The Daily Telegraph

Cutting fuel bills

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SIR – Brexit and the election provide a major opportunit­y to reset energy policy, but what we’ve heard so far has not been encouragin­g.

Capping prices for some consumers will lead to higher costs for others, discourage much-needed investment, and reduce competitio­n. Government interventi­on has already contribute­d significan­tly to higher energy bills.

The principal culprit is the Climate Change Act, which forces deployment of unproven technologi­es at scale. The fossil fuel price forecasts used for the Act in 2008 have proved woefully inaccurate, making a review of the underlying economics a necessity.

The Carbon Price Floor (proof of the failure of the EU Emissions Trading System) places a unilateral burden on British industry. It should be scrapped.

It is also time to put the renewables industry’s claim that they are cheaper than convention­al energy to the test by removing subsidies in 2020.

While America has reaped the rewards of a booming onshore shale industry, Britain is still waiting. Rapid action should be taken to accelerate its developmen­t.

The aim must be a cheap, reliable supply of gas and electricit­y to cut household bills and give Britain an edge over rivals who now pay less. Mark Littlewood Director-General, Institute of Economic Affairs John O’Connell Chief Executive, TaxPayers’ Alliance Benny Peiser Director, Global Warming Policy Forum David Green Director, Civitas

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