Department for Energy Security and Net Zero | |
Type: | Department |
Formed: | 7 February 2023 |
Preceding1: | Department for Business, Energy, and Industrial Strategy |
Superseding6: | --> |
Agency Type: | UK Government Department |
Jurisdiction: | United Kingdom |
Headquarters: | 3-8 Whitehall Place, London, SW1A 2EG |
Minister Type: | Secretary of State |
Minister1 Name: | Ed Miliband MP |
Minister1 Pfo: | Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero |
Deputyminister Type: | Minister of State |
Deputyminister8 Name: | --> |
Chief1 Name: | Jeremy Pocklington |
Chief1 Position: | Permanent Secretary |
Chief2 Name: | Clive Maxwell |
Chief2 Position: | Second Permanent Secretary |
Chief3 Name: |
|
Chief3 Position: | Directors General |
Child1 Agency: | Ofgem |
Child2 Agency: | Civil Nuclear Police Authority |
Child3 Agency: | Coal Authority |
Child4 Agency: | Climate Change Committee |
Child5 Agency: | Nuclear Decommissioning Authority |
Child6 Agency: | Salix Finance Ltd |
Child7 Agency: | Committee on Fuel Poverty |
Child8 Agency: | Committee on Radioactive Waste Management |
Child9 Agency: | Nuclear Liabilities Financing Assurance Board |
Child10 Agency: | Great British Nuclear |
Child11 Agency: | North Sea Transition Authority |
Child12 Agency: | Commissioner for Shale and Gas |
Keydocument6: | --> |
The Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ)[1] is a ministerial department of the Government of the United Kingdom. It was established on 7 February 2023 by a cabinet reshuffle under the Rishi Sunak premiership. The new department took on the energy policy responsibilities of the former Department for Business, Energy, and Industrial Strategy (BEIS).[2]
The department's first Secretary of State was Grant Shapps; he was previously the final Secretary of State at BEIS. The current secretary is Ed Miliband.
The department is scrutinised by the Energy Security and Net Zero Select Committee.[3]
The department was established on 7 February 2023.
The creation of the new department was described by Downing Street as an opportunity to "focus on giving the UK cheaper, cleaner, more secure sources of energy – cutting bills, cutting emissions, and cutting dependence on international energy supplies."[4]
The London School of Economics's Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment welcomed the creation of the new department saying that it "signalled a commitment to delivering net zero" and "showed that MPs on the right of the Conservative Party have failed to win the argument for weakening climate policy." However, the LSE warned that the new department would have to "persuade other departments and the Treasury to accelerate action on cutting greenhouse gas emissions across the economy outside the energy sector" to be effective.[5]
The department's immediate priorities were outlined by the Prime Minister as follows:
DESNZ ministers are as follows, with cabinet members in bold:
width=95x | Minister | Portrait | Office | Portfolio |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ed Miliband | Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero | Overall responsibility for the department. | ||
Minister of State for Industry | Office For Clean Energy Jobs; green finance; green jobs and skills; carbon capture, usage and storage (CCUS); carbon leakage; hydrogen; industrial decarbonisation and emissions trading, including fuel switching, business and commercial buildings decarbonisation; energy sector supply chains; green growth sectors; clean energy; investments; mineworkers’ pensions.[6] Held jointly with the Department for Business and Trade | |||
Minister of State for Energy Security and Net Zero | Nuclear; individual planning decisions; all departmental business in the House of Lords.[7] | |||
Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Climate | International climate and energy policy; international climate finance; carbon budgets; Net Zero strategy; trade, Net Zero investment and supply chains; science and innovation for climate and energy; nuclear fusion; citizen engagement.[8] | |||
Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Energy Consumers | Warm Homes Plan; fuel poverty; energy consumer issues, including pre-payment meters (PPMs), Ofgem consumer elements, the energy price cap and smart meters; domestic energy efficiency and demand reduction; public sector decarbonisation; clean heat, including the Boiler Upgrade Scheme; heat networks.[9] | |||
Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Energy | Great British Energy; renewables and biomass; energy systems, the grid and networks; energy market reform including Review of Electricity Market Arrangements; North Sea transition; energy security, resilience and preparedness.[10] |