Moved by Baroness Kramer That this House takes note of the Report
from the Economic Affairs Committee Investing in energy: price,
security, and the transition to net zero (1st Report, HL Paper 49).
Baroness Kramer (LD) My Lords, the noble Lord, Lord Bridges, the
chair of the Economic Affairs Committee, sends the House his
apologies as he had to be absent today. He wished to move the
debate on the committee’s report Investing in Energy: Price,
Security, and the...Request free trial
Moved by
That this House takes note of the Report from the Economic
Affairs Committee Investing in energy: price, security, and the
transition to net zero (1st Report, HL Paper 49).
(LD)
My Lords, the noble Lord, , the chair of the Economic
Affairs Committee, sends the House his apologies as he had to be
absent today. He wished to move the debate on the committee’s
report Investing in Energy: Price, Security, and the Transition
to Net Zero because it has been 15 months since it was issued,
but any further delay in debating its conclusions and
recommendations in this Chamber would have been intolerable, so
the role falls to me.
I start by thanking all the witnesses who gave evidence to the
committee and expressing our appreciation to the outstanding
staff who were essential in enabling us to deliver the report:
Adrian Hitchins, Peter Jenion and Gurjeet Rathore, and I also
thank one of our current staff, Neil Mellor, who helped me
remember a report that I had put aside 15 months ago.
This is a brief debate, so I shall spare everyone a discussion of
the impact of the Russian war in Ukraine on global energy markets
and the impact of energy price rises on the cost of living of
ordinary people. However, both factors were constantly in our
minds and part of the background as we developed this report. Our
focus was the Government’s commitment in law to achieve net zero
by 2050 and their target to decarbonise the power system by 2035.
We sought to answer the question: how can the Government mobilise
the capital needed to ensure that the transition is orderly and
that energy supply is affordable and reliable?
Our conclusions were structured under four headings. First, we
considered investment and action in the short term. We urged the
Government to seize the moment and respond to public concerns on
energy prices by: speeding up the pace of reducing energy
consumption, notably by accelerating measures such as home
insulation; signalling very clearly that goal to the private
sector; and providing far more detail on how such investment will
be released. We asked the Government to publish an energy demand
strategy and to include financing options and a means of
incentivising investment in energy-efficient measures. We are
still waiting. We called on the Government to re-examine their
limited ambitions for onshore wind, to extend the life of nuclear
power stations over coal power stations—that essentially seems to
be the focus—and to seek an agreement with the EU and Norway on
energy co-operation to manage possible shortages of liquefied
natural gas.
Our second set of recommendations focused on increasing
investment in the transition. While the committee supported the
Government’s clear and ambitious targets for many renewable
technologies, we asked for far more policy detail on a range of
issues, including long-duration energy storage, market structures
and mechanisms for hydrogen production, market models for carbon
capture and storage, and investment in transition networks. We
also sought more policy detail on the delivery plan for nuclear
and sought an explanation for the Government’s target for
24-gigawatt nuclear capacity when the Climate Change Committee
can see a route to only something like half that capacity. That
question remains essentially unanswered.
The committee also suggested:
“Any extension of oil and gas exploration or investment should
focus on projects with short lead times … and not enable
substantial levels of long-term production that conflicts with
net-zero objectives”.
I shall make a comment about that at the end of my speech.
We sought an assessment of the energy profits levy and any plans
for carbon pricing. To oversee the complexity of the energy
network, new technology and the security of supply, we
recommended a new body, independent of government: the future
systems operator.
Our third set of recommendations focused on financial regulation
to ensure that the mandate for the Bank of England to support the
transition to net zero included having regard to energy security.
We received a fairly extensive response from the Bank of England
assuring us that it was aware of the issues.
We called for better data and better disclosure. We also asked
for the Government to help unlock new capital with Solvency UK;
they have made moves in that direction. We asked them to work
internationally on green taxonomies—investors need consistency,
not just in the UK but across the whole marketplace that they
serve—and to consider international opportunities, such as
working with the EU common purchase platform. We also raised the
issue of access to critical minerals and mitigating
vulnerabilities in the supply chain.
All these strands were pulled together in our call for an energy
strategy. Throughout the committee’s work, it became increasingly
evident that there is a critical missing piece: a detailed and
comprehensive plan. The gaps between the Government’s ambition
and practical policy are significant. We recommended that the
strategy should both set out a proper plan, even if in broad
terms, and provide an assessment of costs and savings. A net-zero
delivery plan would highlight vulnerabilities, take account of
key issues such as energy security and foreign policy, and energy
affordability, and help avoid a disorderly transition. An agreed
plan in which all parties have confidence removes
uncertainty—and, without certainty, the private sector will not
make the critical commitments and investments necessary to
achieve net zero.
The work of the committee ended here, in essence, but I will add
a few comments of my own based on recent developments; I stress
that they are my own comments. I recognise that this Government
have made some progress—on a hydrogen road map, on identifying
our first carbon capture site, and on a plan for insulation—but I
agree with the Climate Change Committee in its comments made in
March:
“Delivery and deployment of infrastructure must be achieved at a
much greater pace”.
I am—as I said, these are personal, not committee,
remarks—utterly disappointed by the Government’s decision to
approve the Rosebank oil and gas field development. There is no
way that I can see that it meets the committee’s recommendation
that
“investment should focus on projects with short lead times … and
not enable substantial levels of long-term production that
conflicts with net-zero objectives”.
The five-year delay of the ban on the sale of new petrol and
diesel cars is not just a blow to the UK automotive industry but,
indeed, a blow to achieving net zero on time. I think others in
this debate will expand on this but, talking to people within the
automotive industry, the comment that has struck me most strongly
is that the delay has made a fool of those who believed, and made
investment decisions based on, the Government’s original
commitment. Undermining certainty is a very dangerous thing to
do, especially in a policy so critical to us as net zero, and so
complex because of all the related activities and decisions.
