Ed Miliband has been warned that his rush to deliver clean power by 2030 will leave Britain even more at the mercy of hostile foreign states like China. The warning came from senior Conservatives who urged the Government to ditch the arbitrary target at a time when the threat from Beijing is becoming ever clearer.
Senior Tories urged Mr Miliband to put Britain's energy and national security before his ideological zeal for Net Zero, after Sir Keir's government came under fire over the Chinese spy scandal. Alicia Kearns, a China hawk, warned: "We know Milliband's 2030 Clean Power Target will increase energy bills, waste taxpayers' money and override community consent.
"But it is becoming increasingly clear this unnecessary, arbitrary target is also squandering the energy security benefits that renewable energy could bring.
"Renewables will diversify our energy grid, making us less reliant on imported gas, which Putin can use to hold Britain to ransom. But the unnecessary rush to 2030 means developers must now rely on Chinese-controlled supply chains for renewable components and critical minerals. Because of this self-imposed deadline, we risk a new kind of energy insecurity.
"For the sake of our security, Labour must ditch the 2030 clean power target, focus on working with allies to diversify supply chains from China, including by onshoring more of the factories to the UK, and truly take back control of our energy supply."
The Conservative Environment Network, a think tank supporting the Tories' green agenda, explained that alternative eco supply chains are underdeveloped and dominated by China.
However it argued the growth in British renewable capacity could be a "great opportunity", provided the UK government works with allies.
Spokesman Elinor Bale said the government must "secure Britain energy through new free trade agreements with allied nations".
"Currently, our reliance on imported gas allows petrostates like Russia to spike the price of energy in the UK, providing them with the means to inflict financial pain on British taxpayers. To ensure long-term energy security, the government has rightly recognised the need to diversify our energy mix."
The current government has been under fire recently over its relationship with China, accused of allowing a major trial against two accused Chinese spies to collapse.
Christopher Cash and Christopher Berry were arrested two years ago and set for a trial, however the Crown Prosecution Service declined to take the scandal to court after the government failed to provide sufficient evidence to back up the case.
Sir Keir is now facing further scrutiny about his government's attitude to Beijing, with a further row brewing about the potential approval of a Chinese 'super embassy' next to the Tower of London.
Labour won last year's election with a pledge to have zero emissions for 95% of electricity demand by 2030, claiming it would cut average bills by £300.
A DESNZ spokesperson said: "The biggest threat to our energy security is our continued reliance on fossil fuel markets controlled by dictators and petrostates.
"Through our clean power mission, we are making Britain energy secure, protecting households from energy price spikes, reindustrialising the country with thousands of skilled jobs, and tackling the climate crisis.
"We are building new resilient supply chains that drive investment and growth with our Clean Industry Bonus. Meanwhile, Great British Energy has already announced £300 million to develop British offshore wind supply chains, unlocking significant investment and new jobs."
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