Labour refuses to accept blame for feed-in tariff fiasco

James S Murray
clock

Shadow Climate Minister rejects coalition suggestion that Labour mistakes forced solar feed-in tariff review

Labour has accused the coalition of rewriting history with its attempts to blame the previous administration for setting up an over-generous feed-in tariff incentive that has forced ministers to pursue...

To continue reading this article...

Join BusinessGreen

In just a few clicks you can start your free BusinessGreen Lite membership for 12 months, providing you access to:

  • Three complimentary articles per month covering the latest real-time news, analysis, and opinion from Europe’s leading source of information on the Green economy and business
  • Receive important and breaking news stories via our daily news alert
  • Our weekly newsletter with the best of the week’s green business news and analysis

Join now

 

Already a BusinessGreen member?

Login

More on Politics

'We need to talk to the public': John Kerry reckons with a brave new world for green business

'We need to talk to the public': John Kerry reckons with a brave new world for green business

Former US Climate Envoy joined a raft of top business leaders at SMI's annual meetings in London, where navigating the current geopolitical tumult in pursuit of a greener future was top of the agenda

Michael Holder
clock 25 March 2026 • 13 min read
'Contingency planning': Chancellor confirms work underway to provide targeted energy bill support

'Contingency planning': Chancellor confirms work underway to provide targeted energy bill support

Rachel Reeves signals targeted support planned to help households cope with expected increase in energy bills, as she announces further reforms to help fast track nuclear and renewables projects

James Murray
clock 24 March 2026 • 6 min read
The UK's 'drill, baby, drill' debate ignores the elephant in the room: Climate change

The UK's 'drill, baby, drill' debate ignores the elephant in the room: Climate change

The current debate over North Sea gas drilling focuses on its - negligible - potential impact on energy bills, but largely ignores the huge climate risks attached, writes former BBC News correspondent Roger Harrabin

Roger Harrabin
clock 24 March 2026 • 4 min read