The decision to delay for nine years the ban on fossil fuel
heating for off-gas grid homes; exemptions to the ban on the sale
of gas boilers in 2035; scrapping the requirement for landlords
to ensure that all rental properties have an energy performance
certificate of grade C or higher from 2025—all these are not just
disappointments but, again, undercut any sense of certainty for
the private sector as it decides how to plan and invest.
I thank all the members of the committee, several of whom will be
speaking in this debate. They often have much more understanding
of the broader issues here than I do, so I hope that their
comments will be taken very seriously. Some of our members have
passed on to pastures new. I also thank our chairman, the noble
Lord, , even in his absence, for his
determination to be inclusive; we were a committee of fairly
varied opinions. His wisdom and skill in focusing on the
essentials in the end gave us harmony and brought us to a report
around which there was a great deal of consensus.
The key messages of the report are the need for accelerated
action, for an independent co-ordinating body and, above all, for
a detailed and comprehensive energy strategy that gives certainty
to individuals and the private sector, and—these are my own
words—is not subject to whims and elections. That remains key to
achieving net zero and resolving the potential conflict of net
zero, affordable energy and energy security. We have to make sure
that all three goals are wedded together in the co-ordinated plan
that we then deliver. I ask that the House takes note of the
report.
5.31pm
(Con)
My Lords, I am grateful for the opportunity to debate this
report. I declare my interest as an unpaid trustee of the Global
Warming Policy Foundation, a charity.
The committee’s report, as has been said, is now over a year old
and therefore, unfortunately, rather out of date. It reflects a
world where the policy goal of net zero was undisputed and its
economic and financial underpinnings unquestioned. As we know,
during 2023, as the real-world costs of the net-zero transition
have become more apparent across western economies, we are
beginning to see thinking change. Our own Government’s very
welcome, though still minimalist, decisions to delay the
deadlines for compulsory transition to EVs and gas boilers
recognise the reality that the current course to net zero is
likely to prove impossibly costly and politically and
economically unworkable.
I certainly agree with the committee’s scepticism, though perhaps
not from the same direction, about the relationship between the
Government’s net-zero plans and hard reality. Nowhere is that
scepticism more justified than in one area: wind power. Given the
short time available, that is the issue I want to concentrate on
today. One often hears it said that wind power is both a cheap
form of energy and one that enhances energy security. I am afraid
that both those points are fundamentally mistaken. Given the time
constraints, I want to make just two broad points.
The first of these is the obvious one: wind power is intermittent
and therefore requires back-up. We get wind power only when the
wind blows, so widespread use of it means that we must maintain a
back-up source of dispatchable power, currently gas. It is argued
that the back-up to wind power in the future will be electricity
storage. Unfortunately, this is implausible. Doing so through
battery power will be fabulously expensive—several times the
annual GDP of this country—if it is even possible at all.
Hydrogen might be a little cheaper, though still well beyond what
can plausibly be paid for. I am afraid that last month’s Royal
Society report about hydrogen storage, which purported to show
its feasibility, is based on rather implausible assumptions. At
least, I hope they are implausible. For example, there is a
belief that total UK electricity demand in 2050 will be half what
it is now. We face a rather bleak future as a country if that is
so.
The truth, which wind power proponents shy away from, is that the
more wind power you have, the more gas you need as well. The
resultant rickety generation system then makes the overall grid
less reliable, while balancing it becomesever more complex and
costly—last year it was nearly £4 billion for this alone. This
stressed renewables grid cannot be relied on by a modern
economy.
Secondly, as a result of these things, wind power is expensive.
It is obvious that running wind plus back-up will always be more
expensive than just back-up. Moreover, running that back-up gas
network at partial efficiency brings extra costs and deters the
investment that we want to see. It is widely believed that wind
power costs are coming down fast, but this really does not seem
to be the case. The estimates produced by the department are a
little disconnected from this reality.
If, as the department claims, an offshore wind farm can deliver
power at £44 per megawatt hour, or £55 in current money, why did
no wind farm developer take up the offer last month of contracts
for difference at £65 per megawatt hour? Why did Vattenfall
cancel its plans for the Norfolk Boreas wind farm in July, rather
than deliver energy at the price it was contracted to—prices, by
the way, that ignore the costs of back-up or strain on the grid?
It is obvious from examining the published accounts of companies
that costs have not fallen to any great extent, onshore or
offshore. A policy based on the assumption that they have
therefore makes no sense.
The truth is that the whole wind power project risks being a huge
waste of effort and resources. It is going to deliver us, at
fabulous cost, an electricity grid that is more unreliable, less
secure and more expensive than the one we have now. The correct
way forward to reach any serious target to reduce carbon
emissions has to be a gas to nuclear programme, first by more
modern CCGT generation at existing sites and restarting fracking,
following that with a revived nuclear programme. We will
obviously be able to do that only if we can eliminate the market
distortions and the massive subsidies and consumer costs that
come with the current wind power programme.
I do not have much expectation that this is going to happen,
given the investment that this Government and their predecessors
have made in wind power. I still hope that my noble friend the
Minister and his department will look at these issues with a
fresh eye and perhaps at least put in place a proper red team
review of the wind power programme, before it is too
late.5.36pm
(Lab)
My Lords, the noble Baroness, Lady Kramer, has made a masterly
introduction to this debate on the Economic Affairs Committee’s
report Investing in Energy: Price, Security, and the Transition
to Net Zero, a profoundly complex and challenging subject. I was
proud to be a member of the committee at the time of the inquiry
and, like the noble Baroness, I pay tribute to the noble Lord,
, for his excellent
chairmanship and the work of other committee members and the
staff.
