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Economic Development

Former Energy Secretary claims government has been 'backsliding' on green agenda as Humber role hots up

Chris Huhne is confident carbon capture and hydrogen can follow offshore wind success story with mechanism to make it happen

Chris Huhne addresses The Waterline Summit.(Image: Neil Holmes Photography Limited)

Former Energy Secretary Chris Huhne has accused successive governments of “back-sliding” on the green agenda as he joined calls from the Humber for stability and certainty on the drive to Net Zero.

A £15 billion project pipeline is poised to pour into the Energy Estuary, delivering a decarbonisation demonstrator to take globally. Now stability is urgently sought in Westminster and the City with vital policy frameworks needed to take them forward and unleash the flow.

Mr Huhne appeared at the region’s The Waterline Summit launch, more than a decade on from his time in the Conservative / Lib-Dem coalition cabinet.

Read more: New Immingham ferry terminal will 'bring confidence to economy' - ABP

He said: “We have gone from a position where we were clearly one of the leaders, befitting our status as a scientific super power, which we are. We have been backsliding. At the beginning of this period, we had the lead, in government in 2010 I was Secretary of State for Energy and we were doing good things. David Cameron committed to hugging a husky, and The Energy Act of 2011 included a major programme of retrofitting housing stock and reducing the amount of energy used in heating every year. That has effectively been ended, with very little progress since 2018.

“We went into a period of “cutting green crap” as it was called. On that programme gas bills would be 25 to 50 per cent lower. Our pre-eminent position, where once we led on this agenda, has gone backwards.”

Stating he was optimistic that the Net Zero journey was moving in the right direction globally, he said “we may overshoot” targets and require technology to draw emissions from the atmosphere - another strand of innovation emerging on the Humber.

Out of the Westminster bubble, and he was clear where the lead was in the private sector too.