Gas Storage Levels Debate
Full Debate: Read Full DebateEarl Russell
Main Page: Earl Russell (Liberal Democrat - Excepted Hereditary)Department Debates - View all Earl Russell's debates with the Department for Energy Security & Net Zero
(1 day, 16 hours ago)
Lords ChamberMy Lords, I am grateful to the noble Lord for his question. First, I must remind the House that, on Friday, National Gas confirmed that:
“The overall picture across Great Britain’s eight main gas storage sites remains healthy”.
The diversity of Great Britain’s sources of gas supply means that we are less reliant on natural gas storage than our European counterparts. This includes, as the noble Lord suggests, supplies from the UK continental shelf; our long-term energy partner, Norway; international markets via liquefied natural gas; and interconnectors to the European continent.
I understand and fully accept what the noble Lord says about the North Sea and the contribution of the oil and gas sector, which we have debated, but it is essential that we move as quickly as possible to clean power. Clearly, by 2030, that will give us a great advantage in energy security. We will look for low-carbon, flexible technologies to ensure that we have the proper balance when we get to clean power. We want to see a successful transition in the North Sea, recognising the contribution that it makes and will continue to make.
My Lords, does the Minister agree, first, that this is a fabricated scare story? There are no issues with our gas. It is not running out and it can be quickly resupplied via pipelines and LNG. Secondly, does he agree that the best resolution is the rapid end to the Conservative’s legacy of overdependence on very expensive imported foreign energy? To that end, the Conservatives would be well advised to stop filibustering on the Great British Energy Bill, which will greatly improve our energy security, decrease our overdependence on expensive imported foreign gas from tyrants such as Putin, bring down energy bills and costs for bill payers, and help us to meet our energy and climate targets.
My Lords, I am glad that I was not alone in thinking that we enjoyed a filibuster last night. What is tragic is that the Conservative Party is clearly retreating from net zero and clean power and has become obsessed with gas. This is not the way that we need to go. The noble Earl is quite right. Centrica chose to put out what I can only describe as an alarmist statement. NESO and British Gas are quite clear that we did not face a crisis and that we have adequate supplies. I hope that those who were involved in making those claims last week will reflect on the concern that they caused.