A week is a long time in politics, so the 65 weeks that have
elapsed since the publication of this report is an age. Unlike
the noble Lord, , I believe that its analysis and
conclusions stand up well to the changes during this time,
although three different Prime Ministers and, in particular,
breathtaking U-turns by the current incumbent of 10 Downing
Street—in residence but not in power—have continued to move the
goalposts hugely on government policy. I should draw the
attention of the House to my interests as disclosed in the
register and in the report: as a trustee of the Esmée Fairbairn
Foundation—a major funder of environmental causes in the UK as
well as, through its endowment, an investor in sustainable energy
funds—and as a personal shareholder in Greencoat UK Wind.
Within the committee, we debated whether the challenge of
balancing the issues of cost, security and achieving net zero
could helpfully be described as a trilemma. I argue that it is
even worse, not least in mangling the English language: it is a
quadrilemma, as security must not involve unacceptable conflicts
with, or compromises of, our foreign policy. For that reason, in
the short to medium term the committee concluded, based on
evidence we received from witnesses across the range of
interested parties, that there needs to be further selective
investment in fossil fuel production to meet the country’s need
for energy security, consistent with other foreign policy
objectives. But my personal view, at least partly shared by the
committee, I think, is that to help meet the net-zero target,
which is not an essay crisis with a last-minute deadline but a
continuous path of action and emissions reductions over the next
27 years, the Government may need not just to prioritise the
approval of short lead-time projects but to find ways to
underwrite shorter periods for exploration of new fields.
Stranded reserves may need to remain stranded.
In my remaining time, I will touch on two big themes: technology
and money. The astonishing creativity of scientists and the
technology sector as a whole must not be an excuse for inaction
now. Technology in a wide range of areas, such as hydrogen,
network transmission, carbon capture and, most significantly,
nuclear, lies at the heart of the progressive improvements and
reductions in emissions that are essential to achieve the
underlying objectives of net zero: keeping global warming to no
more than 1.5 degrees centigrade, and, importantly, a 45%
reduction in emissions by 2030—seven years’ time.
Investment, both pure science and commercial, is highly
important. However, a realistic assessment of how quickly
technology can deliver results must be factored into the policies
the Government adopt. Investors in hydrogen projects see no
prospect of it being a valid means of storage in this decade. The
Government have placed great weight on small modular reactors
riding like the cavalry to the rescue, but the technology is
still unproven. The first licence in the US was granted at the
beginning of this year after the expenditure by the company
concerned of half a billion dollars over 10 years.
Finally, on money and timescale, if a week is a long time in
politics, then an hour is a long time for hedge fund traders.
That seems to be the only explanation for the Prime Minister’s
claim that recent decisions were essentially long-term ones. Net
zero cannot be achieved without the expenditure of money. Just
kicking the can down the road beyond the next election, perhaps
betraying a lack of confidence from the Prime Minister that it
will be his problem, is not acceptable. A Labour Government will
make that investment within the constraints—
(Con)
My Lords, can we keep all our speeches to five minutes, please?
Could the noble Viscount now wrap up his comments?
(Lab)
A Labour Government will make the investment that this Government
have failed to.
5.43pm
(CB)
My Lords, I am now a member of the Economic Affairs Committee,
but I was not when this report was published. Had I been, I would
have endorsed it for bringing a measure of realism and proportion
to the debate about net zero. It is helpful that the report
recognises that there will be a transition, which will take
several decades, during which there will still be a requirement
for fossil fuels in the British economy.
When I first worked on energy policy some decades ago, the
dominant framework was the so-called trilemma. Energy policy had
three objectives. The first was sustainability; it had to advance
the Government’s environmental objectives, especially on climate
change. Secondly, there was the objective of affordability; the
price of energy should not impoverish unfairly poorer people or
small businesses, nor make major industries uncompetitive. Third
was security of supply and resilience; it should protect energy
consumers and society from major shocks. The aim was to find a
solution which optimised a combination of those objectives. It
was not to pick one objective and maximise the achievement of
that at the expense of the others.
The Climate Change Act 2008 demolished this framework, giving
climate change primacy. It is the only objective protected in
statute. The Climate Change Committee was established to warn
government about progress towards its environmental goals and to
propose measures needed to correct course. The CCC has also been
backed by extremely eloquent and well-paid spokesmen, some of
whom were sitting here a few minutes ago.
As well as no statutory backing, the other objectives have had no
equivalent sponsor. There has been no body equally resourced and
voiced to defend the interests of poorer people, small businesses
and traders, nor to speak for major industries. Nor, more
dangerously, has there been a body of equivalent authority to
monitor the state of energy security or resilience. This has
become glaringly apparent since the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Witness the reluctance to start filling the Rough storage
facility. For too long we have tolerated dependence on our
enemies, such as Russia, or our Saudi fair-weather friends. With
such a lopsided structure it is unsurprising that policy
decisions have been warped.
The EAC report is therefore to be welcomed for bringing a greater
sense of balance between the three objectives. It is also
consistent with the Prime Minister’s latest set of announcements.
The reaction from the CCC has focused on two issues in
particular: the coal mine in Cumbria and the go-ahead for
offshore oil and gas exploration. The CCC argued that these
measures have no effect on energy prices and that they do not
enhance security of supply. Despite the eminence of their
proponents, both arguments are flawed.
The EAC report acknowledged that extra UK fossil fuel output will
have little effect on prices, which are set in world markets, but
this is not the knock-down argument it claims to be. If, during
the transition to net zero, UK output of oil and gas is higher
and world prices go up, the value of that extra output will also
rise—in effect, creating a natural hedge to offset what would be
a loss to UK national income.
On output, it is argued that security will not be enhanced if the
extra output is contracted to be exported. However, that depends
on how the contracts are written and the terms the Government set
for extraction licences. For example, is there an obligation to
contribute to building up our strategic reserves? I doubt if any
other country in the world takes the view that having greater
domestic output has no bearing on the security of supply.
Notice the contradiction here. It is said that extra fossil fuel
output is too small to be material on prices, but that same
increase in production is claimed to be big enough to have a
damaging impact on world CO2 emissions. You cannot have it both
ways. Eventually the CCC is forced back on to the argument that
the extra output will reduce our influence in the world debate.
