Skip to content
City PM
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
Friday 17 April 2026 5:40 am  |  Updated:  Friday 17 April 2026 10:58 am

Shadow energy secretary: Reeves’ subsidies mean nothing without tax cuts

By: Claire Coutinho

Add as a preferred source on Google
Conservative campaign poster promoting energy bill reform with the slogan Fuel Britannia prominently displayed.

It is the cost of systems, not electricity, that is driving up businesses’ energy bills, and Reeves’ subsidies will do little to help, writes Claire Coutinho

Businesses big and small are being crushed by sky-high energy bills. 

Of course it’s not just energy costs that businesses are struggling with. Every week seems to deal a new blow – higher taxes, more red tape, another cost imposed by a Cabinet where not a single person has ever run a business.  

Rachel Reeves’ solution, announced on Wednesday, is another subsidy scheme to help some manufacturers with their energy costs. But dig into the detail and you will find that only 0.2 per cent of businesses will benefit. Pubs, restaurants, farmers, retailers and small manufacturers who are on their knees thanks to this government won’t get any help whatsoever.  

The scheme also does not address the underlying problem: the cost of our electricity is too high. That’s why the Conservatives’ policy is simple. We need cheap power. 

The Conservatives’ Cheap Power Plan would cut electricity bills by 20 per cent. Not just for 0.2 per cent of businesses, but for all businesses and households – and it wouldn’t cost the taxpayer a penny. How? By genuinely taking costs out of the system. 

Britain’s taxes are making energy expensive

We have the highest industrial electricity bills in the developed world and 75 per cent of that bill is made up of non-commodity costs. That means the bulk of your bill is not the cost of generating electricity – it is system costs, policies and taxes that the government chooses to impose on top. 

And those costs are going up. As energy bosses recently told Parliament, even if gas itself were free, bills would still rise by 2030 because these non-commodity costs are spiralling ever upwards. Major business groups like the British Retail Consortium and UKHospitality have said it is these costs that are causing businesses to feel the squeeze. 

Read more

The climate quango empire will keep growing until cheap matters more than ideology

Net zero secretary Ed Miliband is set to face more pressure over high energy bills in the UK.

So what are these costs? A Carbon Tax which punishes us for using the gas power stations we need when the sun does not shine and the wind does not blow. Decades-old and eye-wateringly expensive renewable subsidies, network and grid balancing charges that are going through the roof thanks to Ed Miliband, and an ever-growing stack of redistribution schemes to compensate certain households and certain businesses for high energy prices. 

If you run a struggling pub, shop or any other business that doesn’t qualify as a special case, you are being hit with a triple whammy: not just your own rising electricity costs, but also higher taxes and extra charges on your energy bill to subsidise the chosen few. 

We need to make electricity cheap

This is a doom loop. Carrying on down this path will mean more businesses going under, which in turn means fewer people using electricity. But the fixed costs of the system will remain. So your bills will go up again as those fixed costs are spread over an ever-shrinking group of users. And on and on we go. Higher bills and fewer businesses means even higher bills and even fewer businesses. 

This is not working for consumers, our economy or the environment. The single most important thing for decarbonisation is to make electricity cheap. Yet Ed Miliband’s chaotic rush to have the cleanest electricity in the world is pushing costs so high that it is deterring people from using that electricity. 

High electricity prices are crushing industry, squandering our chance to lead on AI and penalising people who want to electrify. We need to break this cycle. If we want people to use electricity, then we need a relentless focus on making electricity cheap. 

We cannot keep punishing British manufacturing with high energy costs and taxes in the name of climate change, only to drive them out of business and import the same goods that we used to make ourselves, but with much higher emissions.  

The Cheap Power Plan would axe the Carbon Tax and remove non-commodity costs to cut electricity bills and make our businesses more competitive. And, crucially, it would not cost taxpayers or billpayers a penny.  

Claire Coutinho MP is the shadow energy secretary

Read more

‘Course correction’: UK economy to contract as ‘energy shock catches up’

Rachel Reeves discusses AI adoption for economic growth at UK business conference podium.

Share this article

  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • WhatsApp
  • Email

Similarly tagged content:

Sections

  • Opinion
  • News

Categories

  • Opinion
  • Business

People & Organisations

  • Claire Coutinho
  • Conservative Party
  • electricity
  • Energy
  • energy bills
  • subsidies
  • Tax

Trending Articles

  • Reeves’ new tax charge on cash ISAs faces fierce industry backlash

  • Revealed: Secret Treasury plan to tax State Pension before it is paid out

  • As it happened: Stocks recover after markets rocked by tech-sell off; US claims ‘good foundations’ of Iran deal

  • Burnham’s new chief of staff ran City firm advising Thames Water and rival Heathrow bidder

  • As it happened: FTSE 100 scrapes into green after Segro’s surge; Oil at pre-war levels after Trump snaps at industry

More from City PM

  • The climate quango empire will keep growing until cheap matters more than ideology

    Opinion
    Net zero secretary Ed Miliband is set to face more pressure over high energy bills in the UK.
  • ‘Course correction’: UK economy to contract as ‘energy shock catches up’

    Economics
    Rachel Reeves discusses AI adoption for economic growth at UK business conference podium.
  • OECD: Growth to remain below one per cent as UK economy struggles with unemployment

    Economics
    Sir Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves discussing policy at a press conference, emphasizing Labours economic strategy
  • ‘Tipping point’: CBI boss slams £345bn business tax burden amid ‘cost of doing business’ crisis

    Economics
    Rain Newton-Smith addressing audience at a business conference, wearing a professional suit and speaking at a podium.
  • The UK chemicals sector is in trouble

    Opinion
    Lush green fields and livestock on a British farm under clear blue skies, showcasing agriculture in the United Kingdom.
  • Inflation stays below three per cent despite price warning

    Economics
    The Bank of England is expected to hold interest rates at four per cent due to stubbornly high inflation.
  • Upgrading the grid risks ending up like HS2

    Opinion
    Electricity grid infrastructure with high-voltage power lines and pylons under a clear sky, representing energy distribution.
  • Rolls-Royce shares surge as SMR unit bags multi-billion pound Swedish nuclear contract

    Energy
    Rendering of a small modular reactor (SMR) design showcasing compact and efficient nuclear energy solution

City PM — European politics, business and analysis.

Europe

  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • UK & Ireland

Topics

  • Business
  • Markets
  • AI
  • Technology
  • Opinion
  • Energy

More

  • Politics
  • Economics
  • Fintech
  • Legal
  • Sport
  • Life

Company

  • About City PM
  • Contact
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
© 2026 City PM. All rights reserved.
About · Contact · Terms · Privacy