Skip to main content
Labour will make Scotland the ‘clean energy capital of UK’
Ed Miliband, Shadow Secretary of State of Climate Change and Net Zero, speaking during the Scottish Labour Party conference at the Scottish Event Campus in Glasgow, February 16, 2024

DELEGATES to Scottish Labour’s business conference in Glasgow were assured today that the next Labour government will make Scotland the “clean energy capital” of Britain.

The claim was made by shadow net zero secretary Ed Miliband as he discussed the party’s green prosperity plan alongside his Holyrood counterpart, Sarah Boyack.

Labour had already announced it would headquarter its proposed publicly owned energy company, GB Energy, in Scotland. But it has now bolstered that plan with a funding pledge of £8.3 billion over the lifetime of the next parliament to invest in initiatives such as floating offshore wind, hydrogen, as well as controversial carbon capture and storage facilities.

Ms Boyack told the conference: “Labour’s green prosperity plan is nothing short of a transformation that will deliver a publicly owned energy company here in Scotland, deliver 50,000 jobs and slash people’s bills.

“Labour will unlock the potential that Scotland has to put our country in the vanguard of the global transition to green energy.”

Mr Miliband added: “GB Energy will make Scotland the energy capital of the UK and the UK the energy capital of Europe.

“That means good jobs, lower bills, energy security and climate action for the people of Scotland.

“Seven years ago the SNP promised a publicly owned energy company for Scotland. They have failed to deliver.

“If the people of Scotland help elect a Labour government, we will deliver GB Energy here in Scotland. 

“A Labour government will invest across Scotland from floating offshore wind to tidal energy to carbon capture and we will support community energy across every local area in Scotland.” 

Green New Deal UK Scotland campaigner Calum Hodgson welcomed the announcement, but just days after Labour ditched its £28bn green investment plans, he sounded a note of caution.

He told the Star: “Scotland needs real investment in the just transition in order to create hundreds of thousands of well-paid green jobs. But we also need confidence that these will actually be delivered.

“We don't yet know if this is a pledge similar to the £28bn, or the scrapping of tuition fees, or the nationalisation of rail, mail, and water.

“GB Energy is a step in the right direction. But Labour needs to be bolder on climate.

“It’s time the big six energy companies were nationalised, bills capped, jobs protected, and the transition to renewables delivered.

“Scotland needs real change.”

Morning Star Conference - Race, Sex & Class
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Walkers take an evening stroll near Gretna, Dumfries and Gal
Scotland / 30 May 2025
30 May 2025
NUM Scottish President Mick McGahey (right) with NUM President Arthur Scargill in London, where they met with coal board chairman Ian MacGregor at the NCB's headquarters, March 6, 1984
Scotland / 29 May 2025
29 May 2025
School girls walking to school
Education / 28 May 2025
28 May 2025
Similar stories
A child rides a bike at Whitelee Windfarm in East Renfrewshi
Britain / 13 December 2024
13 December 2024
But Unite warns that Labour has ‘missed a golden opportunity to bring the national grid under public ownership’
Features / 2 July 2024
2 July 2024
This new plan may be one of Starmer’s avowed priorities in government, but he and Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar have given conflicting accounts of how it will actually work. COLL McCAIL reports