Policy Exchange - Think tank calls for a bonfire of the energy quangos at the Spending Review

10 Nov 2015 10:45 AM

Policy Exchange report says a radical overhaul and consolidation of the energy administration system could save hundreds of millions of pounds and help new companies enter the market.

Policy Exchange calling on the Government to use the Spending Review as an opportunity to rationalise the energy landscape.

DECC could save hundreds of millions of pounds and promote more competition and innovation among energy companies by sweeping away swathes of energy quangos at the Spending Review. 
 
A new report by leading think tank Policy Exchange highlights the complex network of organisations that govern energy policy, regulations and rules. The paper find there are over 30 bodies responsible for the delivery of energy policy, the management of industry codes of practice and the operation of the energy system. The cost of these organisations is estimated at over £600million a year. 
 
It says that these bodies often carry out overlapping functions, adding costs and red tape to energy companies. The report says that a vertically integrated energy company could be bound by in the order of 10,000 pages of code regulations, governed by a mass of different organisations. 
 
The sheer complexity of the system means that energy companies are now employing hundreds of people in their policy, regulatory and government affairs teams. This cost acts an obstacle for new energy companies looking to enter the market with new and innovative products to help households already struggling to pay their gas and electricity bills. 
 
The paper says that the various administrative bodies should be reorganised around the following three areas:

Richard Howard, author of the report, said:
 
“There are now over 30 organisations actively involved in the administration of the energy industry. They often perform similar functions, pushing up costs, and creating complexity for energy companies. This unnecessary red tape risks deterring new entrants and stifling growth and innovation. It is time for the government to consider consolidating a large number of these bodies.”
 
View report: 

http://www.policyexchange.org.uk/images/publications/governing%20power.pdf