Western Daily Press

Green boost for Crown Estate thanks to new Bill

- ABBIE LLEWELYN wdp@reachplc.com

ANEW Bill will allow the Crown Estate to invest more in green energy and help the UK achieve net zero, a Treasury minister has told Parliament.

The Crown Estate is a huge collection of assets owned by the British monarchy, which includes vast swathes of urban, coastal and maritime land across the UK.

It is run as a business, independen­t to government, but its profits are delivered to the Treasury each year, after which an annual payment is made to the monarch in the form of the Sovereign Grant.

The new Crown Estate Bill aims to modernise a 1961 law, which created the organisati­on as it is today, with three key updates.

Firstly, the Bill broadens the Crown Estate’s investment powers by removing existing restrictio­ns.

Secondly, the legislatio­n allows the Crown Estate to borrow money from the Government, with Treasury consent, to invest in more expensive projects and free it up to “make better use of its assets”.

This borrowing will be at commercial rates, meaning the interest it will pay outweighs the Government’s cost of borrowing, with the aim of it being a net benefit to public finances.

Thirdly, the Bill makes amendments relating to the governance of the Crown Estate “to bring it into line with best practice for modern corporate governance”.

Financial secretary to the Treasury Lord Livermore told peers that widening the scope of activities the Crown Estate can engage in will “allow it to further invest in the energy transition” and “will support the delivery of its core purpose across net zero, nature recovery, economic growth and generating returns to the public purse”.

He added that the new borrowing powers “act to accelerate and de-risk the sustainabl­e delivery of offshore wind and other technologi­es, such as carbon capture, wave, tidal and hydrogen”.

Giving the Crown Estate the ability to invest more widely in growth opportunit­ies will, the minister said, “increase the frequency of leasing for offshore wind”.

Introducin­g the Bill, Lord Livermore said: “The purpose of this Bill is to bring legislatio­n governing the Crown Estate into the 21st century...

“Existing limitation­s on the Crown Estate’s powers have meant it has had to generate capital for its investment by selling its assets. That is neither desirable, nor sustainabl­e.”

There was cross-party support for the Bill across the House, although one Tory peer voiced concern that it “risks politicisi­ng the Crown”.

Lord Howard of Rising argued that the Crown “should not be associated with a political act or ambition” and warned that borrowing, without a limit, can be harmful.

He said: “It should be a matter of concern that the Crown Estate, an entity with which the Sovereign has such a close associatio­n, should be used for political purposes, however good and noble the intention may be.

“The Crown is apolitical and the Crown Estate must surely come under this umbrella.”

The Bill’s second reading debate comes after it was announced in July that the Crown Estate would partner with the new Great British Energy to support “the accelerate­d delivery of clean energy infrastruc­ture”.

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