UK-EU Customs Union Debate

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Department: Cabinet Office

UK-EU Customs Union

Lord Stephen Excerpts
Thursday 29th January 2026

(1 day, 8 hours ago)

Lords Chamber
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Lord Stephen Portrait Lord Stephen (LD)
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My Lords, I draw attention to my offshore wind interests as declared in the register. I add my congratulations to those offered to the excellent and entertaining maiden speakers that we have already had. Perhaps I may ask for the discretion of the House in mentioning a maiden speech still to come, from the noble Lord, Lord Pitt-Watson. I remember, as a young Liberal in Aberdeen, attending many hours of meetings with Helen Pitt-Watson, which brings back very fond memories to me. I very much look forward to the noble Lord’s speech.

I also welcome the co-operation that was announced on Monday this week by the UK and EU nations in relation to offshore wind and North Sea interconnectors. The headline from the so-called Hamburg declaration was the joint development—the co-operative development—of 100 gigawatts of new projects based around a shared, Europe-wide grid system. Much more co-operation of this kind is surely sensible and badly needed—a significant step, perhaps, on our way to a new single market and customs union.

My friend the late Eddie O’Connor was a very big figure in offshore wind who founded Airtricity and then Mainstream Renewable Power. He championed the idea of a European supergrid with huge energy and passion. The challenge is simple: to create and deliver a renewable energy network across the UK and Europe that is fit for the 21st century and beyond. With determination and drive, I am certain that we can make it happen.

It is also great to see plans announced across several EU countries to adopt contracts for difference to underpin and anchor their own offshore wind developments. These so-called CfDs were first introduced in the United Kingdom in 2012 by then Secretary of State for Energy Sir Ed Davey. They have saved the UK electricity consumer billions compared to the previous ROCs system. Despite one serious and, sadly, completely avoidable misstep in relation to CfDs back in 2023 with AR5, contracts for difference have continued to be a big success in the UK, and AR7, announced on 14 January, just completed with 8.3 gigawatts of new capacity awarded—the biggest ever.

In contrast, Germany, Denmark and the Netherlands have recently struggled with their own power auctions. This is not good for the climate emergency, and Governments together must do better. Nations can learn from each other; they can work together. They can—we can—get better at all of this.

In the UK, it is not perfect, but it is generally positive. All the mainstream UK parties have supported the energy transition, net-zero targets and the importance of real and rapid progress. The only party to stand out is Reform UK. Its policies are strident, negative and hostile. In July last year, the party’s deputy leader, Richard Tice MP, wrote to the chief executives of all the major offshore wind developers threatening to strike down all contracts for difference signed under auction round 7 if the party ever won power—an astonishing, aggressive, anti-business move threatening to break binding commercial and legal agreements being entered into right now.

Such a move is in stark contrast to the words of the noble Lord, Lord Offord, Reform’s new Scottish leader, when he gave his maiden speech in this place in January 2022. He spoke warmly about his attendance at COP 26 and the tremendous achievement of the UK presidency in increasing commitments to net zero from 30% to 90% of world emissions. It will be interesting to learn whether Reform UK has—

Lord Katz Portrait Lord Katz (Lab)
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I ask the noble Lord to conclude. He is getting over the time limit, and it is a time-limited debate. I keep on having to stress that.

Lord Stephen Portrait Lord Stephen (LD)
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I apologise. It was my reference at the beginning to some personal matters that have taken me over. Across the UK and the EU, all this is very important, yes, for the economic benefit for our nations, but, more importantly, for the future of our planet.

Lord Katz Portrait Lord Katz (Lab)
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My Lords, for those immediately following those giving a maiden or valedictory speech, an allowance is made for the tributes being paid and the clock does not start until their remarks start. For others speaking in the debate, the time starts when they stand up, and that needs to be no more than four minutes.