Tag: Caroline Flint

  • Caroline Flint – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Department for Energy and Climate Change

    Caroline Flint – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Department for Energy and Climate Change

    The below Parliamentary question was asked by Caroline Flint on 2014-04-29.

    To ask the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, pursuant to the Oral Answer of 3 April 2014, Official Report, column 990, on energy bills, how many households are forecast to receive assistance under the Energy Company Obligation (a) in each year between 2013 and 2017 and (b) in total.

    Gregory Barker

    Our analysis published in the Assessment of Impacts document accompanying the ECO consultation suggested that 8900,000 households would be supported to the end of March 1015 and an additional 930,000 households would be supported to the end of March 2017. This leads to a total number of households supported of 1,820,000

    We will be publishing our projections of the number of households supported under ECO in the forthcoming Impact Assessment alongside the government response to ECO.

  • Caroline Flint – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Department for Energy and Climate Change

    Caroline Flint – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Department for Energy and Climate Change

    The below Parliamentary question was asked by Caroline Flint on 2014-06-13.

    To ask the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, how much funding his Department has allocated to (a) solid wall insulation, (b) other energy efficiency and insulation measures from his Department’s approved list and (c) refunds for Green Deal assessments under the Green Deal Home Improvement Fund in (i) 2014-15, (ii) 2015-16, (iii) 2016-17 and (iv) over the lifetime of the fund.

    Gregory Barker

    Up to £120 million has been allocated to the Green Deal Home Improvement Fund in 2014-15. DECC has not allocated specific levels of funding to (a) solid wall insulation, (b) other energy efficiency and insulation measures from his Department’s approved list and (c) refunds for Green Deal assessments under the Green Deal Home Improvement Fund in (i) 2014-15, (ii) 2015-16, (iii) 2016-17 or (iv) over the lifetime of the fund.

  • Caroline Flint – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Department for Energy and Climate Change

    Caroline Flint – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Department for Energy and Climate Change

    The below Parliamentary question was asked by Caroline Flint on 2014-04-29.

    To ask the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, pursuant to the Oral Answer of 3 April 2014, Official Report, column 998, with which other countries his Department is working on the New Climate Economy report.

    Gregory Barker

    The New Climate Economy study was launched last September and is due to be published in September 2014, ahead of the UN Climate Summit in New York that month.

  • Caroline Flint – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Department for Energy and Climate Change

    Caroline Flint – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Department for Energy and Climate Change

    The below Parliamentary question was asked by Caroline Flint on 2014-06-13.

    To ask the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, how much funding his Department has allocated to the Green Deal Home Improvement Fund for the lifetime of the programme.

    Gregory Barker

    Up to £120 million has been allocated to the Green Deal Home Improvement Fund in 2014-15. A decision on allocating funding for future years has yet to be taken. In the 2013 Autumn Statement, £150m was allocated in each of 15/16 and 16/17 towards energy efficiency in homes.

  • Caroline Flint – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Department for Energy and Climate Change

    Caroline Flint – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Department for Energy and Climate Change

    The below Parliamentary question was asked by Caroline Flint on 2014-04-29.

    To ask the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, pursuant to his oral contribution of 2 April 2014, Official Report, column 908, on energy price freeze, what the evidential basis is for the statement that average annual investment in renewables has more than doubled in the current Parliament compared with the previous one.

    Michael Fallon

    This shows that average annual investment in renewables has more than doubled in the current Parliament, compared with the previous one.

    New Investment in UK Renewable Electricity

    $m

    2005

    2006

    2007

    2008

    2009

    2010

    2011

    2012

    2013

    Total

    3,292

    2,974

    4,454

    4,511

    11,337

    9,651

    10,996

    10,339

    11,981

    Source: Bloomberg Energy Finance

    There are a number of sources analysing and interpreting new investment in UK renewable electricity, including DECC’s own analysis. However, data are not always readily comparable owing to differences in methodology, data collection points, timings and market coverage.

  • Caroline Flint – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Department for Energy and Climate Change

    Caroline Flint – 2014 Parliamentary Question to the Department for Energy and Climate Change

    The below Parliamentary question was asked by Caroline Flint on 2014-06-13.

    To ask the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, what estimate his Department has made of the number of households that will receive cashback under the Green Deal Home Improvement Fund in (a) 2014-15, (b) 2015-16, (c) 2016-17 and (d) all further years for which funding has been allocated.

