Employees
from firms including British Gas and npower being paid to work at Department of
Energy, documents reveal
The Guardian, Damian Carrington, Sunday 30 December 2012
Caroline Lucas wrote to the cabinet secretary in 2011 with a warning about secondments. She received no reply. Photograph: Christopher Thomond for the Guardian |
Almost two
dozen employees from companies including the energy giants British Gas and
npower are working at the Department of Energy and, in most cases, are being
paid by the government to do so, documents released under freedom of information rules reveal. Oil companies such as Shell and ConocoPhillips also
have staff inside the department, and civil servants have travelled in the
opposite direction to work for the companies.
The Green
party MP Caroline Lucas, who made some of the FOI requests, said: "Fossil
fuel giants should have no place at the heart of government given that their
current investment strategies run contrary to the need to build a low-carbon
future that delivers both security and prosperity. It's even more outrageous
that taxpayers are footing the bill for some of these secondments, including
from British Gas-owner Centrica, at a time when British Gas customers are
struggling in the face of a 6% rise in their energy bills, and the company is
expected to make £1.4bn profits after tax this year.
"These
corporations obviously don't lend out their employees without expecting
something in return."
A
spokeswoman for the Department of Energy and Climate Change said:
"Secondees bring with them knowledge and expertise which are vital to
helping Decc do its job effectively. Likewise, seconding Decc staff into
industry – be that oil, gas, renewables or other areas – provides insight into
the challenges faced by those sectors. It is normal for secondees to be paid
directly by Decc or for their company to be refunded for their time; this is
standard practice across government."
The
documents show 23 external people are working at Decc. Those being paid by the
department include employees of Centrica, Barclays, ESB (Ireland's biggest
energy firm), National Grid and Rolls-Royce. Staff from Shell and npower's
owner, RWE, are seconded to Decc for free.
The
contracts signed by secondees ask them to self-police any conflicts of
interest. It states: "It is a condition of the secondment that the
secondee ensures to the best of their ability that in the course of their
duties for Decc there will be no conflict of interest or perception of
such."
The Decc
spokeswoman said: "We ensure any secondee is bound by relevant
professional codes of practice. Contractual measures make sure that any
secondee is not placed in a position where they could be a conflict of
interest."
Joss
Garman, political director of Greenpeace, said: "Centrica, Shell and RWE
are corporations that make their huge profits from the fossil fuels that are
warming our planet. Nobody will believe that these vested interests are lending
staff to Decc out of charity. To the contrary, they have a clear financial
interest in putting their people into key positions where they can exert a
malign influence that runs counter to the public interest."
After
revelations in 2011 in the Guardian about staff from companies working in Decc,
Lucas wrote to the then cabinet secretary, Gus O'Donnell, stating: "The
perception exists that [people and expertise] can be loaned out in return for
access to ministers and valuable influence over the processes and decisions of
government. I'm sure you will agree that such a perception is damaging."
Lucas received no reply.
She said:
"To avoid serious damage to public trust in government, secondments must
at the very least be transparent and properly monitored, to ensure that such
arrangement cannot be exploited by vested interests against the public
good."
A Guardian
analysis of declared meetings showed there were 195 meetings between Decc
ministers and energy companies and their lobby groups between the 2010 general
election and March 2011. There were 17 meetings with green campaign
groups.
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