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    7 July 2026

    Why can't Britain turn its green revolution into cheap energy? A ...

    Why can't Britain turn its green revolution into cheap energy? A ...

    Article Summary

    Key point
    Despite ambitious government targets to significantly increase onshore and offshore wind and solar capacity, Britain struggles to translate its green revolution into cheaper energy. There's 115GW of approved projects, but deployment faces hurdles.
    Why it matters
    No immediate change to household bills, but worth watching.
    Expected impact
    Mixed / neutral impact — A structural or regulatory development to monitor.

    Despite ambitious government targets to significantly increase onshore and offshore wind and solar capacity, Britain struggles to translate its green revolution into cheaper energy. There's 115GW of approved projects, but deployment faces hurdles.

    What This Means

    While the ambition for green energy is commendable, the disconnect between approved projects and cheaper energy for consumers is a critical issue. We need to understand the bottlenecks preventing these projects from coming online and delivering affordable power. This suggests that simply having renewable capacity isn't enough; efficient grid integration and market mechanisms are crucial to translate green generation into lower bills for UK households.

    • Consumers: No immediate change to household bills, but worth watching.
    • Businesses: Limited direct cost impact for businesses for now.
    • Energy market: A structural or regulatory development to monitor.

    From The Source

    The Guardian · 7 July 2026

    This summary and analysis is based on reporting from The Guardian. Read the full original article on their website.

    Read on The Guardian

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