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Former Green Party Leader, and Byline Times columnist Caroline Lucas has called for a new pact with the EU that could deliver abundant cheap, clean energy and reduce pollution dramatically, all while robustly tackling the climate crisis.
In a new campaign video, European Movement UK Co-President Caroline Lucas has urged the Government to work towards a new climate partnership with the European Union, warning that key environmental and energy challenges - including the climate crisis, nature restoration, dirty air and water, and high energy costs - "can't be fixed by one nation alone."
It comes as Britons brace for another winter of soaring gas and electricity prices, and as more than 80 countries push for a roadmap to quit fossil fuels at the UN's COP30 climate conference this week.
The push for renewed cooperation is set out in full in A New Agenda for UK-EU Energy, Climate, and Environment Cooperation. It was authored by Lucas' European Movement UK - a cross-party pro-European organisation founded in 1949 to promote closer ties between Britain and the EU.
Britain's self-imposed exile from Europe's integrated systems is at the heart of Britain's soaring prices, the report shows, warning of "mounting evidence of divergence" in everything from energy trading to pesticide regulation.
The campaign group proposes a new "Energy, Climate and Environment Partnership" that would restore win-win cooperation without re-entering the single market.
Here's what they're proposing.
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Cheap, Clean Energy
One major focus is the fractured state of UK-EU energy cooperation. Since Brexit, the UK has been operating outside the EU's Internal Electricity Market (IEM), which streamlined the flow of electricity to the UK by automatically allocating it where it is cheapest and most needed. The upshot? UK energy prices are rocketing.
Energy UK, a trade association for the UK energy industry, says that being outside of the EU market is adding £120 million - £370 million to energy bills.
As part of Keir Starmer's 'Post-Brexit Reset' in May, the UK Government began negotiations to rejoin the IEM.
While this will likely involve financial contributions from the UK, European Movement UK argues that rejoining the IEM would reduce volatility and unlock more investment in offshore wind.
Modelling in the report suggests this could cut up to £13bn from the cost of building out North Sea infrastructure by 2050, a vast improvement on planning offshore grids in isolation which risks Britain falling behind its neighbours.
North Sea Powerhouse
Another key proposal is that the UK seek full membership of the North Seas Energy Cooperation (NSEC), a regional forum promoting the development of offshore wind power amongst ten North Sea countries. Britain currently retains observer status, excluded from key decisions and long-term planning. The report says that UK developers are currently unable to exert influence over the development's objectives or its potential impacts on marine life.
Lucas argues today that the UK should "play a full role in transforming the North Sea into Europe's clean energy powerhouse."
As stressed by RenewableUK, a trade association for the renewable energy industry, large-scale wind development is inherently cross-border. The UK therefore risks slower deployment without structured European cooperation. This report finds that reconnecting with EU mechanisms could cut up to £13 billion from the cost of meeting offshore wind targets by 2050.
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