Energy-Intensive Industry Electricity Support Payments and Levy (Amendment) Regulations 2026 Debate
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(1 day, 7 hours ago)
Grand Committee
Lord Fox (LD)
My Lords, it is always a pleasure to follow the noble Baroness, Lady McIntosh of Pickering, who is forensic in her detail. I should say that she has somewhat mixed her drinks with this measure and other things, but this measure and her comments indicate that the energy market in this country, which this Government inherited from their predecessor, is broken, in essence, and is not working properly.
While we are talking about this particular statutory instrument, it would be useful to have an indication from the Minister that the Government understand the malfunctioning way that energy works for both and consumers, and for him to undertake a process whereby the whole thing is properly reviewed. It is quite clear that there are many pushes and pulls, puts and takes, within our energy market: some are to do with green energy and some of them not; and some are to do with the way that the overall energy cost is assessed based on a floating gas price, rather than the actual cost of the energy being generated. It would help for the Minister to indicate, on behalf of the Government, that he understands that a proper root and branch review of the way in which the energy market is structured is long overdue. I do not blame the Government for what it is now, but I would blame them if they just sat on their hands without doing something about it.
Measures to bring down some of the highest industrial energy prices in the world—if not the highest—obviously come as welcome news to those businesses that have received them. Energy-intensive industries, as the Minister said, such as steel, chemicals, glass, ceramics and brickmaking, as the noble Baroness mentioned, face much higher energy costs than competitors overseas. They really are competing with not just one arm tied behind their backs but most of their limbs. They cannot pass on these prices because of the international market in which they operate. It is welcome that these EII businesses have been recognised, but we are concerned about the lack of support for other businesses across our manufacturing and energy use sector, which includes consumer businesses and the high street.
It is not just EII businesses that are facing an energy cost crisis; it is right across business. If we look in particular at small businesses, energy can be a high proportion of their total costs. They are the backbone of our economy and the heart of local communities. They create many of the jobs on which those communities rely, but they are struggling with uncertainties and changes around the cost of energy on top of the other costs that the Government have decided to put on those businesses, such as NIC costs and the change in the business rates system.
This is all part of a huge burden that all businesses are suffering, but SMEs are proportionately suffering more. They are exposed to the energy market with little support after the previous Government’s decision to slash energy bill support for businesses by an average of 85% when they replaced their energy bill relief scheme with the energy bills discount scheme, which itself ended in 2024. We estimate that 3.1 million SMEs saw a total bill increase of £7.6 billion when the initial energy bill relief scheme ended. That is a huge burden that the sector had to take during the previous Government’s oversight.
We welcome Ofgem’s announcement in December 2024 on enabling SMEs with up to 50 employees to use the Energy Ombudsman to challenge unfair energy rises and charges.
I hate to interrupt the noble Lord but a Division has been called—
Lord Fox (LD)
I have literally three words and then I will sit down. What about the ones with more than 50 employees? That is just the start of the problems that we have in our energy market.
That is most considerate of the noble Lord. A Division has been called in the Chamber; the Grand Committee stands adjourned until 5.02 pm.