14/01/2026
Soaring energy bills for households and industry continue to keep inflation high and create a straitjacket for growth.
Labour’s arbitrary and unnecessary 2030 Clean Power Target continues to undermine the urgent mission to cut bills. And this has been laid bare yet again today.
Some might have hoped that the seventh allocation round (AR7) for new renewable energy projects would bring some welcome news for hard-pressed billpayers. But with the results of the auction, we now know the minimum amount the Government has agreed for billpayers and taxpayers to pay for the electricity produced by these new projects. The outcome isn’t pretty, with an unwelcome increase on last year’s price.
Wind has been – and can continue to be – a significant opportunity for Britain. It is our largest source of electricity generation, bringing high-paying jobs in the construction and maintenance of turbines, and is crucially a domestically produced energy source, not susceptible to control by hostile powers in the same way that fossil fuel prices are. Along with nuclear and other renewables, it should remain an important part of our energy mix, with gas as a back up when the wind doesn’t blow.
But AR7 has been a highly uncompetitive auction round, with the Government agreeing to pay £65 per mWh (in 2012 prices), compared to £54 per mWH last year – a significant increase at a time when we urgently need costs to come down. This locks both billpayers and the Government into unnecessarily high prices for electricity produced by these new wind projects for the next 20 years.
✍️John Flesher
If we are to get a grip on energy prices and decarbonise, we have to be realistic