British Industrial Competitiveness Scheme Debate
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(1 day, 8 hours ago)
Lords Chamber
Baroness Lloyd of Effra (Lab)
The noble Lord raises the question of the business environment and electricity prices. One of the most important things for businesses around energy prices, business confidence and investment capability is the fiscal situation. Last week, the IMF welcomed the UK’s notable improvement in our public finances, with the economy growing by 0.5% in the three months to February. Taking long-term steps to create a stable economy will enable sound finances, lower prices and enable investment in energy over time, which will bring prices down.
My Lords, the alleviation of the high policy costs imposed on energy-intensive and internationally competitive manufacturing in this country is to be welcomed. I will ask a question about the manufacturing sectors that will benefit from the BICS. These are the industrial strategy’s eight sectors and the related foundational technologies, but that leaves out some key manufacturing sectors. The Minister will have heard what was said in the other place about ceramics, and I want to ask about food manufacturing, which is our largest manufacturing industry. It is highly internationally competitive, but exposed to a great deal of international competition. It is often energy-intensive. Given what is happening in the agritech sector, there is considerable potential for growth. I never thought that the industrial strategy’s eight would be designed to leave others behind. I hope that this Minister will give food manufacturing and ceramics the opportunity to make their case as well.
Baroness Lloyd of Effra (Lab)
The noble Lord is right that there are many thriving and growing businesses, industries and sectors in the country. Not all of those are going to be covered by the BICS. In the eligibility consultation that we put out before this confirmation, that was one of the questions that we consulted on. We expanded the scope, from the beginning to the end of the consultation, from what we thought was going to be about 7,000 businesses to 10,000 businesses. The focus of the scheme is on the strategic manufacturing sector supporting frontier industries, as the noble Lord mentioned, and foundational manufacturing industries. We are looking carefully at supply chains—for example, fertiliser availability and cost—as we monitor the impact of the current situation in the Middle East.