Friday 7th February 2025

(1 day, 18 hours ago)

Lords Chamber
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Lord Livermore Portrait The Financial Secretary to the Treasury (Lord Livermore) (Lab)
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My Lords, is a pleasure to speak in this debate today. I congratulate the noble Lord, Lord Wigley, on this Bill and on his opening speech. While we may disagree on the substance of this issue, I enjoyed our debates on this topic during the passage of the Crown Estate Bill, and it was a pleasure to hear him put the case so powerfully again today.

I will begin by setting out how the Crown Estate currently operates and the case for retaining the current model, which the Government believe provides the best deal for Wales and for the wider United Kingdom. As noble Lords will be aware, the Crown Estate was established with the aim of creating lasting and shared prosperity for the whole of the United Kingdom. Governed by the Crown Estate Act 1961, it holds a diverse portfolio of buildings, shoreline, seabed, forestry, agriculture and common land. It has shown itself to be a trusted and successful independent commercial business, with a proven track record of effective manage-ment. Each year, the Crown Estate is required to pay its profits into the UK Consolidated Fund, which has totalled more than £4 billion over the past decade. This money is used to fund vital public services across the UK, including in Wales in reserved areas. When the UK Consolidated Fund is spent in England—in areas which are devolved to Wales—the Welsh Government also receive funding through the operation of the Barnett formula.

The proposed powers in the Crown Estate Bill, which is currently progressing through the other place, combined with the Crown Estate’s existing scale, expertise and track record, mean that it is uniquely placed to drive forward important growth-generating projects in Wales. This is particularly true in relation to offshore renewable energy and other emerging offshore technologies.

Over the last 20 years, the Crown Estate has helped to deliver a number of important renewable energy projects and to position Wales at the vanguard of clean energy technology and growth. The benefits of these projects are being felt in communities and supply chains right across Wales. For example, the Crown Estate has invested £1.2 million in Welsh tidal stream energy through the Morlais demonstration zone in Anglesey. Last year, the Crown Estate launched offshore wind leasing round 5 for floating offshore wind in the Celtic Sea, which is expected to deliver significant jobs and supply chain benefits locally. The Crown Estate works closely with the Welsh Government and Natural Resources Wales to develop these projects and ensure that resources are sustainably managed for the long term.

As noble Lords will remember, the Government were pleased to support the successful amendment of the noble Lord, Lord Hain, moved by my noble friend Lord Murphy, to the Crown Estate Bill, which will see the appointment of two Crown Estate board commissioners for Wales and Northern Ireland respectively. This is a positive step that will ensure the Crown Estate’s board continues to work in the best interests of the whole of the UK. Importantly, the devolved Governments will reserve the right to be consulted over these appointments. I am grateful to all noble Lords across the House, including some who have spoken in today’s debate, for their work to make this change possible.

Let me turn to the concerns the Government have with the Bill we are discussing today. Devolving the Crown Estate to Wales at this time risks significant fragmentation of the energy market and jeopardising the existing pipeline of offshore wind development in the Celtic Sea planned into the 2030s. This in turn would undermine international investor confidence and significantly delay progress towards net zero, to the detriment of the whole of the UK.

Devolution would likely require the creation of a new entity to take on the management of the Crown Estate in Wales. This entity would not benefit from the Crown Estate’s substantial capability and capital and systems abilities, nor from the fact that the Crown Estate’s marine investments are currently made on a portfolio-wide basis across England and Wales. Devolving the Crown Estate to Wales at this time would disrupt these existing investments, as they would need to be restructured to accommodate a Welsh-specific entity.

As the noble Baroness, Lady Humphreys, quoted from our debates on the Crown Estate Bill, devolution would likely delay UK-wide grid connectivity reform, which is crucial for meeting our growth targets, because it would make it harder to co-ordinate energy generation and infrastructure across England and Wales. The Government are driving forward grid connectivity reform. Introducing a new entity, which would have control of assets only within Wales, into this complex operating environment, where partnerships have already been formed, would not make commercial sense. A devolved entity would be starting from scratch, midway through a multimillion-pound commercial tendering process for a pipeline of Welsh projects, at a time when the Crown Estate is undertaking critical investment in the UK’s path towards net zero.

