Debates between Lord Mitchell and Lord Bates during the 2010-2015 Parliament

Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Bill

Debate between Lord Mitchell and Lord Bates
Monday 3rd December 2012

(11 years, 11 months ago)

Grand Committee
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Lord Bates Portrait Lord Bates
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Can I dissent from the amendment? I think that it goes against the whole point of the legislation. Indeed, it goes against the whole point of the Green Investment Bank, which is to stand in the gap of market failure within the capital markets in order to get projects up and running and off the ground. Where that is not possible, it provides a bridge or an intervention, but only so that private sector capital can come in. As an example of that, I mentioned earlier the first investment that had come in to Earthly Energy, the anaerobic digestion plant in Teesside. As I recall, the Green Investment Bank invested £8 million there. Immediately that attracted matched private sector investment of £8 million. The total value of the project is £100 million. That seems to be a classic example. To go from zero to £100 million, clearly they would not have been able to get the project off the ground, but that measured intervention of £8 million unlocked a project worth £100 million, which is exactly what the amendment proposed by the noble Lord, Lord Teverson, is trying to achieve. I am simply saying that it is already happening under the present regime.

Lord Mitchell Portrait Lord Mitchell
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My Lords, we have had some very good contributions. In fact, my Amendment 9 just leads on from what the noble Lord, Lord Teverson, said, and we have a few additional points to make about it. First, I refer to what my noble friend Lady Ford has said on this subject; she has a lot of experience in this area and we should listen to her. We should also listen to the noble Lord, Lord Oxburgh. He has shown a lot of passion for green technology in this country and has said how important it is that we stop sitting around and get on with it. I hope that that is taken on board by this Government.

I suppose that what we are saying more particularly is that this Green Investment Bank has to be a real bank and not a sham. I do not think that it is going to be a sham, but it has to be a real bank with all the attributes of a real bank. Probably the most important issue before this Committee today is its borrowing powers. Without the capacity to borrow from the capital markets for investment, the bank is no more than a government fund. In fact, Transform UK has said:

“A bank that is not allowed to borrow cannot be described as a Bank, and investors will notice this”.

However, the amendment represents a compromise and takes into account the strain on public sector funding, and we would not therefore support reckless and irresponsible levels of borrowing.