However, with our CO2 emissions being only about 1% of the
world’s total, we are not major players, and we will be seen as
having a loud voice but carrying a small stick.
I have one reservation with the report. It looks favourably on
the discussions going on to ensure that banks and other sources
of finance pay greater attention to the risks of fossil fuel
investments becoming stranded assets. Indeed, they could be—just
like the canals. But there are many places where one will find
stranded assets. A lot of them are more immediate and closer to
home. A walk down the high streets of Britain or its office
districts will show you many stranded assets. The airfields of
the south-west of the USA are littered with surplus aircraft,
which are stranded on someone’s books. By all means, be wary of
stranded assets, but do not treat oil and gas investments as a
special case.
In conclusion, I welcome this report, with its greater
recognition that oil and gas will be needed during the
transition, and indeed beyond 2050, and that we must pay more
attention to all three objectives in the trilemma. So long as we
continue to be a consumer of oil and gas, it would be better to
produce a higher proportion of it for ourselves.
5.48pm
(GP)
My Lords, it is a pleasure to take part in this debate. I
listened particularly carefully to the speech of the noble Lord,
, who represents a small but very
vocal segment of the debate covered by this report and the
broader net-zero issue. I would like to correct one statement the
noble Lord made about the Royal Society report. It does not
assume a halving of electricity demand. I will quote a paragraph
from the report:
“The demand for electricity in Great Britain in 2050 is taken to
be 570 TWh/year in this briefing, roughly twice current annual
demand”.
I thank the committee for the report and the noble Baroness, Lady
Kramer, for her excellent introduction. I will make three points,
pairing the 86 pages of the report and the Government’s 28-page
official response—I am not counting the letter from the right
honourable Mr Rees-Mogg, who was briefly relevant as the
Secretary of State—because, despite the change in governing
regime, it seems that there has been disturbingly little change
in government energy policy.
The noble Baroness, Lady Kramer, focused on paragraph 121 of the
Economic Affairs Committee’s report, and I make no apologies for
focusing on it as well, because it is absolutely crucial. It
quotes Dr Fatih Birol, the executive director of the
International Energy Agency:
“Nobody should imagine that Russia’s invasion can justify a wave
of new large-scale fossil fuel infrastructure in a world that
wants to limit global warming to 1.5°C”.
But in the Government’s written response, as in their subsequent
response, there is reference to launching a
“new oil and gas licensing round”,
which is exactly what they have gone ahead and done. You might
think that they have not read the report at all. The noble Lord
preceding me referred to stranded assets. I point out that the
Committee on Climate Change estimates that new oil and gas
licences take, on average, 28 years to begin producing. We are
talking at a time when we clearly cannot use any significant
amounts of oil and gas.
My second point is on the committee’s recommendation that the
Government publish an “energy demand reduction strategy”,
focusing particularly on home energy efficiency. This is just one
of the many disaster areas of energy policy. It is worth noting
that insulation rates in homes today are well below where they
were when , as Prime Minister, decided
to “cut the green crap”. Listening to the Prime Minister’s
comments at the recent Tory party conference, you might have
thought that, given the committee’s report’s focus on the need
for green skills—these are often debated in your Lordships’
House—they might have been a focus of Tory education policy. So
can the Minister say how the proposed new British baccalaureate,
the major education policy announcement, fits with the green
skills agenda?
Thirdly, on carbon pricing, the committee calls for the provision
of
“clarity to investors and … incentives to fund projects necessary
for the transition”.
The official government response here has since been overtaken by
events. We have recently seen a sharp decline in the carbon
price, attributable to the Government’s decision to release 53.5
million additional allowances from a reserve pot to the market
between 2024 and 2027. That means that emissions prices have
fallen to less than half of the EU equivalent, when they used to
be more or less at parity.
I credit the Financial Times for noting the financial and
economic impact of this. It has left British exporters facing
hundreds of millions of pounds in EU carbon border taxes within
the next decade. That means that money that would have come to
the British Treasury will now go to the EU; are the Government
happy about that?
5.53pm
(Con)
My Lords, I declare my registered interests as an investor in a
number of energy companies. I too am a member of the Economic
Affairs Committee, and I pay tribute to the chairmanship of my
noble friend of Headley. It is a shame that
he is not able to be here to lead this debate, but I thank the
noble Baroness, Lady Kramer, for introducing the report so
ably.
It has taken 15 months for there to be a debate on this report
and, after all that, we are allowed only five minutes. Our Select
Committees should be an integral part of how Parliament holds the
Government to account, but they are being sidelined. I hope that
the Government will do better in future to allow Select Committee
reports the time they deserve in your Lordships’ House.
A lot has happened in the energy space in the last year since we
reported. I particularly welcome the Government’s recent
announcements, which have brought a welcome sense of pragmatism
to the delivery of net zero. As we heard, the report focused on
how much investment was needed in order to deliver net zero by
2050 and where that investment would come from. The Government’s
response has not shed much more light on this. But the even
bigger questions, which the report did not set out to look at,
are: who pays, when they have to pay it and how much they have to
pay. These are the biggest challenges facing the delivery of net
zero.
The Government have never been clear with the public about how
much the cost of achieving net zero will affect them. Indeed, my
noble friend Lord Hammond has recently said that successive
Governments have been “systematically dishonest” about it. The
public have little understanding about how green levies are
already inflating their energy bills or about what they will pay
for in future, including the impact of delivering a nuclear
programme. We need a proper grown-up debate with the public about
what costs they are prepared to accept.
The advocates of net zero often assert that, in the long run, the
costs are likely to be outweighed by the benefits. Long-range
forecasts, such as those from the Committee on Climate Change,
are only as good as the underlying assumptions on which they are
based, and it is not surprising that many of those assumptions
are highly contestable. They were also made at a time when
interest rates were near zero, and today’s “higher for longer”
environment does not improve the calculations.
