How is the UK Planning to Tackle The Global Energy Crisis?

Share this article
Share this article
Prioritise Us on Google
The UK's Energy Secretary, Ed Miliband, and the UK's Prime Minister, Sir Keir Starmer
Middle East conflict sends energy prices soaring, but could accelerate UK shift to renewables as government action & consumer demand drive energy indepence

The conflict in the Middle East, which began when the US and Israel launched military action against Iran on 28 February, has sent shockwaves through global energy markets.

However, the crisis could also prove to be a pivotal moment in accelerating Britain's transition towards sustainable energy independence.

Oil and gas prices have surged as Tehran has effectively closed the Strait of Hormuz, a vital shipping corridor through which roughly one-fifth of the world's oil and gas supplies typically pass.

For Britain, the fallout has been swift and significant, but the response from both government and consumers suggests a potential shift away from fossil fuel dependency could be gaining momentum.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer has acknowledged that there may not be a "quick and early end" to the conflict and has promised to examine "every lever that's available" to help households cope with rising energy costs.

Youtube Placeholder
Keir Starmer Unpacked: the situation in the Middle East

Reopening critical carbon dioxide infrastructure

Ministers are understood to be working on means-tested support packages ahead of the summer, when the current energy price cap expires.

The PM has indicated that this support will manifest as a fuel allowance for next winter, with the price shocks expected to continue for several months.

That said, Starmer has been careful to rule out a repeat of the blanket bailout introduced during the Ukraine crisis, which cost the government an estimated £40bn (US$53bn).

The government is also considering giving the Competition and Markets Authority additional powers to clamp down on what Starmer called "price gouging or profiteering" by companies exploiting the war.


Sustainability, procurement and supply chain leaders won’t want to miss Sustainability LIVE: The US Summit, taking place at Navy Pier, Chicago, on April 21–22.

Co-located with Procurement & Supply Chain LIVE, the event unites senior decision-makers at a time when supply chains, sustainability and business performance are more interdependent than ever.

Secure your place now for The US Summit – group booking discounts available.


Bill support aside, one of the government's other high-profile responses to the price spike has been the decision to invest £100m (US$133m) in reopening a carbon dioxide plant in Teesside.

The facility, operated by Ensus at the Wilton International industrial site, was mothballed in September 2025 after a trade deal with the US removed a tariff on American ethanol imports, making domestic production unviable.

Reopening the plant is expected to relieve several British industries that rely on the gas. CO₂ is used to stun livestock before slaughter, to keep packaged food fresh and to carbonate soft drinks.

It also plays a role in water treatment, healthcare and the nuclear industry.

Peter Kyle, UK Business and Trade Secretary. Credit: UK Government

Business Secretary Peter Kyle says that the investment will "boost the resilience of our supply chains and protect critical UK sectors like food production, water and healthcare".

Elsewhere, Grant Pearson, Chairman of Ensus UK, welcomed the decision, saying it "strengthens the broader Teesside manufacturing economy and the UK's resilience in relation to biogenic CO₂ supplies".

Grant Pearson, Chairman of Ensus UK. Credit: Ensus

The plant directly employs around 100 people and supports roughly 3,000 jobs across its supply chain.

The move has been partly driven by concern that rising energy costs could force European fertiliser producers – which also generate CO₂ as a by-product – to cut output, potentially triggering a repeat of the supply crises seen in 2021 and 2022.

Consumer demand for renewable solutions

If the government's response has been largely defensive, consumers appear to be taking matters into their own hands by embracing sustainable energy alternatives at unprecedented rates.

Greg Jackson, CEO of Octopus Energy, with Sir Keir Starmer, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom

Greg Jackson, founder and chief executive of Octopus Energy, tells the BBC's Big Boss Interview podcast that his company had seen a 50% rise in solar panel sales between 1 March and 15 March compared with the same period in the previous month.

Heat pump sales are also up 50% over the same period, while enquiries about electric vehicles had risen by more than a third. Greg says homeowners are now saying: "we've just got to do something about it".

Many industry experts have made similar observations in recent days, including Lloyd Greenfield, Founder of Glow Green.

Lloyd Greenfield, Founder of Glow Green. Credit: Glow Green

"Households that plan will be better prepared if supply becomes tight," Lloyd explains.

"Families across the UK are already seeking quotes, checking stock and upgrading their homes, showing that early action can make a real difference in managing energy bills and avoiding last-minute stress."

This surge in consumer interest reflects a broader recognition that energy independence at the household level can provide protection against volatile global markets.

The combination of technological advances, falling equipment costs and rising fossil fuel prices has created what many analysts describe as a tipping point for domestic renewable energy adoption across the UK.

Accelerating clean energy regulations

Meanwhile, the government has moved to capitalise on this shift. On 25 March, Energy Secretary Ed Miliband announced that all new homes in England would be required to be fitted with heat pumps and solar panels under new building regulations.

Ed Miliband, Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero, and Bridget Phillipson, Education Secretary - Credit: Zara Farrar/DESNZ

The rules, which form part of the Future Homes Standard due to take effect in 2028, will also make plug-in solar panels available for purchase in shops within the coming months.

Miliband says that the Iran war has "once again shown our drive for clean power is essential for our energy security so we can escape the grip of fossil fuel markets we don't control".

Not everyone is convinced the government is moving fast enough. opposition energy secretary Ms Coutinho has called for new North Sea oil and gas licences, a proposal Greg dismissed as something that would make only a "tiny difference".

What is clear is that the war has concentrated the focus of the UK's energy sector towards sustainable solutions.

Plus, events in the Middle East may have done more to accelerate the industry's ambition for renewable energy adoption than years of policy debate have ever managed.

Executives