
Ministers could subsidise factory energy bills as sky-high costs could lead to job losses in key seats
PANICKED Ministers could subsidise factory energy bills amid a warning that sky-high costs could lead to job losses in key Labour seats.
A multi-billion pound package paid for by taxpayers for manufacturers will help make them more competitive with overseas competitors.
2
The intervention will be a key plank in the government's ten-year industrial strategy unveiled next week as Ministers try to boost the UK's sluggish growth.
Industries such as ceramics, steel, glass and chemicals will be eligible for standing charges dropping by some 90 per cent saving hundreds of millions of pounds.
But Ministers are also expected to launch a consultation on extending support to areas such as AI databases and manufacturing helping thousands of firms.
It comes as a new report says soaring energy costs are putting thousands of jobs at risk triggering a key election issue in battleground seats.
Analysis by the Jobs Foundation reveals 21 out of 25 constituencies most reliant on jobs in energy-intensive industries are Labour seats.
Several top Ministers including Home Secretary Yvette Cooper and Defence Secretary John Healey could be at risk to losing their seats to Reform without action.
Current polling reveals that 15 out of the 21 seats would be lost to Nigel Farage's party if an election were held today.
The study finds that UK industrial energy prices are some 46 per cent above the average of competitor nations – putting firms here at a major disadvantage.
Lord Matthew Elliott, President of the Jobs Foundation, said: 'We must avoid repeating the mistakes of the 1980s, when the unmanaged decline of coal devastated entire communities.
'Today's energy-intensive industries – steel, chemicals, glass, ceramics – are facing a similar fate.
National inquiry into the grooming gangs scandal finally ordered by Keir Starmer in another Labour U-turn
'The government must act to lower energy prices in order to protect jobs and secure Britain's industrial future.'
The warning shot comes after Manchester United co-owner and entrepreneur Sir Jim Ratcliffe, who founded chemicals giant Ineos, said the high prices were 'squeezing the life out of the sector'.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves told a CBI event that making energy more affordable is 'one of the questions that we need to answer'.
The government declined to comment.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
38 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
ANDREW NEIL: No future UK government has a hope of making things better if it can't reform our incompetent Left-wing, WFH civil service
Former Tory Cabinet minister-turned-magazine editor, Michael Gove, this week revealed that, as Education Secretary, he had to overrule civil servants who wanted to suppress newspaper revelations about in Rotherham. The local council requested the government join it in legal action to prevent The Times from publishing details of its ground-breaking investigation into the scandal. Some senior civil servants in his department advised Gove to join in this bid to muzzle the press.


Auto Car
an hour ago
- Auto Car
MWIC Bonus Episode 13: Autocar Meets car designer Julian Thomson, GM Advanced Design Europe
Close Julian Thomson is one of the world's best car designers and if you don't know the name, you'll know his cars. As Lotus's chief designer he designed the Elise and at Jaguar Land Rover created the LRX concept, which went on to become the Range Rover Evoque. But most of Thomson's career has been spent in advanced design and that's where he finds himself now, at General Motors' new advanced design centre Europe. Why does GM need a European design centre and what will it do? Join Steve Cropley and Matt Prior as they put these questions and many more to one of the world's most eminent car designers.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Nicola Peltz is spoiled. Do they realise what their sneering sounds like?: After 'tight' accusation David and Victoria's friends call KATIE HIND and let rip - and reveal true story
When Brooklyn Beckham turned 15, he got a job as a barista in a Kensington coffee shop where his remuneration was a modest £2.68 per hour. It was part of a plan by his parents, David and Victoria, to teach their children the value of money.