The renewables sector lives on subsidies and, as we heard, it
imposes costs by way of extra investment in grid infrastructure
and in back-up storage or generation capacity for when the sun
does not shine and the wind does not blow. Consumers pay for all
of that. As my noble friend pointed out, renewable energy
itself seems to be getting more expensive rather than less, as
the latest auction round showed. Who really knows what renewables
will end up costing consumers, not in a hypothetical 2050 but in
three, five or 10 years’ time? A 25-year forecast has no meaning
to those who pay bills in the short and medium term. Today’s
energy consumers should be centre stage in the conversations
about the cost of delivering net zero.
The country as a whole remains supportive of the Government’s
net-zero ambitions, but polling shows that support weakens when
the impact on bills is factored in. As energy bill payers
discover what net zero is costing them, and as those costs
increase, so support for the policies will likely decrease. At
the end of the day, net zero will be delivered in this country
only if the British people are prepared to pay for it, either in
their bills or in higher taxes. The Secretary of State for Energy
Security and Net Zero described net zero as a form of religion.
Religious belief is all very well, but it does not pay the
bills.
It was never sensible to sign a blank cheque to deliver net zero
in a country that accounts for less than 1% of global emissions,
and we certainly ought not to sign a blank cheque for some notion
of global leadership. This House must never forget that the
British people will decide what happens, whatever the politicians
and the metropolitan elite think.
5.59pm
(Con)
My Lords, I apologise for delaying the Front-Bench speakers a few
minutes in their replies to what I regard as a really excellent
report. In fact, I rate it the best one that has so far come from
your Lordships’ House on the great energy transition.
In my brief intervention I will simply add one point. The report
rightly explains that most of the funds for the great energy
transition ahead will have to come from the private sector, which
will have to do the heavy lifting. Governments may be strapped
for cash—all Governments, not just this one, or any future
one—but, as the report rightly says, there is certainly a huge
amount of investment money around the world in both pension funds
and sovereign wealth funds. Indeed, I declare an interest in
advising one of the biggest funds, as in the register.
These funds will come here only if there are investible projects,
and this applies acutely in the nuclear power field, which is
central to our all-electric future. The present UK plan, as I
understand it, is to build another mega-gigawatt plant at
Sizewell in Suffolk, described as a replica of the unfinished and
vastly overbudget one now being built at Hinkley Point C. This is
just not very attractive for investors; even with the regulated
asset-based idea, which piles the money on the consumer and
taxpayer from the start, the attraction is not really there. The
EPR design is anyway full of problems; even the French say that
it is too complicated. The prize one that was supposed to work in
China had to be partly closed, and others are full of
difficulties. The taxpayer and the struggling consumer have to
carry the full burden and a good deal of the risk.
Smaller new designs, which are becoming available and can be
built much quicker off site, should right now be the absolute
priority, as in many other countries. They could be highly
attractive to investors and are ready to produce clean
electricity from existing nuclear sites. Of course such sites
will have the wiring already, which many other sites do not, and
they can be ready before these risky and out-of-date white
elephants are anywhere near finished, and well before the end of
this decade. Therefore they will make a major contribution to our
net-zero aims.
Please will my noble friend confirm that the Government are at
least aware of those key facts before they mistakenly plunge
ahead with Sizewell C, committing billions to it, which I
understand could be very soon? Indeed, it would be nice if the
opposition spokesmen could also confirm that they are aware of
these realities, which so far seem to have escaped too many
people.
6.02pm
(LD)
My Lords, I also declare my interest: it is in a company called
Aldustria Ltd, which is into energy storage. I absolutely agree
with the noble Lord, , that there are many issues
around energy storage, particularly in the long term, on which I
know the Government have done a number of consultations.
I congratulate my noble friend Lady Kramer on her introduction to
this report. She is absolutely right: it has taken far too long
to get it to the Floor of the House. As the noble Viscount,
, said, there have been three
Prime Ministers since the report came out. The only thing that I
would say is that it has actually managed to get to the end of
its process slightly quicker than the Government’s Energy Bill,
which started in the same month that this report was published
but has still to be completed. I hope that that will happen
before the end of this month. That shows the urgency that the
Government wanted to put into their energy strategy but did not,
particularly on electricity and carbon capture and storage.
I shall come back on energy costs for a minute, in response to
the noble Lord, . The noble Viscount, , is absolutely right about
2050. It is not about reaching net zero that year—you have to get
it all the way through. I do not think that methane was mentioned
in the report—I may be wrong—but that is one area where there may
be some quicker wins.
I absolutely agree with the noble Lord, , about Rough storage,
although I think that only a small amount of that facility is
contracted to the Government. Centrica is hanging on to the rest
of it, and there is no guarantee that it will be there long term.
That is a real vulnerability.
As for new gas and oil and, particularly, coal facilities, I do
not see any UK Government banning exports of those products. I do
not see that ever happening, which is why I do not think that
there is any effect on our energy security or, indeed, on global
pricing for those new openings.
I shall come back on demand reduction in a minute in response to
the noble Baroness, Lady Bennett, as it is an important area. But
I just say to the noble Baroness, Lady Noakes, that I came up as
a traditional economist, and it always seemed to me that it was
really important to cost the idea of externalities into actual
pricing systems. With carbon emissions we have huge externalities
that are not priced into market competition—and that is why there
have to be differences.
I also say to the noble Baroness that, of course, there is a huge
kickback at the moment to the Government on contracts for
difference through the Low Carbon Contracts Company, whereby at
the moment actual market prices are hugely higher than strike
prices. I would be interested to understand from the
Minister—
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for Energy
Security and Net Zero () (Con)
It is not a kickback to the Government—it is a kickback to the
consumer.
(LD)
Yes, exactly. The Minister corrects me. That is even more to the
point. I think it has got to several billion pounds in terms of
coming back into that sector working the other way, which
probably exceeds now the green costs that there were. That is
quite an optimistic look at that.