    Gregory Barker

    The total number of homes supported under the GDHIF scheme will be dependent on a number of factors. Given these are unknown factors currently, the number of homes potentially supported could vary significantly. Up to £120m has been allocated to this scheme for 2014/15. A decision on allocating funding for future years has yet to be taken.

  • Caroline Flint – 2012 Comments on Energy Price Increases

    Caroline Flint – 2012 Comments on Energy Price Increases

    The comments made by Caroline Flint, the then Shadow Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, on 12 January 2012.

    With falling wholesale costs, all energy companies must cut their prices for now. They are very quick at hiking up energy bills when prices rise – they need to be just as quick in cutting them when prices fall.

    For the future we need a more a responsible and competitive energy market that works in the public interest. But one thing all energy companies should do now is ensure that all over 75s are on the cheapest possible tariff.

  • Caroline Flint – 2010 Comments on Unequal Financial Support for Councils

    Caroline Flint – 2010 Comments on Unequal Financial Support for Councils

    The comments made by Caroline Flint, the then Shadow Communities and Local Government Secretary, on 20 December 2010. The text in bold is from the Labour Party’s press release.

    [Sheffield hit four times as hard as Cameron’s Witney

    Caroline Flint MP, Labour’s Shadow Communities and Local Government Secretary, has responded to House of Commons figures revealing that the most deprived councils in England will see a fall in revenue spending power in 2011/12 on average nearly four times as big as the least deprived councils.

    Meanwhile, Labour Party analysis shows Tory Cabinet Ministers’ constituencies getting off lighter than many other areas, including those of their Lib Dem colleagues.

    Nick Clegg’s Sheffield council will suffer a cut of 8.4% whereas David Cameron’s Witney constituents living in Oxfordshire County Council will get off with only a 1.9% reduction. Oliver Letwin’s Dorset County Council will even see its central government support rise.]

    These figures confirm what many feared – we’re not all in this together. While Sheffield council taxpayers will see their council lose eight percent of its central government support, Tory Cabinet ministers’ areas are getting off much lighter.

    The Tory-Lib Dem Government has chosen to hit the poorest councils hardest, with average cuts for the most deprived communities four times bigger than those in the better off areas. In some cases, the cuts are nearly nine times as big.

    That’s unfair and it shows just how out of touch this Government is with ordinary people.

    Eric Pickles must now explain why the hardest pressed towns and cities up and down the country are faced with spending cuts substantially greater than the best off areas.

  • Caroline Flint – Speech to 2013 Labour Party Conference

    Below is the text of the speech made by Caroline Flint to the 2013 Labour Party Conference in Brighton.

    Conference,

    Margaret is 88.

    Lives on her own.

    Hard of hearing and finds it difficult having conversations on the phone.

    In five months, her monthly electricity bill jumped from £45 to £67.

    She couldn’t afford the new payments, so a debt built up.

    Her energy company wanted it to be repaid in full.

    Margaret has never been in debt before.

    Frightened – she turned her heating off.

    Embarrassed that her flat was too cold, Margaret stopped inviting friends over too.

    Nicola is 32.

    She’s a mum, with two kids.

    Both her and her husband work.

    But after a few cold winters, the gap between what Nicola could afford and her bills left her in debt, too.

    Now, she’s worried about what will happen if prices rise again this winter.

    David Cameron and George Osborne say the economy is fixed but for people like Margaret and Nicola, things are getting harder, not easier.

    They’re at least now getting some help from the National Energy Action charity.

    But millions more face the same problems and worse.

    Unfolding day-by-day in kitchens and living rooms, in every town and every village – North, South, East and West, is a cost of living crisis.

    Of course, the worst off are the hardest hit.

    But everyone’s living standards are under attack.

    People who always thought themselves “comfortable”, now feel under pressure.

    Now, the slightest misfortune – a broken boiler, a faulty fridge, or another inflation-busting rise in their energy bills, can mean real hardship.

    So if ever there was a time for action over energy prices it is now.

    But what is this Government doing?

    Have they taken our advice over the last year?

    Will they put all those over 75 on the cheapest tariff this winter?

    Did they sit up and listen when we revealed that energy companies have seen their profits soar while ordinary people’s bills have rocketed?

    No, support for people struggling to pay their bills has been cut in half.

    The Prime Minister promised that energy companies will have to give their customers the cheapest tariff.

    A year later, four out of five people still on the wrong deal, paying more than they need to.

