£1 billion government investment in community energy projects will ‘drive down’ bills across London

  • london
  • February 17, 2026
  • Comments Off on £1 billion government investment in community energy projects will ‘drive down’ bills across London
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Social clubs, places of worship and community centres will be able to bid for funding for clean energy generation under plans announced last week.

Energy Secretary Ed Miliband has said the intention is for every local community to “own and control clean energy so the profits flow into the community and not simply out to the big energy companies”.

During a visit to a Community Food Learning Centre in South London on Friday, Minister for Energy Consumers Martin McCluskey said the scheme was a glimpse of a “new economy” in London and across the UK.

Minister for Energy Consumers Martin McCluskey, Natasha Irons MP, Connie Duxbury, founder of Community Energy Croydon and Amanda McGrath, MD of Good Food Matters Croydon

Kumail Jaffer/LDRS

“We want to see communities across the country doing projects like this and making sure that not just they’re taking advantage of lower energy bills but also that they have ownership over their own energy supply,” Mr McCluskey told the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS).

“The driving purpose of this government is to try and reduce energy bills. And what we’re seeing here today is a project that gives us a glimpse of a kind of new economy that we want to build, a fairer economy where people can have ownership over their own community energy assets like this here.

“Now, here we’ve got solar panels and in other places that might be batteries and other projects are looking at different technologies.

“But this is all about giving people, not just in London, but across the country, real ownership over these energy assets.”

Amanda McGrath, the Managing Director of the project, said she “couldn’t see why” any other organisation in the capital and beyond who owned their own building wouldn’t look to take advantage of the scheme.

“From a kind of sustainable perspective, it’s something that’s really important to us here that we’re trying to be as carbon neutral as possible,” she said.

Minister for Energy Consumers Martin McCluskey, Natasha Irons MP and Amanda McGrath, MD of Good Food Matters Croydon

Kumail Jaffer/LDRS

“This is really helping us hit that target. We’re a really small charity with a small turnover, so financially, it also helps us, because it’s reducing our energy bills.”

The Mayor of London – who has set a target for the capital to become a Net Zero Carbon city by 2030 – said the support will “help our city’s vibrant community energy sector continue to grow” and that Londoners were ready to “play a powerful role in building a cleaner, fairer and more resilient energy system for everyone.”

Mr McCluskey said the government were “standing alongside” Sir Sadiq Khan in his “ambitious targets” for London.

“We want to make sure that we can do what he’s doing in London right across the whole of the United Kingdom,” he added.

Connie Duxbury, who founded Croydon Community Energy, said the investment could see clean, community energy projects profilerate across London.

She added: “There are already just over 250 community projects in the capital. The Community Energy London has a vision for a thousand projects in London by 2030, which I think is absolutely possible.

“We’ll exponentially see the sector grow, especially with a boost from the Local Power Plan.”

Natasha Irons, MP for Croydon East, told the LDRS: “The solar panel project at Good Food Matters is a perfect example of how community-owned power can fuel vital work that supports local families, isolated men, young people and refugees. I’m looking forward to seeing how public buildings and schools across Croydon will benefit.”