Reform UK - Energy
Scrap net-zero subsidies
Remove net-zero policies, renewable subsidies and related levies while expanding domestic fossil-fuel production.
Last updated: May 2026.
Policy scope
Reform pledges to scrap net-zero policies it says drive bills higher and to expand domestic energy production. The 2024 Contract claimed GBP 30bn annual savings.
- Current page pledges cheaper energy.
- Contract claimed GBP 30bn annual saving.
- Existing contracts may limit savings.
Core trade-offs
Some bills or public costs may fall if schemes are cancelled. Investment certainty, emissions, supply-chain jobs and fossil-price exposure are likely to worsen.
- Consumers may gain short-run bill relief.
- Green investors and supply chains lose.
- Climate and energy-risk costs rise.
Illustrative fiscal impact
-GBP 12.0bn to +GBP 10.0bn. Central estimate: -GBP 3.0bn.
- Positive numbers mean public-finance pressure; negative numbers mean Exchequer savings.
- GBP 30bn claim is the main scale marker.
- Gross costs and receipt offsets are separated in methodology.
- Behaviour and pass-through widen the range.
- This is not an official costing.
Economic impact by 2027-28
- Jobs: Fossil sectors may gain; renewables, retrofit and grid-investment jobs likely lose.
- Wages: No broad wage gain; sectoral pay shifts with investment flows.
- Prices: Bills may fall short term if levies are cut, but gas-price exposure increases.
- GDP / productivity: Likely negative long term through weaker investment certainty and climate-risk exposure.
Assessment
There may be some near-term bill or fiscal savings, but the GBP 30bn claim should not be treated as spendable cash without a contract-by-contract schedule. The likely long-run economic impact is negative if the policy deters energy investment and raises fossil-price exposure.
Confidence: Low. Reform's pledge is broad, while actual savings depend on levy design, contracts and compensation liabilities.
Main risks
- Contract liabilities: Existing renewable contracts may require compensation or keep costs in place.
- Investment shock: Abrupt reversal can raise the cost of capital for energy infrastructure.
- Fossil exposure: More reliance on gas and oil leaves households exposed to global price spikes.
Safeguards
- Publish a scheme-by-scheme repeal schedule.
- Separate bill levies from Exchequer spending.
- Keep grid and efficiency investments with positive paybacks.
Academic evidence
Metcalf and Stock, American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics, 2020
Carbon prices and macro effects
Observed European carbon taxes did not produce large negative macroeconomic effects.
Weakens the claim that climate policy is mainly an economy-wide drag.
Andersson, American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, 2019
Swedish carbon tax evidence
Sweden’s carbon tax reduced transport emissions relative to a synthetic-control comparison.
Relevant to emissions risk from weakening decarbonisation incentives.
Carbon Taxes and CO2 Emissions: Sweden as a Case Study (2019)
Stern and review team, HM Treasury and Cambridge University Press, 2006
Long-run climate economics
Unpriced climate damages create long-run economic costs that conventional budgets may miss.
Explains why fiscal savings can come with external-cost risks.
UK government evidence
Ofgem, 2026
Energy price cap
The April-June 2026 cap is GBP 1,641 for a typical dual-fuel direct-debit household.
Scale check for energy-bill relief.
Reform UK, 2026
Reform energy pledge
Reform pledges cheaper energy by scrapping net-zero policies, levies and taxes.
Defines policy direction but not details.
Sources
- PolicyLens illustrative scenario methodology: Scrap net-zero subsidies Internal - PolicyLens, 2026
- The Macroeconomic Impact of Europe's Carbon Taxes Academic article - Metcalf and Stock, American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics, 2020
- The Economics of Climate Change: The Stern Review Academic review - Stern and review team, HM Treasury and Cambridge University Press, 2006
- Energy price cap explained Regulator data - Ofgem, 2026
- Our Contract with You Party policy document - Reform UK, 2024
- Carbon Taxes and CO2 Emissions: Sweden as a Case Study Academic article - Andersson, American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, 2019
- Our Policies Party policy source - Reform UK, 2026
Other Reform UK policies
PolicyLens estimates are illustrative and not official costings.