Energy Bill Commons Reason Scottish Legislative Consent granted.
Welsh Legislative consent withheld. Northern Ireland Legislative
Consent sought. 3.20pm Motion A Moved by Lord Callanan That this
House do not insist on its Amendment 274B, to which the Commons
have disagreed for their Reason 274C. 274C: Because the Government
has already committed to consulting on barriers to the development
of community energy schemes and the Commons do not
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Energy Bill
Commons Reason
Scottish Legislative Consent granted. Welsh Legislative consent
withheld. Northern Ireland Legislative Consent sought.
3.20pm
Motion A
Moved by
That this House do not insist on its Amendment 274B, to which the
Commons have disagreed for their Reason 274C.
274C: Because the Government has already committed to consulting
on barriers to the development of community energy schemes and
the Commons do not consider it appropriate to set a timeframe for
bringing forward any proposals for the removal of such
barriers.
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for Energy
Security and Net Zero () (Con)
My Lords, Amendment 274B was added to the Energy Bill during the
previous consideration of Commons amendments. As the House will
be aware, the amendment was debated in the other place last week
and the Government Motion to disagree to the amendment was passed
with a substantial majority.
I can confirm to the House that our position remains the same.
The amendments would commit the Government to a consultation on
the barriers preventing the development of community energy
schemes. The amendment sets out with whom we would consult and
commits the Government to bringing forward proposals to remove
identified barriers to community energy within a brief six-month
timescale.
I welcome the constructive engagement from across the House, in
particular from the noble Baroness, Lady Boycott. I welcome her
continued efforts throughout the passage of the Bill to ensure
that the interests of the community energy sector are heard in
this Chamber, but I reassure the noble Baroness that, on this
issue, the Government have already made a clear commitment to the
consultation.
As part of this commitment, we have outlined that we will engage
in an open and collaborative way with the community energy
sector, via the community energy contact group, to design the
consultation. In fact, officials are already engaging on exactly
that, and earlier this month held a very constructive discussion
on the consultation with the group. Given our existing commitment
to consult, and our ongoing engagement with the sector, we
therefore believe that it is of no additional value to put the
specifics in primary legislation.
In addition, there are further issues with the previous
amendments that meant that we could not support their inclusion
in the Bill. We clearly cannot commit to putting forward
proposals to remove barriers that are preventing the development
of community energy schemes before we know what barriers are
raised in the consultation, or the implications of removing them.
It would be remiss of us to agree to put that into primary
legislation. Placing this obligation on the Government would be
putting the cart before the horse.
However, I reassure the House yet again that the Government will
carry out the consultation and continue to work closely with the
sector to do so. I also reiterate the Government’s support in
principle for community energy; we recognise the role that
community groups play in our efforts to eliminate our
contribution to climate change. I participated in a great visit
to North Kensington Community Energy two weeks ago where I was
able to see first-hand some of the important work that the sector
does and to meet the contact group.
More widely, government support for the sector is demonstrated
through existing support that we have already put in place, such
as the £10 million community energy fund. I am pleased to tell
the House that we aim to open applications to that fund as soon
as we possibly can.
(CB)
I thank the Minister very much for his sort of co-operation
through the passage of the Bill. It is hugely important. It was
introduced about 16 months ago, and I do not wish to delay it any
further. But I speak with great regret that the Government find
themselves unable to agree to my simple and incredibly
uncontroversial amendment, which just seeks to clarify the
Government’s commitment to consult on the barriers that community
energy schemes face. I am very pleased that the Minister went to
visit one that was working, but I assure him that a lot are
not.
While I welcome the steps the Government have taken to
re-establish the community energy fund—for instance, reporting to
Parliament and consulting—it is important to put a timescale on
these plans; 18 months is fair and reasonable. Without a
timescale there is a risk that this will not happen. It has been
demonstrated that this issue has widespread support across both
Houses. When we have something that we agree on, we ought to just
get on with it and do it. I fear that this small but significant
issue will get drowned out in next year’s general election. I
would appreciate reassurance from the Minister that this is a
needless worry and that the Government are committed.
I would just like to get some clarity on a couple of points. What
will be the basis of this annual report to Parliament? Is it
simply to report on the progress of projects, or will it address
the challenges that we face and the best route to sort them out?
My amendment also sought to ensure that, should any consultation
find that there are barriers—new barriers, for instance—the
Government will commit to taking steps to address these. Being
candid, we know that there are barriers, and I appreciate the
argument that you should not legislate for the unknown, but I am
simply trying to get an assurance that they would plan to lift
barriers that we know are there—including ones that we do not
know.
To return to the issue of the consultation, we have rehearsed
what issues need to be resolved; thanks to the Bill committee in
the other place, there are many views on record. I do not believe
that much is likely to change in the next year. While I agree
that we should follow due process here, it must not be used as a
reason for delay. I urge the Minister to open this consultation
ASAP, so that we can get this ball rolling.
