Lord Scriven
Main Page: Lord Scriven (Liberal Democrat - Life peer)Department Debates - View all Lord Scriven's debates with the HM Treasury
(1 day, 12 hours ago)
Lords Chamber
Lord Livermore (Lab)
I am particularly grateful to the noble Lord for his optimism, which is much needed at times. Let us hope that he turns out to be correct. As I have said already, the long-term consequences of this are hard to predict at this point; they will depend on the severity and duration of the conflict. However, I think the noble Lord is saying that we need to make sure that our response is temporary and does not have long-lasting impacts. One of the principles that the Chancellor has set out for our response is that it should be temporary.
My Lords, one of the implications of what has happened in the Middle East is that the United Arab Emirates has announced that it is withdrawing from OPEC, which will have an impact on global oil market volatility. In the light of this new scenario, are the Government planning to take extra steps to shield energy-intensive industries from potentially very large swings in oil prices?
Lord Livermore (Lab)
The noble Lord is absolutely correct to say how important it is to do that. That is why we have taken further action to weaken the link. Last week, the Chancellor announced plans to weaken the link between high gas and electricity prices and to prevent spikes in energy prices from driving up inflation and costs for households. That is why the delinking steps that we have taken are so important.
The Chancellor also announced the extension of the British industrial competitiveness scheme, which was a commitment in the industrial strategy. That will reduce electricity costs from April 2027 by around 25% for electricity-intensive manufacturing frontier sectors in the industrial strategy and foundational sectors in their supply chains. Last week, the Chancellor announced that over 10,000 businesses are now expected to benefit from the scheme, rather than 7,000 as previously planned. Eligible businesses will also benefit from a one-off backdated payment in 2027, covering the support firms would have received if the scheme had been in place from April 2026. The consultation on scheme design and eligibility was published last week.