It seems to me that one real problem in this area—because the
world has moved on since last July—is with those recent
announcements that my noble friend went through from the Prime
Minister. They probably did not have as big an effect as some
people said, but they did drive a horse and carriage through our
international reputation, as indeed did the coal decision in
Cumbria. Our being seen as a global leader in this area, which
the report was keen to emphasise, has been trashed to a large
degree, and has been seen as such by allies such as America and
the European Union.
I want to come back to those announcements, one of which was to
abolish the Energy Efficiency Taskforce. The Minister was chair
of that, and I understand that four meetings took place. Whether
you look at security or at cost, the most secure energy is the
energy that you do not need. The energy-efficiency side is
important in that area, as well as cost. I would be interested to
understand from the Minister why he was made redundant by the
abolition of that committee. The UK should be a real leader, and
really move in this area. The report asks for an energy demand
reduction strategy, and that is really called for. It is not just
around buildings, as the Government’s response said that it was;
it is around a much broader area, including appliances and other
interests.
One thing that has been emphasised during this debate is private
investment, which it is clear is absolutely essential to deliver
net zero. I am not pessimistic about this. Most private
investment takes place to reduce costs, not to increase them.
Companies do not invest to increase prices; they invest to reduce
prices, and that is what we should aim for with the net-zero
strategy.
One problem with the Prime Minister’s announcement, and all the
other issues that have happened, is that we have a wobble with
investor confidence—absolutely we do. Those messages that go out
to industry and the investment sector say that we are no longer
reliable on our government policy or on the foundation of
confidence going forward. That has an even bigger effect when we
have the Inflation Reduction Act in the United States and the EU
green deal industrial plan on the other side of the channel. I
would be interested to understand from the Minister when the
Government will really respond to that huge financial challenge,
which really prejudices how we can deliver net zero through the
private sector in future.
I will make one or two further points, as I am sure the House
will want to move on. The noble Baroness mentioned the UK
Emissions Trading Scheme. I have been very hopeful—not because I
am pro-European but because of liquidity and various other
areas—that there should be a tie-up between the UK Emissions
Trading Scheme and the EU equivalent. I understood that that was
a government objective, but now we have a huge divergence in
prices. The UK ETS a year ago was about £100 per carbon tonne; it
is now down below £40. In the EU, it was around €100 per tonne a
year ago but is now down to about €80. A huge difference has
opened up. I would be interested to hear the Minister’s reaction
on how the carbon border adjustment mechanism will affect that,
as Europe starts to develop it over the next few years. That
price signal is so important in terms of taxation and
disappearing incentives for investment in our economy.
I am glad to see the noble Lord, , is here, because one of the key
issues in energy security at the moment is defence, which has not
been mentioned in this debate. In Finland, we have seen potential
interference with the explosion of one of its energy pipelines
and we have seen Nord Stream 1 and 2 destroyed. We know from our
intelligence that the Russian Federation is keeping a very close
eye on our undersea energy and communication networks. The
Minister may not have an answer to this, but it is one of our
major concerns in energy security as we move forward and have
more interconnectors offshore. I am sure he agrees that this is a
major thing we must look at.
Finally, coming back to consumers, the energy companies and Ofgem
estimate that, as we reach the end of summer and enter winter and
higher bills, the outstanding energy bills from consumers will be
about £2.6 billion. Are the Government happy with that? Do they
think it is sustainable for low-income families? Do they intend
to do anything about it? This is probably the biggest challenge
of all. Although the noble Lord, , talked about the importance of
gas, which will be important for many years, the gas price has
driven inflation and the high costs to families of keeping warm.
It has led to inflation, which has led to the failure of those
offshore wind projects. It is important that we restart that, but
the problem is not the technology and the price coming down in
real terms; the problem is inflation. What will happen to
families over this winter?
6.13pm
(Lab)
My Lords, I thank the noble Baroness, Lady Kramer, and, through
her, the noble Lord, , and other members of the
Economic Affairs Committee for producing this weighty report.
July 2022 was also when the Government first announced their
intention to legislate for the country’s future energy needs in
the Energy Bill. The Energy Bill has now expanded to some
400-plus pages, has still not become an Act of Parliament and is
due for further consideration by the other place later this
week.
(Con)
It would not if the Government acted as Parliament
recommended.
(Lab)
There is a process to go through. The amendments we made were to
the benefit of the Bill rather than to take away from it.
There is some crossover between the Economic Affairs Committee
report and the legislation but, sadly, nowhere near enough. The
starting point of this report was back in February 2022, when the
Economic Affairs Committee launched an inquiry into how the
Government could support investment in UK energy to achieve
greater security of supply, improve affordability and meet the
UK’s net-zero targets.
The committee considered how the Government planned to achieve
the following two separate but related objectives. First was the
commitment in law to achieve net zero by 2050 alongside the
target to decarbonise the system by 2035. The committee
considered how this target might be achieved while ensuring the
UK’s energy supply was “affordable and reliable”. It argued that
encouraging private sector investment was the key to achieving
net zero. However, the committee said there was
“a gap between the Government’s ambitions and the practical
policy that is needed to provide confidence and clear market
signals to investors”.
The second was the Government’s plans to mitigate the effect of
rising energy prices exacerbated by Russia’s appalling invasion
of Ukraine in 2022.
The report produced by the committee recommended that the
Government should take the following measures over the next three
to five years—now two to four years. First, they should publish a
net-zero delivery plan which would detail how the UK could
achieve net zero in an orderly way. Secondly, they should publish
an energy demand reduction strategy which would include measures
to increase incentives for investment in energy efficiency
measures for buildings and to support the development of
resilient supply chains and workforce skills—as the noble Lord,
, pointed out, this has not
happened. Thirdly, they should increase the deployment of
renewable energy sources to reduce the UK’s dependence on gas
markets, including onshore wind, which it describes as
“one of the cheapest and fastest ways to increase renewable
energy generation”,
despite the reservations of the noble Lord, . Fourthly, they should maintain
existing energy generation in the immediate future while
extending the life of nuclear power stations over coal power
stations, as this would result in lower carbon emissions.
