Budget 2020: Was this the green tech Budget?

18 Mar 2020 12:55 PM

Following the Spring Budget 2020, techUK unpacks the announcements surrounding climate, energy and environment policy.

On 11 March 2020 the new Chancellor Rishi Sunak unveiled the first budget of the new Government. Along with a fiscal package to help mitigate against the economic and social costs of COVID-19 the budget also contained a large number of announcements for the tech sector. Over a series of insights we will dive deeper into what the budget means for data, green tech, digital infrastructure, R&D and competition and regulation.

What the Budget means for climate, energy and environment policy

The Chancellor fired the starting gun last week on a 30 year tax and spend race to help meet the 2050 net zero emissions target. Combined with policies around market development and shifting towards renewables, the UK needs a whole government approach – and a lot of money – to get anywhere near the target. We’re still not much nearer the promised Treasury analysis of exactly how to pay for net zero, but the sooner we see it the better.

To reach the net zero target industry has a good story to tell. The World Economic Forum believes digital tools can cut global emissions by 15% and in a way that delivers growth. Many of those tools will be things like automated energy management and IoT which means those deploying it will see lower energy costs (the single biggest cost to most sectors), plant and machinery in life for longer and better productivity.

We can’t also just limit our ambitions to carbon though. How we manage resources and stimulate investment in green tech is also vital. The budget introduced a series of measures to achieve aiming to deliver on key environmental goals to through investment and a tax on harmful resource use, such as non-recycled plastics.