- Community Windpower intends to sue the British government over windfall tax.
- Community Windpower is a £2 billion investor in more than 1.5GW of British wind energy.
Community Windpower has shown intentions to sue the British government after the Electricity Generator Levy (EGL) was implemented on 1st January 2023.
The EGL is a windfall tax on the renewable energy sector which green energy companies claim is seeing them treated worse than oil and gas firms.
The wind company is a £2 billion investor in more than 1.5GW of British wind energy and has informed government lawyers of its intention to sue.
Community Windpower states that the levy is “unfairly disproportionate, discriminatory and adverse to the government’s Net Zero Strategy.”
Explaining the company’s decision to sue, Managing Director, Rod Wood, said: “This measure not only leaves Ministers’ green credentials in shreds, but it will also suck hundreds of millions of pounds out of investment in green energy, hammering renewable industries and costing high-quality jobs. The levy proposals are at loggerheads with the government’s obligation to cut carbon emissions, abide by fair subsidy rules and foster investor confidence. We are now left with no option but to seek the court’s intervention.”
A spokesperson from the Treasury said: “This temporary measure is not designed to penalise electricity generators, it is a response to the fact that, as a result of exceptional and unforeseen geopolitical events, some electricity generators are realising extraordinary returns from higher electricity prices. These higher prices have imposed substantial costs on households and businesses, so the government took unprecedented action with £55 billion to help people with their energy bills directly.”