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Lower electricity prices for industry are crucial, but the government's plan lacks detail
The Guardian
|June 24, 2025
The colour palette for the front cover was the same, and whizzy light beams were again used to denote go-getting national ambition.
But the big difference between Greg Clark's 2017 industrial strategy and Jonathan Reynolds's "modern" version yesterday was supposed to be the latter's emphasis on reducing the sky-high cost of electricity for UK industry.
Does it deliver? Well, it acknowledges the problem, which is a start. But after that it is impossible to avoid the woeful position British business has with electricity prices.
The statistics are aired alongside every story about de-industrialisation from the Port Talbot steelworks to the Grangemouth oil refinery. The manufacturers' lobby group Make UK estimates that energy costs for UK steelmakers were £66 per megawatt hour in 2024-25, compared with estimated German prices of £50 per megawatt hour and French ones of £43.
So a plan to "slash industrial electricity prices" for 7,000 companies and "move us from being an outlier to right in the middle of the pack", as Reynolds put it, is definitely a step towards sanity. The detail matters, however. For at least three reasons, this looks more like a sketch of a plan rather than a fully worked-up scheme.
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