(GP)
My Lords, I rise very briefly and with great pleasure following
the noble Baroness, Lady Boycott, who has done such an enormous
amount of work on this issue—I pay tribute to that.
I was the person who started these amendments on their way back
in December 2022, after we started work on this Bill last July. A
consultation is something but what we really need is action, so I
have a simple question for the Minister. As he said, this
consultation has already started this month; if the Government
see or identify through that consultation some simple,
easy-to-remove barriers, will they act on them immediately rather
than waiting for the end of the formal process? Surely, if action
can be taken then projects, such as the one in Kensington to
which the Minister referred, can go forward.
(LD)
My Lords, I too congratulate the noble Baroness, Lady Boycott, on
her persistence in this area. One of the strong messages that
came out between Committee and Report in this House was the slow
progress, and lack of progress, on community schemes. I very much
hope that this consultation will reverse that trend. It seems
slightly ironic, though typical, that the objection from the
Commons is on there being a timetable, whereas we all know that
for anything to happen, you need a timetable to focus.
On these Benches we are now keen to get this Bill on the statute
book and that it becomes an Act. It has been delayed a number of
times, mainly from the government side, as it has progressed
through both Houses. There are a lot of important parts of this
Bill that need to happen. I very much hope that the future
systems operator will be quickly nominated and can move into
action, so that a number of the strategic bottlenecks that we
have in our energy sector can be swept away and solved. Again, I
thank the noble Baroness for her persistence in this area, and I
hope that consultation will move to action very quickly.
(Lab)
My Lords, I thank the noble Baroness, Lady Boycott, for her
persistence on this. I agree with what she is trying to achieve.
The Minister came dangerously close to Rumsfeld-speak when he
effectively said that we cannot know the unknowables. All that we
and the amendment were suggesting was that a report needs to come
forward and then we can determine how we need to act, which seems
entirely sensible.
I agree with the noble Lord, : it is time that the Bill got
on to the statute book. The Bill has been far too long in
digestion. Let us hope we can now eat it all and enjoy its
flavour.
3.30pm
(Con)
I thank all Members who have contributed to this extremely brief
debate. To have a brief debate on the back of a Bill that now has
335 clauses, one of the longest Bills that we have passed in this
House for many years, is quite ironic but probably
appropriate.
On the issue in question, I thank the noble Baroness, Lady
Boycott, for her remarks. She spoke about the timing of the
consultation. All I can tell her is that we will launch it as
soon as we can; I am afraid I cannot put a specific date on it,
but I hope it will not be too long away now. Officials need to
continue their discussions with the community energy sector about
the content of the consultation before we can launch it. I
confirm absolutely that officials are working closely with the
Community Energy Contact Group—I have met it myself —and we are
keen to get on with this as quickly as possible.
Similarly, on the content of the consultation, until we finish
those discussions we cannot commit to exactly what the
consultation will include. That really would be putting the cart
before the horse—unknown unknowns, as the noble Lord, , referred to. On the
commitment to publish an annual report on the community energy
sector, which the noble Baroness, Lady Boycott, spoke about, I
confirm that, as with the consultation, we will work closely with
the sector to design exactly what the report will look like.
The noble Baronesses, Lady Bennett and Lady Boycott, asked me to
commit to removing barriers. Until we know what those barriers
are, it is impossible for me to give a vague commitment. If
removing a barrier is simple and straightforward then of course
we would want to do it, but we are talking in generalities
without knowing what the specific issues are. Let us have a bit
of patience and wait for the outcome of the consultation. The
House can be reassured that we are committed to the consultation
and keen to see the community energy sector go forward, which is
why we have provided the new £10 million fund to aid it to do
just that. In the personal discussions I had with the sector, it
was extremely keen and enthusiastic to get on with some of the
great work that it does.
As this will be the final time that I will be on my feet for this
gigantic piece of legislation, I thank the Members from all sides
who have contributed during the passage of this, frankly, huge
piece of legislation. At every industry forum that I have done
for the last six months, I have been asked the obligatory
question, “When will the Energy Bill get Royal Assent?”. Whether
it be the CCUS sector, the hydrogen sector or the smart meter
sector, as well as the community energy sector, every stakeholder
group in this area is keen to get this legislation on the statute
book. I know the House had some concerns but in general the
legislation has support from all sides, and I think everybody
accepts that it will do great and noble things for the energy
sector.
As well as Members of the House, I thank all the officials who
have now spent a number of years working on this. There were
several hundred of them so I cannot mention them all by name, but
I particularly pick out Jeremy Allen and , who have led the team
fantastically over the last months and years. I am sure they will
be lost without their little baby, as the Energy Bill becomes the
Energy Act. They have done some great work, including on the
Nuclear Energy (Financing) Act and the Energy Prices Act. I hope
noble Lords will join me in thanking them for all the good work
they have done, in the finest traditions of the Civil Service, in
helping us to navigate our way through these important pieces of
legislation.
Motion A agreed.
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