Western Daily Press

Windfall tax may divide opinion

- SAM BLEWETT Press Associatio­n

BUSINESS Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng yesterday voiced firm opposition to a windfall tax on oil and gas companies – despite Chancellor Rishi Sunak raising the possibilit­y.

The Cabinet minister was adamant that it would be a “disincenti­ve” to investment by energy giants, despite his colleague in the Treasury using the threat to encourage spending, as their profits soar along with customers’ bills.

However, Mr Kwarteng did not rule out that the move, long called for by Labour, is being considered by the Government as a measure to alleviate the cost-of-living crisis. He told Sky News’ Sophy Ridge on Sunday: “I’ve never been a supporter of windfall taxes – I’ve been very clear about that publicly. I think they discourage investment.”

He told the BBC’s Sunday Morning that “it doesn’t make much sense to me to then hit them [energy firms] with a windfall tax which is arbitrary and unexpected”.

He added: “I don’t think that is the right way, but I would say that is not for me. That’s for the Chancellor of the Exchequer.”

Ministers have been resisting taking the action, but Mr Sunak caused some surprise by toying with it last week. “If we don’t see that type of investment coming forward, and if the companies are not going to make those investment­s in our country and in our energy security, then of course that’s something I would look at,” he said in an online discussion.

Mr Kwarteng is instead trying to pressure North Sea oil and gas firms to reinvest their profits so more drastic action is not required. He has written to the industry demanding a “very clear plan” to spend profits on accelerati­ng domestic production and clean energy before a meeting in the coming weeks.

Mr Kwarteng has told the sector that investing in home-grown energy production is essential to grow the British economy and “crucially bring down consumer bills in the long term”.

Labour said the Government is “rattled” because oil and gas producers are making “soaring profits” while bills rocket.

Shadow climate change secretary Ed Miliband said: “Kwasi Kwarteng’s letter is not worth the paper it is written on for millions of families facing the cost-of-living crisis. Families want action to deal with the bills crisis, not a vacuous, insulting piece of political spin.

“The only way to actually make a difference is to do the right, fair and principled thing and impose a one-off windfall tax on oil and gas producers’ profits to provide real help to families now and put in place a green energy sprint in the years ahead.”

Mr Kwarteng also suggested there will not be an “emergency budget” to give further support to tackle the cost-of-living crisis, before back-tracking somewhat.

He told Sky News: “There won’t be an emergency budget... [but] I’m not ruling it out, it’s not in my power to do that. You know as well as I do, and many of your viewers, that budgets are for the Chancellor. All I’m saying is that there’s been a considerab­le amount of support already.”

 ?? James Cook ?? Artist James Cook, from Essex, who used a typewriter to create a portrait (inset) of Tom Hanks, has said he was “blown away” when the artwork was signed by the actor
James Cook Artist James Cook, from Essex, who used a typewriter to create a portrait (inset) of Tom Hanks, has said he was “blown away” when the artwork was signed by the actor

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