Conservative - Energy tax
Repeal the Energy Profits Levy
Remove the additional oil and gas profits levy before the current expiry date.
Last updated: May 2026.
Revenue baseline
The current Energy Profits Levy is set at 38 percent and extended to 2030. Repeal would reduce receipts, but the exact cost depends heavily on oil and gas prices and investment response.
- Oil and gas receipts are volatile.
- Investment allowances affect behaviour.
- Consumers do not automatically see lower bills.
Core trade-offs
Producers gain from lower tax on North Sea profits, which may support investment in mature fields. The Exchequer loses volatile but material receipts, and household energy bills are unlikely to fall directly.
- Oil and gas producers gain directly.
- Taxpayers lose levy receipts.
- Investment response is uncertain.
Fiscal impact by 2028-29
+GBP 0.5bn to +GBP 5.0bn. Central estimate: +GBP 2.2bn.
- Positive numbers mean net fiscal cost; negative numbers mean Exchequer savings.
- Main cost is lost levy receipts.
- Investment may recover some corporation-tax receipts.
- Commodity prices dominate the range.
- This is not an official costing.
Economic impact by 2028-29
- Jobs: Could support North Sea jobs at the margin; long-run basin decline remains.
- Wages: Sector wages may be supported; no broad wage effect expected.
- Prices: Little direct effect on UK energy bills, which follow international prices.
- GDP / productivity: May support extraction investment, but raises fossil-fuel lock-in risk.
Assessment
Repeal is a clear tax cut for oil and gas producers. It may support some investment, but the fiscal cost is volatile and the policy does not directly lower household energy prices under internationally set oil and gas markets.
Confidence: Medium-low. Levy parameters are clear; receipts depend on commodity prices and investment timing.
Main risks
- Fiscal volatility: Receipts swing with oil and gas prices, making the cost hard to predict.
- Limited bill impact: Producer-tax cuts do not mechanically reduce household energy prices.
- Transition risk: Lower fossil taxation can slow transition incentives and increase climate-policy tension.
Safeguards
- Use a price-contingent sunset, not unconditional repeal.
- Require investment commitments for relief.
- Publish receipts under oil-price scenarios.
Academic evidence
Mirrlees and review team, Institute for Fiscal Studies and Oxford University Press, 2011
Tax design principles
Efficient tax systems use broad bases, coherent rates and few arbitrary reliefs.
Frames the efficiency trade-off when tax cuts are not matched by credible funding.
Saez, Slemrod and Giertz, Journal of Economic Literature, 2012
Taxable-income responses
Higher-income taxpayers respond more strongly to tax-rate changes through avoidance, timing and real behaviour.
Important where the policy changes top-pay, capital or business-tax incentives.
The Elasticity of Taxable Income with Respect to Marginal Tax Rates (2012)
UK government evidence
HM Treasury and HMRC, 2024
Energy Profits Levy reforms
The note raises the levy to 38%, extends it and removes the investment allowance.
Defines the oil-and-gas tax baseline.
Office for Budget Responsibility, 2024
OBR October 2024 forecast
The OBR scores fuel-duty, EPL and environmental-receipts measures and discusses oil-and-gas uncertainty.
Anchors energy and motoring estimates.
Office for Budget Responsibility, 2026
OBR fiscal forecast
The OBR forecast sets the macro, borrowing and receipts baseline used for broad fiscal context.
Prevents treating tax cuts or spending changes as self-financing.
Sources
- PolicyLens methodology: Repeal the Energy Profits Levy Internal - PolicyLens, 2026
- Energy Profits Levy: reforms 2024 Tax policy note - HM Treasury and HMRC, 2024
- Economic and fiscal outlook: October 2024 Fiscal forecast - Office for Budget Responsibility, 2024
- Economic and fiscal outlook: March 2026 Fiscal forecast - Office for Budget Responsibility, 2026
- Tax by Design: The Mirrlees Review Academic review - Mirrlees and review team, Institute for Fiscal Studies and Oxford University Press, 2011
- The Elasticity of Taxable Income with Respect to Marginal Tax Rates Academic article - Saez, Slemrod and Giertz, Journal of Economic Literature, 2012
- Our Plan for Britain Party policy source - Conservative Party, 2026
Other Conservative policies
PolicyLens estimates are illustrative and should not be treated as official costings.