Last week for
instance, Tata steel, the operators of the Port Talbot
plant, raised an issue over the price which they have to pay for energy. Their European chief executive described high
energy prices as an “obstacle" to growth.
Specifically he also complained that his company pays more for energy
than competitors in France
and pays business rate double those of competitors in Germany. I have no reason to doubt either of those
figures, but it's notable that his company would also be paying considerably
less corporation tax on any profits in the UK
than it would in either France
or Germany.
Keen to support a
major employer in South Wales Carwyn Jones, our first Minister, leapt to their
support. He called for what he referred
to as a "level playing field" when it comes to energy prices, and
urged the UK
government to take steps to ensure such a level field.
What exactly he had
in mind is unclear, but it seems reasonable to assume that what he was in fact
calling for was government action to reduce energy prices. That is, however, looking at only one factor. And looking at one factor in particular is
not giving proper consideration to the overall economic environment in which
companies operate.
There is a question
also over the extent to which Jones's call conflicts with his own government’s “central
organising principle". Indeed, he
recognised the conflict when he said "Sustainability
is important, but one of the main planks must be economic sustainability and
sometimes they have to be trade-offs."
That sounds to me
as though he is in fact saying that the commitment to sustainability applies
only in so far as it does not conflict with the interests of major employers. And such a commitment is no commitment at
all.
There are indeed
differences in energy prices between different countries. And there are differences in
tax regimes as well. There is a danger
in trying to be the lowest in order to compete in the interests of economic
growth. And that danger is that economic
sustainability leads to environmental unsustainability.
I’m sure that Jones
recognises that danger himself. Indeed,
some months ago, he argued that corporation tax should not be devolved to Wales because it would lead to a ‘race to the
bottom’ as different parts of the UK sought to compete with each
other for economic investment on the basis of a lower tax regime. Up to a point, I agree with him. That's part of the reason why I would argue
for devolution of a range of taxes rather than considering a single tax in
isolation.
Reducing energy
prices to large consumers of energy to compete with other countries is another
form of a race to the bottom. But this
isn't just an economic race to the bottom; it is also potentially an
environmental race to the bottom, given the impact of energy consumption on
emissions.
Now steel is going
to be made somewhere. It's an essential
product to any developed or developing economy.
And we certainly would not want to create an economic environment which
drives such industry elsewhere. Solving
our own emissions problems by moving them elsewhere is no solution at all.
Creating an environment
where companies are both successful economically and have incentives to reduce
their environmental impact is a difficult balancing act. But simply responding to their pressure for
reduced energy costs is avoiding any attempt to do any balancing at all.
6 comments:
It would be useful if politicians, starting with Carwyn, started by explaining to us exactly what they mean by the word.
At the moment it is just a soft nice feely word,- if you claim to be sustainable, then you must be good and beyond question. But nobody knows what it actually means!
As for Tata, let them do the steel thingsduring the hours of darkness, using Wind power which would otherwise go to earth? They could have that for nothing, surely.
Sionnyn is difficult to take seriously. Night shift only steel making must be big on Ork.
Nigel Bull, how right you are.
Bull - is that your best shot? My suggestion was not entirely serious, but nor is the government's energy policy.
It seems to me that achieving and sustaining a vibrant Welsh economy could be achieved by a return to the mixed economy model. If the industries that support enterprise such as: Steel production, Transportation, the extraction, production and distribution of energy were nationalized then not only would we have something to export to Europe and the world at large but also allow for reduced cost to Welsh based business. It would require the government to be placed in the position of venture capitalists, a system that worked very well in the past and today is working very well indeed for China.
There were weaknesses and mistakes made in the past, where funds that should have gone to research and the modernization of equipment were siphoned off to shore up other parts of the economy. Surely we could learn from those mistakes and see a way forward.
I also was amused by Sionnyn’s remarks. Finding Steelworkers who will only work nights is like trying to find construction workers who will only repair the roads on weekends. Good luck with that.
Pete, I have explained, my comment was made to illustrate the absurdity of an energy policy that relies on intermittent sources.
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