Some noble Lords have argued today that Wales would benefit financially from devolution of the Crown Estate. Let me set out why the Government believe this not to be the case. As I have already noted, Wales benefits from the UK Government’s spending derived from the Crown Estate. It receives Barnett funding when Crown Estate funding is spent in England in areas which are devolved in Wales. As the noble and learned Lord, Lord Thomas, quoted from our debates on the recent Crown Estate Bill, if Wales were to benefit only from the income from the Crown Estate generated in Wales, it would likely be zero or negligible for several decades to come. This is because Welsh assets are relatively new and will take time to mature, likely to be in the order of 10 to 15 years. Previous reports did not include costs and, as I understand it, many of the figures quoted today are reports of profits from activities without taking into account costs. As I have said before during debates on the Crown Estate Bill, disaggregating activities requires a high degree of subjective judgment.

My noble friend Lord Murphy asked about funding for the Wales Government in the event of devolution of the Crown Estate. Even if devolution could be achieved without risking the revenues for Wales that the Crown Estate generates, this would not automatically lead to an increase in the funding available to the Wales Government. As agreed in the Scottish Government’s fiscal framework review, which concluded in August 2023, the Scottish Government receive a block grant reduction to reflect the profits they retain from Crown Estate Scotland following its devolution.

The noble Lord, Lord Wigley, and my noble friend Lord Murphy raised the Treasury Ministers’ discussions with the Welsh Government about the Crown Estate. In November, I met the Welsh Government’s Cabinet Secretary for Finance and Welsh Language. Our discussion covered a range of issues, including the Crown Estate. I reiterated the UK Government’s position that we do not believe devolution of the Crown Estate is in the best interests of Wales or the wider UK. More widely, the UK Government maintain regular ministerial and official-level engagement with the Welsh Government across a range of different policy areas.

The Crown Estate’s existing scale, expertise and track record mean it is uniquely placed to drive forward growth and investment in Wales. Wales continues to benefit from the funding generated by the Crown Estate, both through the UK Government’s spending in reserved areas in Wales and through funding for the Welsh Government via the Barnett formula. Devolving the Crown Estate at this time would significantly fragment the UK’s energy market, jeopardise the existing pipeline of offshore wind development in the Celtic Sea, undermine international investor confidence in the UK and significantly delay our progress towards net zero. It is for these reasons that the Government cannot support the Bill before your Lordships’ House. The Government will of course continue to discuss these issues—

Lord Thomas of Cwmgiedd Portrait Lord Thomas of Cwmgiedd (CB)
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Before the Minister sits down, I want to press him on one point: the proportion of income classified in the accounts as derived in the marine sector from option fee and other income, some of which is straight-lined into the Consolidated Fund. Can he give the figure for Wales? As we have discussed, he was able to give it at an earlier point; it must be possible, and I would be grateful if he would write to the House and give us that figure. It is of huge symbolic importance to the people of Wales, and I do not want this Government to suffer 15 months hence.

Lord Livermore Portrait Lord Livermore (Lab)
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I am very grateful to the noble and learned Lord for his concern for the Government. I am told it is impossible to disaggregate the figures in the way that he has asked. I will double check that and write to him if I can, but I am told it is not possible to do that disaggregation.

Lord Thomas of Cwmgiedd Portrait Lord Thomas of Cwmgiedd (CB)
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Forgive me for a moment, but I am quite used to arguing with accountants and I would be delighted to meet the Crown Estate to try to understand what the problem is. I believe it is accountancy gobbledygook that we cannot do it. Of course there will be an element of subjective judgment, but it can be done. If it cannot be done, please can I meet the accountants at the Crown Estate?

Lord Livermore Portrait Lord Livermore (Lab)
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I will happily suggest that to the accountants at the Crown Estate.

The Government will continue to discuss these issues with the First Minister and the Welsh Government, to ensure that Wales sees the full benefits of the Crown Estate.