Finally, they should seek to reach agreement with other European
countries to manage energy supply emergencies. Have any of these
measures been taken on board?
The committee also recommended that the Government should take
action to increase investor confidence to make more private
capital available to support the transition to net zero, by
setting out a cost analysis of their targets to achieve 24
gigawatts of nuclear capacity. As the noble Baroness, Lady
Kramer, pointed out, this figure is more than double the capacity
assumed by the Climate Change Committee. Can the Minister explain
the variance between the two? It also recommended they provide
more detail on the capacity, timeframes and expected costs of
increasing long-duration energy storage, outline the market
structures and mechanisms that would be used to support increased
hydrogen production and support carbon capture and storage by
fulfilling their commitment to develop four low-carbon industrial
clusters. They should also design “market models” to provide
information to investors on the types of technology required, to
give potential investors greater confidence in the long-term
viability of carbon capture and storage. Is there any sign of
this happening?
Since the report was published, a number of government changes
have affected energy policy. The Energy Bill was introduced in
2022 under Prime Minister . It included measures
intended to leverage investment in clean technologies, protect
customers and maintain the safety, security and resilience of the
energy system. It reached Committee on 7 September 2022 and was
thereafter paused by the new Prime Minister, . Following Liz Truss’s resignation, in December 2022
Committee started again and, under Prime Minister , the House of Commons is now
scheduled to consider Lords amendments on 18 October. In February
2023, BEIS was replaced, with responsibility for energy policy
transferred to the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero.
served as Secretary of State
for Energy from February to 31 August; currently, the Secretary
of State is , but for how long is
anyone’s guess.
published his review Mission
Zero: Independent Review of Net Zero on 13 January 2023. It
concluded that the UK was not on track to meet all its targets
towards achieving net zero and stated that the Government needed
to do more to make the most of the economic opportunities arising
from the transition to net zero. The Government have published a
series of policy updates on their plans. In March 2023, Powering
Up Britain was Secretary of State Grant Shapps’s launch of the
new Government’s energy strategy. In the same month, Mobilising
Green Investment: 2023 Green Finance Strategy updated the
previous green strategy. In this, the Government committed to
commissioning an
“industry-led … review into how the UK can enhance our position
and become the best place in the world for raising transition
capital”.
Has it happened?
On 20 September 2023, , still the PM, gave a speech
in which he announced some changes to government policy on
achieving net zero. While working towards meeting their overall
2050 net-zero target, he said that policies including the ending
of the sale of petrol and diesel cars and vans, plus the sale of
new gas boilers, would be pushed back by five years to 2035. How
does this help achieve net zero? Its effect has been to deter
investment by undermining the commitment and consistency required
by business, as the noble Lord, , and the noble Baroness, Lady
Kramer, said.
This is the framework in which the Economic Affairs Committee
report is being considered. Of its 38 recommendations, only a
small handful have been taken forward. However, the Government’s
initiatives to secure private capital by certainty and leadership
are woefully inadequate. In the meantime, more changes have been
confirmed. , chair of COP 26, is standing
down. is not going to contest his
seat in the next general election. The offshore wind auction
attracted no bids because the strike price was wrong.
once said:
“I’ve not got a reverse gear”.
It is a pity the same cannot be said of . The report rightly states
that the Government cannot be expected to accurately predict what
is going to happen in the future. Surely, though, we can expect
more than what is currently on offer.
Labour would establish Great British Energy. It would invest in
order that Britain can lead the world in carbon-free energy and
technologies. Labour will ensure that we have the grid we need to
rewire our country. Our public investment will stimulate private
investment to bring prosperity to every part of Britain.
6.21pm
(Con)
First, I add my thanks to the noble Baroness, Lady Kramer, for
securing this debate, as well as thanking noble Lords for their
insightful contributions.
It was a bit rich for the noble Lord, , to criticise us for not
getting the Energy Bill on to the statute book. The reason we
have not done that is because the Opposition—despite saying that
they support it—have supported largely irrelevant and superfluous
amendments to the Bill. If the noble Lord is so keen to get it on
to the statute book, he has the opportunity to prove it next week
when it will come back to this House. I hope the Opposition will
agree with the passage of the Bill, rather than just saying that
they support it. We will then be able to get it on to the statute
book and proceed to the secondary legislation, which will result
from the primary powers, on things such as hydrogen, CCUS, et
cetera.
(Lab)
I think it is a bit rich for the Minister to say that the
Opposition parties are responsible for the delay to the Energy
Bill. It was paused by the Government for three or four months,
when they went absolutely silent. We were knocking on the door
asking what was happening with the Energy Bill, but nothing was
forthcoming.
(Con)
We would have had the Energy Bill on the statute book by now if
it was not for the amendments the Opposition had supported. My
point remains.
As the Prime Minister made clear in his recent speech, it is
extremely important that we chart the fairest credible path to
net zero, bringing people with us through democratic debate. As
several noble Lords have mentioned, we have shifted to less
drastic targets on phasing out fossil fuel cars and boilers
because of the potential for sharp upfront costs to families
already struggling with the cost of living.
The 2035 target for decarbonising the power sector, however,
remains in place. Why is that? It is not just because this a
critical bridge to net zero by 2050—which, I remind the House, we
have a legal obligation to deliver —but, in response to my noble
friend Lady Noakes, because wind and solar are the cheapest forms
of electricity, which is also the reason why I, as a fiscal
conservative, am in favour of them.
Against that, and as the noble Lord, , noted, international fossil
fuel markets are volatile as they are driven by geopolitics, and
our own reserves are now declining. Yes, the price of offshore
wind has now risen from a historic low, but it remains well below
that of gas, nuclear or gas with CCUS. In response to my noble
friend Lady Noakes, we are going hard for clean electricity
because it is not in tension with cheap electricity; nor is there
tension in such electricity having the security of being produced
domestically. It is, if you like, electricity with a UK flag
plastered upon it.
