HomeNewsHinkley Point C hailed as 'biggest future burden' on consumers

Hinkley Point C hailed as ‘biggest future burden’ on consumers

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The Stop Hinkley Campaign has this week welcomed a speech by the former Conservative Secretary of State for Energy (1979-81), Lord Howell, who described the proposed Hinkley Point C nuclear power station as “by far the biggest future burden on consumers and households.”

Although he says he’s “very pro-nuclear”, Lord Howell said he “would shed no tears at all if the elephantine Hinkley C Project was abandoned.”

Lord Howell’s remarks came just after the current Secretary of State for Energy, Amber Rudd, said there is a “very good prospect” of a decision to build Britain’s first new nuclear plant finally being taken later this year.

The Government announced moves to curb subsidies to small-scale solar farms this morning. This follows similar moves to cut subsidies for onshore wind announced in June, and an end to subsidies for larger solar farms announced in May last year.

Rudd’s motivation is that she wants to prevent an overspend of the government’s clean energy support budget, known as the Levy Control Framework (LCF), which is designed to limit the impact of subsidies on household energy bills. Solar at all scales is expected to add only around £10 to consumers’ bills this year. Yet the Treasury is offering subsidies – paid for by consumers – of up to £17.6bn to EDF Energy over 35 years.

Stop Hinkley spokesperson Roy Pumfrey said: “The Minister appears to be delusional in thinking that Hinkley Point C will get built any time soon; deceitful by pretending that she is helping UK consumers and disingenuous for saying that Hinkley C is a good deal.”

“The list of problems which EDF needs to overcome gets longer every week. Cutting subsidies to sustainable energy, whilst carrying on regardless with a scheme unlikely ever to come to fruition, is just plain daft.”

“Lord Howell reminded us that no reactor of the Hinkley C variety has ever been completed successfully and those that are being built are years behind.”

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