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Starmer confirms floating offshore wind will be GB Energy’s ‘priority’

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer, centre, and new Welsh First Minister Vaughan Gething, right, during a visit to the Port of Holyhead in North Wales (Peter Byrne/PA)
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer, centre, and new Welsh First Minister Vaughan Gething, right, during a visit to the Port of Holyhead in North Wales (Peter Byrne/PA)

Sir Keir Starmer has said he wants the UK to lead the world on floating offshore wind, which he confirmed will be the “priority” of a Labour government’s publicly-owned clean energy company.

On a visit to North Wales with new First Minister Vaughan Gething on Monday, the Labour leader said GB Energy will “put in the money” in floating wind farms to “ensure private investors come in behind us”.

The Tories have attacked Labour’s plan as “unfunded”, though Sir Keir branded the claims as “unpatriotic”.

Labour has already announced that GB Energy, a new state-owned company with an initial £8.3 billion budget to invest in clean homegrown power and make Britain energy secure, will be headquartered in Scotland.

Speaking to the BBC in Holyhead, Sir Keir said: “I think it’s (floating offshore wind) going to be one of the main drivers for the future.

“I think there’s a reason we should make it a priority in the UK because we’ve got the skills, the infrastructure, we’ve got a track record when it comes to static offshore wind.

“And look, frankly, some country in the world is going to get ahead on this, and lead and I want that to be the UK which is why we’ve made it a priority, and said today that GB Energy will be investing in it.

“That’s a huge decision because that will ensure that private investors come in behind us and it gives us scope then to also link it with our plan for ports infrastructure. Making sure we get the ports of the future, and the British jobs bonus, so that the jobs go with the technology. So I think it’s great future here we’ve got ambition here for this to be a big significant part of our renewables by 2030.

“This is a bit of evidence as to how serious we are. These are conversations that I want to have now, rather than after the election so that we can hit the ground running.”

Sir Keir was visiting the port alongside shadow environment minister Ed Miliband and shadow Welsh secretary Jo Stevens.

Ms Stevens said the money needed to launch GB Energy will be sourced from a 78% windfall tax on oil and gas producers.

She told Times Radio Breakfast that Labour would also be “borrowing to invest, not borrowing to binge” in raising the funds needed for the “exciting, bold and ambitious plan”.

She said the Conservatives had “crashed” the economy with “short-sighted” decisions.

Ms Stevens added: “We’ve had no industrial strategy in this country for 14 years under the Tories.”

The Great British Energy company was described by Ms Stevens as a network of “jobs and infrastructure that will be built to last”.

Energy Security Secretary Claire Coutinho said: “Sir Keir Starmer’s energy promise is a race to the bottom that will put Britain’s energy security at risk.

“Despite industry sounding the alarm, Labour are happy to send jobs abroad and sacrifice investment for the sake of ideology.

“Labour have doubled down on their unfunded 2030 spending promise which now experts calculate would cost far more than £28 billion.

“Labour cannot say how they would pay for it because they do not have a plan, taking people back to square one with higher taxes.

“Only Rishi Sunak and the Conservatives will stick to the plan, growing the economy whilst reaching net zero in a pragmatic and responsible way that doesn’t saddle families with extra costs.”