Teesside has been praised as a national example of how green energy can transform a region.
A new report out today says the UK has five years to secure investment in green industries or risk missing out forever.
Centre-right think tank Onward said the Government should provide cash incentives for green manufacturing businesses to set up in the UK.
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The report has been backed by 24 Tory MPs, including former communities secretary Simon Clarke, who said: “We must find ways to reduce the high energy prices facing energy-intensive industries like the UK’s steel industry.
“I have seen for myself the transformative potential of new green industry in the Tees Valley, and I want to see this replicated across the UK.”
The report warned that the country was already “rapidly falling behind the EU”, where nations offered incentives for electric car and battery manufacturers.
It said: “If the Government fails to secure these green factories, then they will go to the UK’s competitors in Europe, the United States and Asia.”
With manufacturing jobs concentrated in “left behind” areas, the report added that failing to secure green investment would further “devastate” industrial communities and cause political problems for the Government in vital “red wall” seats.
Ed Birkett, head of energy and climate at Onward, said: “The green industrial revolution is a big risk for UK factories that make cars and steel, and for workers in the UK’s oil and gas industry.
“The Government must work night and day to secure the green factories of the future, or there’s a risk that we’ll lose industrial jobs forever.”
In some sectors, the report said the UK could have even less than five years to secure investment.
Onward said it expected most European EV and battery factories would be built by 2030, ready for the likely peak in demand, but with plants taking around five years to build, investment decisions need to be made in the next two years.
Tees Valley Mayor Ben Houchen said: "We have been leading the way in green energy for years now - and we can truly power the UK's ambitions to hit Net Zero.
"Gamechanging projects like Net Zero Teesside, Carbon Capture and Storage, and our vast hydrogen ambitions show we're at the forefront of a fight which will create a greener future but also bring thousands of good, well-paid jobs for the people of Teesside, Darlington and Hartlepool."
The report said: “The UK must secure investments in EV and battery manufacturing by 2025, or risk the UK’s car manufacturing industry shrinking significantly.”
Other European governments are already offering cash incentives for battery manufacturers to build plants in their countries.
Hungary has offered around £172 million of investment aid to Korean firm SK Innovation, while Poland has offered LG Chem around £82 million.
In the US, Tesla benefited from 465 million dollars (£375 million) in low-interest loans from the government as an incentive to build its main factory in California.
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Along with cash incentives, the Onward report recommended exempting green manufacturing firms from business rates, reducing electricity bills for heavy industry and introducing “local content” targets for green technologies.
The report also called for the UK to introduce a carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM), which taxes imports according to their carbon content and prevents emissions being “offshored”.
The Government agreed to consult on creating a CBAM in June following similar calls from the House of Commons Environmental Audit Committee.
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