Labour plans publicly-owned electric vehicle charging network

There will be ‘more to come’ on renationalising public services in Labour’s next manifesto, Rebecca Long-Bailey, Shadow Secretary of State for Business Energy & Industrial Strategy, promised a fringe meeting on public ownership at the Labour Party Conference.

“We want regional energy agencies to be right at the forefront of the electric vehicle revolution,” she said, and they will be “tasked with rolling out the infrastructure we need for charging points all the way through to homes and workplaces, rather than allowingthe private sector on its own to meet that demand. It isn’t working, and we are not generating a market for our automotive sector.”

The regional energy agencies will be publically owned bodies that will replace the existing distribution network operators, owning and operating the network.  Labour has also said that the National Grid would be replaced by a National Energy Agency. It and the regional energy agencies together will be tasked with making sure the UK  achieves its decarbonisation targets. That would include a role in industrial policy to help enable a ‘green industrial revolution’ and taking a ‘hands on’ approach to insulate homes and tackle fuel poverty.

Saying “We have the legislation ready”, Long-Bailey said “The government’s own cost of energy review has criticised the energy companies for prioritising dividend extraction over investment in critical infrastructure,”  and if we are to take the necessary “radical action” to tackle climate change “we have to have the means to do it”. Taking the grid into public ownership was one of the “essential components” of that. She promised “open and transparent” decision-making in the new bodies, with customer and employee contributions and online decision-making mechanisms.

 

Further reading

Shift: UKPN’s EV charging market trial to begin recruiting in August

EV users shift 70% of charging out of peak hours in ‘real world’ study

Want to avoid blackouts? Buy an electric vehicle

Shell promises its faster EV charger will be one of hundreds on retail sites

Climate change minister promises action on hydrogen ‘this year’

Labour renationalision plans – responses

 

Stay up to date with New Power’s online news. Sign up for our FREE weekly newsletter here