Minister: ‘solar companies back support cuts’ Updated for 2024

Updated: 22/11/2024

Energy Minister Andrea Leadsom has been accused of “talking nonsense” by small solar companies in her constituency after she appeared to suggest that Conservative plans to cut subsidies for the industry were supported by “small solar companies in her constituency”.

Speaking to MPs last week, the energy minister indicated that firms may see the cuts as useful because they will “focus the industry on the most fruitful areas”. She told the Energy and Climate Change Committee: “I too have small solar companies in my constituency, I’ve been to see a few of them as well.

“My local companies are saying, they would argue that there is a very strong business case for solar almost anywhere as a result of the subsidy and what in fact cuts will do is to focus the industry on the most fruitful, the areas where there’s the greatest irradiation, the areas on perhaps commercial roofs where the electricity generator can be used by the company itself.

“So in other words what some of – not all of – my local companies that I’ve spoken to are saying is actually putting pressure on the subsidies forces you to focus on the best outcome.”

‘She’s talking through her orifice’

But companies in Leadsom’s own South Northamptonshire constituency told Energydesk the minister had “no idea what she is talking about” if she thought companies supported the cuts.

Kevin Spice, from Daventry-based Lazenby Energy, said: “Cutting subsidy will cost the homeowner more in the long run as prices rise. Along with thousands of jobs to be lost.

“The only way any company could support such subsidy cuts was if they were to want an unregulated industry which would find itself overcome with cowboys and unscrupulous traders. Andrea Leadsom has no idea what she is talking about.”

Paul Flynn, electrician director at Northamptonshire firm LP Solar and Electrical, was similarly dismissive of Leadsom’s comments: “No we don’t support Leadsom’s stance. Not in the slightest. There will be a lot of jobs lost. The government should have cut gradually. They should have given companies more time to get new technology in. I expect every company will feel the same way.”

Energydesk has asked the Department of Energy and Climate Change for the list of solar companies Leadsom claims to have met with, and will update this piece if it provides one.

A growing barrage of criticism

The government’s policy on renewables has been roundly criticised by environmental groups, while auditors EY (formerly Ernst & Young) released a report last month claiming Conservative policy had undermined investor confidence in the energy sector as a whole.

Leadsom, in fact, told an audience at the Conservative Party Conference earlier this month that energy policy changes have “very regrettably damaged investor confidence”.

More than 1,000 jobs have been lost since solar panel installer Mark Group entered administration just over two weeks ago – efficiency firm Climate Energy went bust soon after, Southern Solar quickly followed suit and then Elon Musk-backed Solar City pulled out of the country late last week.

All of these companies said cuts to green energy subsidies were at least in part responsible for their closures.

US solar giant SunEdison, for instance, recently told Energydesk it is was pulling out of the UK because the cuts would “essentially eliminate the solar PV market.” Planned community energy projects across the country are also under threat, a new report has found.

Kuki Dattani, operations director at the Coventry-based firm Synergy Power, told Energydesk he “feared for the future” of his company: “The government said it was going to revolutionise the solar industry. So it seems like they’ve made a massive u-turn. Leadsom is talking nonsense.”

 


 

Joe Sandler Clarke is a UK-based journalist specialising in investigative and public interest stories. He is currently working at the Guardian on the Global Development Professionals Network and Greenpeace Energydesk.

Zachary Davies Boren is an environment journalist writing for Greenpeace Energydesk, the Press Association, The Telegraph, The Independent, Huffington Post, IBTimes, Yahoo, Chicago Tribune and other media.

This article was originally published on Greenpeace Energydesk.

 

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