    And what about the big promise to insulate homes and save us all money? The Green Deal.

    It was meant to be the biggest home improvement programme since World War Two.

    Ministers said they’d be having sleepless nights if 10,000 people hadn’t signed up by this Christmas.

    They’ve spent £16 million promoting this scheme so far.

    But just 12 households have had any work done.

    £16 million for 12 homes.

    Only nine thousand nine hundred and eighty eight to go. They won’t be getting much shut eye this year.

    This Government, complacent over soaring bills.

    Indifferent to people’s struggles.

    Always standing up for the wrong people.

    It doesn’t have to be like this…

    Imagine if a certain beer company was your energy supplier?

    You know who I mean.

    They’d ring up one day and say “the wholesale price has fallen, so we’re going to cut your bill today”.

    A few weeks later, they’d ring you again “we’re really sorry you’ve overpaid us, we’re refunding the money today”.

    They’d ring you up a few weeks after that and say “we’ve got to own up, we’re not the cheapest supplier to you, so we’re cutting your tariff today to make sure we are.”

    Conference, we’d all raise a glass to that.

    But it’s not like that is it?

    Half a dozen companies, squeezing out competition, setting prices in secret, and never telling you if you’re getting a rotten deal.

    Prices rising year after year, followed by record-breaking profits.

    Conference, it’s not right.

    We all joined the Labour Party to fight injustice

    And this is one injustice Ed Miliband and I won’t stand for.

    Now is the time for politicians that are bold enough to argue for big changes in our energy market.

    Today, I promise with a Labour Government the most radical, comprehensive reforms since energy privatisation.

    No more price setting in secret.

    The energy companies will be forced to open their books.

    And do all their electricity trading on the open market, in a pool.

    A single place, in public, for everyone who wants to buy or sell power.

    No more secret price setting. No more back room deals.

    The days where a company generates energy, sells it to themselves… and then sells it to us…

    Those days will end.

    But that’s just the start.

    Have you ever wondered how it is that whatever world energy prices, whatever our bills are, somehow the energy companies always manage to make bigger and bigger profits?

    Conference, let me spell it out.

    If they own the power station and sell the electricity to themselves, what’s the incentive to keep their prices down, if all it does is reduce their profits?

    So Conference, today I pledge, we will break up the Big Six.

    The power stations will be separated from the companies that send you your bill.

    Just as the banks will have to separate their investment and trading arms from the high street branches, so we will make the energy companies separate their production from the companies that supply your home.

    And let me say one more thing about the bills you will receive…

    Under Labour, on every bill you will see one standing charge and one unit price.

    Simple.

    Straightforward.

    Easy to compare. Easy to switch.

    Conference, ultimately, our best protection against volatile world energy prices is to save the energy that escapes through our windows, walls and rooftops.

    And invest in home-grown British clean energy.

    Around these small islands that make up Britain, from the Shetlands to Southampton, we must invest in the low-carbon energies that will power our country for a new industrial age.

    And I say to every nation in our great country, we invest in energy together, we share the risks, we share the rewards.

    We are stronger, together.

    And to the Tory backwoodsmen, understand this: clean energy is not the enemy, climate change is.

    So in government, we will set a clear course to clean up our power system.

    To keep our country safe and secure, we will establish a new dedicated Energy Security Board, to identify our energy needs, secure investment for the future and keep the lights on.

    And I promise we will end the disastrous decline in new jobs and industries under David Cameron.

    I want Britain at the forefront of change, building a cleaner economy, creating the jobs our nation needs.

    Conference, together, we can build a better Britain.

    A Britain where the energy we share is secure, affordable and clean.

    A Britain where Margaret, and millions like her, can warm their homes without fearing the bill.

    A Britain to which we all truly belong.

    For the many, not the few.

    A Britain built by Labour.

  • Caroline Flint – Speech to 2012 Labour Party Conference

    Below is the text of the speech made by Caroline Flint to the Labour Party conference on 1st October 2012.

    Conference it was my birthday the other week.

    Apart from them arriving too quickly these days – I find myself reflecting on times gone by when life seemed simpler, but also on the amazing scientific advances that have changed our lives for the better.

    Over the past year I have been inspired by the opportunities for jobs and growth new low carbon technologies can deliver for all our futures.

    But some changes we have all experienced don’t seem that great. Technology was meant to put you in control and make life easier.

    So why do so many of us feel less in control than ever before?