The UK energy system in 2035 and beyond is going to be a mixture
of tried and trusted technology and new innovation. We have
connected approximately 40 giga- watts of renewable
electricity—primarily wind and solar—to the grid since 2010. The
point made by the noble Lord, , is completely valid: with
the high price of electricity, driven primarily by gas, the vast
majority of those contracts for difference are now paying back
into the system and subsidising consumer bills. It is not the
case that the amount of renewables we have on the grid is
contributing to the high price. It is driven entirely by
international gas prices, and the problem is that we do not have
enough of it connected to the grid. If we had more, prices would
be lower.
On the nuclear side, Hinkley Point C and Sizewell C are under
development, and we have set up Great British Nuclear, whose
first objective is to support small modular reactor development,
which my noble friend Lord Howell will, no doubt, be pleased to
hear.
My noble friend raised an issue about wind and
solar. Wind and solar are clean, cheap and homegrown. Of course,
my noble friend is right to say that they currently rely on
unabated gas as back-up. UK gas usage has declined in the past
decade as wind power has proportionately increased. Of course, it
is true to say that we need a portfolio of technologies to
replace unabated gas, including power CCUS; hydrogen; short- and
long-duration storage; renewables, such as tidal and geothermal;
interconnection; energy efficiency; and demand side flexibility.
We need all these technologies. My noble friend and the noble Lord, , will be pleased to hear that
there is currently nearly 38 gigawatts of electricity storage in
its various forms in the planning pipeline.
Resilience comes from having diversified sources of supply and
strong relationships with trusted partners and allies. We will
work closely with the EU and bilaterally on both short- and
long-term energy security. As the noble Viscount, , will be pleased to hear, I
was delighted recently to launch a UK-German hydrogen partnership
with German State Secretary Nimmermann, where we are working on a
broader energy and climate partnership.
Of course, investing in energy security is about demand as well
as supply. We have made great progress in upgrading what is
probably the oldest housing stock in the world. Despite what the
noble Baroness, Lady Bennett, would have us believe, residential
emissions in this country have fallen by something like 31% since
2010; that is the second biggest improvement in the G20.
The noble Lord, , was concerned about the
decision to discontinue the Energy Efficiency Taskforce. The body
was formed very much around Dame Alison Rose as my co-chairman
and, without her, we believed it was better to streamline its
function into existing work. We remain extremely grateful to the
members of the task force, who produced some excellent work and
recommendations; I continue to meet them regularly and we will
continue to listen to their wise and trusted advice on the
importance of energy efficiency.
The noble Lord, , mentioned demand management.
I can inform the noble Lord that the National Grid is planning to
run its demand flexibility service again this winter—subject to
Ofgem approval—as it proved so successful last winter.
The noble Lord, , asked about the UK ETS, and
that remains a cornerstone of our climate policy. It remains the
fact, though, that the price is set as a market mechanism. The UK
ETS is a separate market to the EU ETS so it is possible, as we
have seen, that prices will fluctuate and differ, although both
do have similar levels of ambition. The noble Lord will have
noted that in the summer, we decreased the cap and aligned it
with our net-zero ambitions. This means that the number of
permits we issue in the future will continue to decline in line
with our net-zero ambitions.
A number of noble Lords raised the important issue of nuclear,
and our current nuclear fleet is of course ageing. While the
Government have no direct involvement in the decision to expand
lifespans, we are pleased that extensions are happening where the
technology is performing above original expectations, and I am
pleased that the noble Baroness, Lady Kramer, is in agreement on
this point. On new build, we are continuing towards taking
Sizewell C to final investment decision this Parliament.
The noble Baroness, Lady Kramer, did however note her personal
opposition to Rosebank, as did a number of other noble Lords.
Notwithstanding the shift towards renewables, it is important to
remember the total UK energy use in 2022 was still 77% oil and
gas. Following extensive scrutiny by regulators, including
environmental impact assessments and a public consultation, we
have granted new licences, including for Rosebank. As the noble
Lord, , alluded to, domestically
produced gas is around four times cleaner than imported liquid
natural gas. Oil and gas production also provides around £17
billion to the UK economy each year and supports around 200,000
jobs.
Let me address directly the point made by the noble Baroness,
Lady Bennett. New licences will merely slow the already inbuilt
decline in UK production levels, rather than see them increase
above current levels. Even with continued exploration and
development, oil and gas production is expected to decline by 7%
per year. This decline is faster than the average global decline
needed to align with the UN 1.5 degrees centigrade pathway. Even
with new licences, the amount of oil and gas produced in the UK
sector will continue to go down as these fields come to their
natural end.
I will deal with the point on the AR5 auction round. It was
successful in broadening contracts to both tidal and geothermal
projects, but, of course, we were disappointed by the lack of
offshore wind bids. That was because developers were experiencing
unprecedented economic conditions. However, as we have now moved
to an annual process, in less than a year AR6 will open, and we
will of course incorporate the lessons learned and ensure that
AR6 reflects the most recent evidence.
As stated, we remain committed to the challenging but deliverable
target of decarbonising the power sector by 2035, while at the
same time, and most importantly, maintaining security of supply,
which is absolutely critical. The Government are supporting
investment, innovation and regulatory reform across the full
range of technologies that will need to be developed and deployed
in concert.
6.32pm
(LD)
My Lords, all that remains is for me to say thank you to all of
those who participated in this debate. We have heard a very wide
range of views and I think anyone listening to this range of
speeches, including the Minister’s, would turn around and say
“Yes, energy strategy and fast, energy demand reduction strategy
and fast, and it sounds like we need infrastructure far more
rapidly than we had previously planned”. I hope that those are
the lessons that are taken away by everybody who is here, and I
thank everyone for participating in this report and taking note
of its content.
Motion agreed.
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