Lord Harrington of Watford debates involving the Cabinet Office during the 2024 Parliament

UK Electricity Prices

Lord Harrington of Watford Excerpts
Thursday 4th June 2026

(6 days, 15 hours ago)

Grand Committee
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Lord Harrington of Watford Portrait Lord Harrington of Watford (Non-Afl)
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My Lords, I declare an interest as chairman of Make UK, which represents 26,000 manufacturing businesses in the UK. I declare it not just because it is in the register; I am speaking in this debate because the unfair policy for pricing energy is affecting every one of those 26,000. Our members pay 25p per kilowatt hour. French and German companies in exactly the same field pay 12%.

Lord Harrington of Watford Portrait Lord Harrington of Watford (Non-Afl)
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Sorry, I stand corrected: 12p. The noble Lord is right. In China, it is 3p. What does this really mean? Is it just a number? Having been on a presentation with the chief executive officer of Nissan, I can tell the Committee that that company pays more for electricity in Sunderland than in any of its other plants globally. Tinsley Bridge Ltd had to shut its automotive division in Sheffield because of energy prices—110 skilled jobs and £20 million of work went to France. That was because of energy prices. Another company, one of our members in Yorkshire, has seen its bills go up from £1.2 million to £2.4 million, not because of Iran or anything else recently but because of the cost of energy.

Why is this? International oil and gas prices are much the same everywhere. It is the price. This is the Government’s choice. Five different levies make the difference. That is policy; it is a choice that can be made. This is what makes the difference. Domestic prices are regulated, I assume for electoral reasons, but industrial prices are not and there are 150,000 small companies in this country that do manufacturing.

I had the pleasure of working with the Minister, the noble Lord, Lord Whitehead, when I was Energy Minister and he was my shadow. He is very smart and understands all these arguments, but I ask him not to respond to this debate by talking about the supercharger. That is an attempt to lower prices, very successfully, for 400 heavy users. I also ask him not to rely on BICS and its subsidies. This was announced after extensive lobbying by Make UK a year ago, when Jonathan Reynolds, then Secretary of State for Business and Trade, phoned up with glee to say that he had won a big argument around the Cabinet table and that there would be this scheme for manufacturing, affecting thousands of businesses and reducing their prices to the levels of those in France and Germany. A year later, what have we had? We have had consultations and arguments about who is included. Ed Miliband’s department tells us that it is the Treasury; the Treasury tells us that it is Ed Miliband’s department. Our members do not care: they get their bills, which are going up and up. Where is this?

I remind the Minister, who is a student of history, that every industrial revolution has been based on cheap power: water, steam, coal and oil. What now? We cannot allow the deindustrialisation of this country because of inept—I do not use the word easily—energy policy which is penalising jobs, employment and, as the Government are always mentioning, growth.