boost energy security around
the world
- Helping provide consumers and businesses with cheaper, more
secure energy
The London Energy Conference follows a significant programme of
international engagement by the Energy Security Secretary. In
recent months, has agreed greater
collaboration on visits to the United States, Japan, South Korea,
India, France and the North Sea Summit in Belgium. These have
been on top of holding key talks with global leaders including at
the COP27 negotiations at Sharm El-Sheikh, the G7 Energy and
Climate Ministers Meeting in Sapporo, the G20 Energy talks in Goa
and the UK’s recent leadership in hosting the Ukraine Recovery
Conference in London.
Energy Security Secretary said:
“As history has shown, including more recently with the Russian
invasion of Ukraine, global energy security and supply is
interconnected. Shockwaves quickly travel around the world and
hurt consumers and businesses by sending global prices soaring.
“We acted swiftly to protect the British public, providing
unprecedented energy bills support, cutting off all Russian gas
supplies and setting out our blueprint for boosting homegrown
energy production to power up Britain.
“But energy security does not stop at our borders – our landmark
London Energy Security Conference will bring together
international governments and industry leaders to help rewire the
global energy system and build collective resilience.”
Next year’s London Energy Security Conference will build on the
UK’s existing work to boost domestic energy security – with the
UK’s decarbonisation leadership to reach Net Zero by diversifying
its energy mix also bringing benefits for global energy security
as well. The government has set out plans to power up Britain, by
scaling up the deployment of cheap renewables and boosting our
homegrown supply of nuclear, while also maximising North Sea
production.
Recent steps taken include:
This has come alongside the UK working together with allies
across Europe, G7 countries, and across the world to accelerate
the global transition to clean, reliable sources of power and
energy efficiency – both to improve energy security and tackle
climate change.
The UK is also well-placed to bring the international community
together on energy, building on world-leading achievements in
delivering cleaner, cheaper renewable technologies.
This includes being the first major economy to legislate for net
zero, and between 1990 and 2021, cutting emissions by 48% while
growing the economy by 65% - decarbonising faster than any other
G7 country.
The UK has increased the amount of energy coming from renewables
from 6.7% in 2010 to 41.5% in 2022, is home to four largest
offshore wind farms in the world and last year, saw the biggest
increase ever in the installation of offshore wind
capacity.