Electricity Supplier Payments (Amendment) Regulations 2026 Debate

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Department: Department for Energy Security & Net Zero
Tuesday 17th March 2026

(1 day, 11 hours ago)

Grand Committee
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Lord Fuller Portrait Lord Fuller (Con)
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My Lords, there is a reason why UK energy prices are some of the most expensive in the world. We are starting from a high base and we are increasingly vulnerable. At the moment, our gas prices are six times higher than you might find on an ex-NOLA basis: that is, exported from New Orleans. We are more expensive than the rest of Europe, apart from Germany, which has its own particular industrial problems, and we are increasingly vulnerable because we are trying to run our 24-hour-a-day, 365-day-a-year economy on energy sources that do not work at night or when the wind does not blow. I understand that, and I am not against using renewable energy—we need to have an energy mix—but the way we are going at the moment is to put too many eggs in the renewables basket.

With this statutory instrument, the name is on the tin: it is all about nuclear energy, but the speech that the Minister gave was not really about nuclear at all, but about the mission creep that has led to us having the world’s most expensive industry, whereby we are deindustrialising. Only today, what a shame that the Huntsman Group has announced that the Wilton facility, that last vestige of ICI at Billingham, could be closed. How ironic it is that the obituary of Sir Ronald Hampel, the architect of ICI, was in the Times this week: he must be turning in his grave.

This debate has all been about carbon capture and storage. I did not realise it was going to be, I thought it was about nuclear, but there we are. Carbon capture and storage is expensive, technically challenging and hard to implement. It does not work, it is the most expensive way of doing it and it is unproven. If it were proven, it would be eligible to be discounted against CBAM, but it is not. One of the main things by which this Government want to take carbon reduction on board—they are parroting and trumpeting carbon capture and storage—is ineligible for the headline carbon reduction process. Can noble Lords not see the incompatibility here?

What we have heard so far in this debate, and I know it is early days, is that—

Earl Russell Portrait Earl Russell (LD)
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This is not a debate. This is an SI about the mechanism for contracts for difference. It is not a debate on energy policy.

Lord Fuller Portrait Lord Fuller (Con)
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I thank the noble Earl, but he will forgive me for having made an introduction, and now I come immediately to the substance, because what we have heard, and it came from the Minister’s mouth, is that this is all about investor confidence. This is about subsidy farming; this is about underwriting the most emitting power station in Britain, Drax, which is responsible for the desecration of huge tracts of forestry on the other side of the world, the shipping costs associated with getting it and its transport to that power station, as if it is somehow renewable. That is a fantasy.

What these regulations underpin is a false economic market that says, “No matter how high the gas price is”, and, my goodness, gas prices are high now, “we’re going to bid up the costs of renewables in an unearned income”. This is financial engineering. We are kidding ourselves that we are doing this for low carbon. We are creating a false market in unproductive assets such as carbon capture and storage. When we invest in carbon capture and storage, and I use the word “invest” advisedly, we are not investing in productive assets that will generate an economic return; we are just burying money, money that we need.

I do not deny that, as a result of this regulation, the authorities—forgive me, there are so many acronyms, I cannot remember them all, the LCCC and so forth—have to be paid for. However, this debate has exposed that it is not just about paying for the authorities, it is about financing a mission creep into all sorts of areas that collectively and cumulatively are driving the cost of our energy. Householders are paying more and industry is paying more—and, candidly, industry is now voting with its feet to go to other parts of the world because it cannot afford all this.

At some stage, we need to draw a line. I am grateful that the Minister has used the word “crisis” to describe the circumstances currently being visited on the Middle East and, by extension, on our own economy. When the facts change, you need to alter your position, and when it comes to this panoply of extra burdens on industry—not least contracts for difference—we need to have a fresh look, because the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting the outcome to change. This nation cannot afford it, and neither can our industry or our householders. Clearly, we are going to note this statutory instrument, but at some stage the music needs to stop.

Baroness Redfern Portrait Baroness Redfern (Con)
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My Lords, it is a pleasure to follow my noble friend and to have the opportunity to speak to this statutory instrument. I support and welcome the update levies to fund operational costs of low carbon and nuclear energy schemes. However, it is the wider context that is my concern: the continued high prices of electricity, which are among the highest in the world for our heavy industry—such as steel, which is truly disadvantaged when having to compete worldwide. Our high-energy intensive industries—not only steel, chemicals and ceramics, which are the industrial base of the UK—are, therefore, left inadequately supported.

We all know that lower electricity costs directly help to retain manufacturing reinvestment and jobs, and support the supply chains, so it is disappointing to see manufacturing jobs moving abroad in the past 12 months. For high-energy intensive industries to compete on a level playing field, confidence must be targeted, building that elusive confidence and bringing the precious private investment into the heavy sector. The Government know they have to develop and go further with serious long-term plans, and possibly introduce a two-way contract for difference to provide a competitive wholesale electricity price to support and restore our British industrial competitiveness for the next decade.

Finally, the Government must support further—rather than undermine—the UK’s wider industrial strategy and growth emissions. I look forward to the Minister’s reply.