    Do you remember a time when you knew what your bank manager looked like?

    When you didn’t have to press ten numbers before you spoke to a human being?

    When you didn’t have enough passwords to fill a small notebook?

    Even buying something as simple as gas and electricity is bewildering today.

    We all have to heat our homes and buy gas and electricity from somebody.

    And I know that companies that keep the hospitals warm, factories working, and the lights on in 22 million homes are doing a pretty fundamental job for the British economy.

    But even the big six energy giants know that something has gone badly wrong when the poorest people pay the most for energy and nearly everyone pays more than they need to.

    When fewer than ever trust their energy company to help them.

    Fewer than ever switch supplier.

    And fewer than ever believe the Government will help.

    Energy bills have gone through the roof in the past two years.

    Up by £200.

    And more price hikes heading our way this winter.

    The Government tells people to shop around for a better deal.

    It’s down to you they say.

    You’re on your own.

    That’s not the Labour way. We believe in co-operation.

    We know that by the strength of our common endeavour we achieve more together than we do alone.

    Turning the clock back isn’t the answer.

    But we don’t have to accept things the way they are.

    I want to tell you and everyone at home, that Labour may not run the country but we can help you cut your bills today.

    In America, co-operatives, local councils and community organisations are bringing people together to strike a better deal for their custom.

    Our sister parties in Belgium and Holland have delivered cheaper energy prices for thousands of people through collective switching.

    We can do the same.

    I am proud to announce the launch of Labour’s SwitchTogether campaign.

    We will ask people to sign up to Labour’s SwitchTogether to get a better energy deal.

    And if the energy companies want our business they need to name the price.

    Stand together. Buy energy together. Switch together.

    Not giving up because we are in opposition but rolling up our sleeves and getting down to work.

    Our strength is in our local organisation, our community links, our councillors, our members, our supporters.

    I am asking you – knock on doors, deliver leaflets, organise community meetings, make the calls and the tweets.

    We can reach out to people who are paying too much but alone can’t change that, and we can make a difference.

    The next time someone tells you all political parties are the same – and they will – tell them Labour is buying energy on behalf of many people, as one customer to get a better deal.

    Tell them about the first political party in British history to run a collective switch.

    We may be in opposition.

    We may not run the country.

    But we can help people right now when this Government won’t.

    There are of course things only Government can do, and the British people deserve to know Labour’s plans for the way our energy is sold.

    Whenever bills go up, the energy companies always tell us they’re only passing on their costs.

    So why, when prices rise do bills go up like a rocket but when they come down they fall like a feather – if at all?

    The reason is – they’re allowed to run their businesses in such a complicated way that it’s almost impossible to know what the true cost of energy is.

    This must end.

    So we’re calling time on Ofgem.

    Too often, Ofgem has ducked the opportunity to get tough with the energy giants, failed to enforce its own rules and let energy companies get away with ripping off hard pressed families and pensioners.

    The time has come to say goodbye to Ofgem and create a tough new regulator that people can trust.

    We will open the books of the energy giants.

    Stop the backroom deals and end the secret contracts.

    And if they don’t do it first, we will force the energy companies to pass on price cuts.

    An energy market that is simpler and works in the public interest.

    An energy market which delivers fair prices, protects the most vulnerable.

    An energy market that people trust.

    That is our pledge.

    I am proud that it was a Labour Government that faced the future – stood by the science and faced the threat of our planet overheating.

    We beat our Kyoto target and doubled renewable energy generation.

    Ed Miliband delivered the Climate Change Act, a world first, placing Britain at the forefront of global action on carbon and sending out a clear message that Britain was open for green business.

    When Labour left Government the UK was ranked third in the world for investment in green growth with £7billion of private money driving new energy and clean technology.

    We are now seventh.

    David Cameron’s promise to be the greenest government ever lies in tatters.

    But let’s not forget the Liberal Democrats

    It was Chris Huhne who took the axe to Britain’s solar industry.

    It was Ed Davey who fired the starting gun on the next dash for gas.

    Tories and Liberal Democrats.

    Creating uncertainty.

    Deterring investment.

    Costing us jobs.

    Britain must be part of an energy revolution just as important to this country’s prosperity as the Victorian railways, and the internet in the 20th century.

    A cleaner future in a radically different, fairer energy market.

    Britain needs:

    New jobs.

    New growth.

    New hope.

    And in 2015 – a Labour Government.