Electricity and Gas (Energy Company Obligation) (Amendment) Order 2025 Debate

Full Debate: Read Full Debate

Lord Offord of Garvel

Main Page: Lord Offord of Garvel (Conservative - Life peer)

Electricity and Gas (Energy Company Obligation) (Amendment) Order 2025

Lord Offord of Garvel Excerpts
Wednesday 16th July 2025

(2 days, 9 hours ago)

Grand Committee
Read Full debate Read Hansard Text
Earl Russell Portrait Earl Russell (LD)
- Hansard - - - Excerpts

My Lords, from these Benches we generally support the draft regulations. We commend the stated commitment of this Government to deliver warm homes that are cheaper to heat and to tackle fuel poverty. We have some of the highest energy bills and some of the coldest, dampest and worst-insulated homes in Europe. Cold homes not only waste energy and contribute to global warming needlessly but cause problems for people on budgets and low incomes and with ill health.

We generally welcome the warm homes plan in the spending review, with its ambitious £13.2 billion of investment, and the crucial steps towards reducing our energy bills and strengthening our energy security. We particularly welcome the rollout of solar panels, heat pumps, batteries and insulation.

We particularly welcome several targeted practical changes introduced by this draft instrument, targeting those in need of most support. The most significant change allows 75% of the energy suppliers’ £1 billion Great British Insulation Scheme target to be met through the reassigned ECO4 delivery pathway. This appears to be a pragmatic approach. The Explanatory Memorandum clarifies that this is necessary because the GBIS would otherwise have severely underdelivered, and this is seen as the way to maximise savings and get this done. Further, it reassures us that this will not increase consumer bills, as it is using existing funds and will be a good means of reassigning support and continuity in the ECO4 supply chain. This is considered better value for billpayers, as ECO4 is cheaper to contract.

We welcome the flexibility to enable greater allowance of installation measures, especially for low-income households. We welcome the plans to encourage the uptake of smart meters, and we welcome the updating of technical standards.

I have just a couple of questions for the Minister. A lot of previous schemes have not quite delivered as intended. Indeed, even here, a scheme that would have underdelivered is having its resources rolled into a new scheme. So, specifically how will this new programme be monitored to ensure that it actually works and delivers in practice, and does not fall foul of some of the issues that have plagued past schemes?

The Minister spoke about the issue of quality control with past schemes. I very much welcome the fact that 90% of that work has now been done—that is a tremendous achievement. But, again, under this new scheme, how will we make sure that the quality of the work delivered for households is up to the standards that we require and does not cause any further problems?

The Minister said that the Government are planning to bring forward larger-scale reforms for the warm homes plan. Is the Minister able to say anything more about that today or will we just have to wait for that?

We recognise that allowing the 75% of the ECO4 delivery for GBIS targets is pragmatic, but what measures will happen with the remaining 25% of the GBIS target? I do not want that bit to be forgotten about, so how will the Government set about making sure that that is delivered and that those houses are not forgotten about?

How do the Government plan to report on the delivery of this new scheme and make sure that it is delivering? How will the Minister report on the uptake of smart meters under this scheme? We recognise the measures that are being taken to encourage consumers to do that and that the Government are using the contact through the insulation measures to do that. Generally, we welcome what the Government are doing here.

Lord Offord of Garvel Portrait Lord Offord of Garvel (Con)
- Hansard - -

My Lords, this order makes modest changes to the energy company obligation—ECO—scheme, and I was pleased to see the Minister in the other place recognise that ECO4 and the GB Insulation Scheme have been a key part of the effort to upgrade homes across the country. These schemes were introduced under the previous Government to support better insulation of energy customers’ homes, and I am pleased that the Minister has recognised the success of the previous Government in this area. We will not oppose this statutory instrument.

The previous Government announced that more than 300,000 homes would get insulation installed under GBIS, and they said that this could potentially save families up to an average of £400 a year on their energy bills. Claire Coutinho, then the Secretary of State, said that the introduction of GBIS would help hundreds of thousands of people, including some of the most vulnerable in society, get the upgrades their homes need while cutting their energy bills. So this is a Conservative initiative, and we are pleased to see that this Government are building on that track record.

It is concerning that some of the insulation installed under the schemes has not met the appropriate standards, and Ministers are right to tackle this as a matter of urgency. Can the Minister confirm what proportion of the identified issues has now been solved, and can he confirm that no energy customer should be out of pocket as a result of this remediation work?

We know that high energy costs are one of the greatest challenges in our economy at the moment. High energy bills contribute to growing household costs for families, but they are also holding back businesses and stifling growth. One of the key reasons that the UK manufacturing sector is finding it so difficult to grow at the moment is high energy costs, so we would welcome the Government’s continued commitment to energy efficiency and insulation—this is positive work—but we also need to tackle head-on the challenges we face on energy prices, and that means supply-side reform. We must urgently address the energy baseload challenge and get the right mix of cheap energy from all sources so that households and businesses across the UK can thrive.

We support steps to improve household insulation, but can the Minister take this opportunity to set out what steps the Government are taking to tackle energy prices more broadly for households and businesses in the UK? Can he comment on further investment—for example, new nuclear and long-term energy storage—towards that objective? What assessment have Ministers made of the impact of spikes in wind energy production on the cost of energy to consumers? We egregiously pay wind turbine operators to turn off the supply of energy when it spikes, and when we find ourselves in periods of no wind and no sun, we pay exorbitant sums to emergency energy suppliers, which burn gas as a peak supply instead of baseload. What steps will Ministers be taking to review the overall situation so that we can not only deliver better-insulated homes as part of this but, as another key part, drive down the costs of energy for families and businesses?