'Incredibly expensive': Is the government's energy price freeze plan fit for purpose?

James Murray
clock • 8 min read
The Chancellor of the Exchequer Kwasi Kwarteng | Credit: Simon Dawson / No 10 Downing Street
Image:

The Chancellor of the Exchequer Kwasi Kwarteng | Credit: Simon Dawson / No 10 Downing Street

Period of national mourning has overshadowed government’s sweeping new energy support package, but experts remain convinced more targeted long-term plan is needed

Even as she stood up in the Commons last Thursday to announce the government's hugely anticipated energy price freeze package, Prime Minister Liz Truss knew the historic £150bn package would struggle to...

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 Policy

Government accused of failing to tackle microplastic pollution

Government accused of failing to tackle microplastic pollution

New research from Global Plastics Policy Centre warns UK is 'falling behind international efforts as microplastics infiltrate food, bodies, and ecosystems'

James Murray
clock 06 May 2025 • 2 min read
Global Briefing: Work completed on Europe's first dedicated CO2 carrier ship

Global Briefing: Work completed on Europe's first dedicated CO2 carrier ship

Plus Kenya's new national climate plan, Equinor's row with the Trump administration over US wind farms, and all the top green business news from around the world this week

Michael Holder
clock 02 May 2025 • 6 min read
How Trump's tariffs could drive up deforestation to feed demand for soybean oil

How Trump's tariffs could drive up deforestation to feed demand for soybean oil

Hefty US tariff hikes on Indonesian and Malaysian palm oil imports could serve to drive up demand for more land-use intensive soybean oil production, reports Anthony Harwood

Anthony Harwood
clock 02 May 2025 • 5 min read