The debate over the UK’s windfall tax on oil and gas companies has reignited after Scotland’s First Minister called for the levy to be scrapped. He joins his Scottish Government colleagues in putting pressure on UK ministers after lobbying from the energy industry.
Citing uncertainty caused by conflict in the Middle East, John Swinney said the Energy Profits Levy is harming investment and jobs. But with global gas prices rising again (57% increase month on month as per market data at 1400 on 4 March) and energy companies continuing to post strong profits, campaigners argue weakening the tax would not help households already struggling with high bills.
A spokesperson for the End Fuel Poverty Coalition, commented:
“Conflict in the Middle East and rising global gas prices show exactly why the Windfall Tax remains necessary, not why it should be scrapped. When geopolitical tensions push up prices, energy companies and their shareholders benefit while households face another round of higher bills from 1 July.
“Energy firms have made tens of billions in UK profits in recent years even with the Energy Profits Levy in place, so the idea that removing it will suddenly make energy cheaper or more secure simply doesn’t stand up. The North Sea is declining because of the geology of an ageing basin, not because companies are paying a fair share of tax.
“Instead of handing the industry a tax break, governments should be using these revenues to cut bills, tackle energy debt, support workers through the transition and invest in warm homes and clean energy so households are protected from exactly this kind of global price shock.”