Powered by Lexis+®
Jurisdiction(s):
United Kingdom
CASE STUDY

“LexisLibrary gives us the most relevant and recent cases and always has the latest information on them. It makes research so much easier. We're more cost-effective for our clients and more efficient each day”

Advocates

Access all documents on Energy Act 2013

Energy Act 2013 meaning

Published by a LexisNexis Energy expert
What does Energy Act 2013 mean?
In legal practice, Energy Act 2013 refers to the UK statute underpinning Electricity Market Reform, frequently cited in power project development, financing and regulatory compliance. It provides for: contracts for difference (long-term support for low-carbon generation, administered by the Low Carbon Contracts Company and funded via the supplier obligation); the capacity market (securing security of electricity supply by procuring capacity from generators, storage and demand-side response, with settlements by the Electricity Settlements Company); and the Emissions Performance Standard (a limit on carbon dioxide emissions from new fossil-fuel power stations). The Act also placed the Office for Nuclear Regulation on a statutory footing as the independent nuclear safety and security regulator. It includes a power for the Secretary of State to set a 2030 decarbonisation target range for the electricity sector by secondary legislation; this has not been exercised. Wider carbon targets are now set under the Climate Change Act 2008 (as amended), including the sixth carbon budget and the statutory net zero 2050 target. The EMR mechanisms established by the Act apply in Great Britain. Northern Ireland and Ireland participate in the Single Electricity Market and operate separate support schemes and capacity remuneration mechanisms under their own legislation. Usage is broadly consistent...
Speed up all aspects of your legal work with tools that help you to work faster and smarter. Win cases, close deals and grow your business–all whilst saving time and reducing risk.

View the related News about Energy Act 2013

NEWS
UK and EU environmental law update: permitting reforms, energy CfDs, ESG ratings regulation, biodiversity standards, water company performance—30 October 2025

In this issue: Air emissions and climate change Energy efficiency of products Energy for environmental lawyers Environmental disputes and proceedings Environmental information Environmental permits and consents ESG and sustainability Nature, biodiversity and habitat conservation Waste Water, flooding and drainage Daily and weekly news alerts New and updated content Air emissions and climate change DESNZ publishes independent review on greenhouse gas removals The Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ) has released the Independent Review of Greenhouse Gas Removals (GGRs), led by Dr Alan Whitehead CBE, evaluating how removal technologies could support the UK in meeting its 2050 net-zero ambition. See: LNB News 23/10/2025 6. UK ETS Authority launches consultation on aviation free allocation end and regional connectivity The UK Emissions Trading Scheme (UK ETS) Authority is currently consulting on the potential implications of ending aviation free allocation in 2026 for regional connectivity. It considers whether further action is...

Read More Right Arrow
NEWS
UK construction law weekly: building safety reforms, procurement and termination judgments, energy NPS, Welsh SIP fees, arbitration and CPR deadlines, carbon assessment standards, and AI in disclosure (20 November 2025)

In this issue: Building safety Environmental issues Procurement in construction Termination Infrastructure projects Construction industry news Arbitration Litigation Daily and weekly news alerts New and updated content Construction trackers Building safety Building Safety Regulator (Establishment of New Body and Transfer of Functions etc) Regulations 2026 SI 2026/Draft: These draft Regulations are laid to establish a new organisation, the Building Safety Regulator, and to appoint that body to replace the Health and Safety Executive as the building safety regulator for the purposes of the Building Safety Act 2022 (BSA 2022) accordingly. They are scheduled to come into force on 27 January 2026 as drafted. See: LNB News 14/11/2025 5. Construction Products (Amendment) Regulations 2025 SI 2025/1172: These Regulations amend both a UK statutory instrument and an item of assimilated direct legislation concerning construction. They make changes to Regulation (EU) 305/2011 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 9 March 2011, which...

Read More Right Arrow
NEWS
Planning Court: onshore petroleum (PEDL) licences are contractual property and can be varied by agreement; Secretary of State acted within powers (Dean v Secretary of State for BEIS)

Original news Dean v Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy [2017] EWHC 1998 (Admin); [2017] All ER (D) 72 (Aug). The Planning Court concluded that the grant of a PEDL under section 3 of the Petroleum Act 1998 (PA 1998) was not entirely constrained by the statutory licensing code, so the Secretary of State could agree to alter the licence terms. Consequently, it rejected the claimant’s case that the deed varying the licence was ultra vires, and dismissed his application for judicial review. What was the background to the case? In 2008 the defendant issued a PEDL conferring exclusive rights on the licensees to search, drill for and recover hydrocarbons within a defined geographic area. The licence period was split into three stages: a stage for the licensee to undertake the agreed works programme of seismic and geological surveys a stage to obtain Oil and Gas Authority approval of a field development plan a production stage ...

Read More Right Arrow

View the related Practice Notes about Energy Act 2013

PRACTICE NOTES
Health and safety in nuclear decommissioning: legal framework, regulators' interfaces, emergency planning and post-Brexit/assimilated law developments

What is the impact of Brexit on the UK nuclear sector? As of 31 January 2020 (exit day), the UK ceased to be an EU Member State. From that date, a transition/implementation phase applied, during which the EU continued, for many purposes, to treat the UK as if it remained a Member State. Leaving the EU also entailed withdrawal from the Euratom Community. The transition ended at 11 pm (GMT) on 31 December 2020—known in UK law as ‘IP completion day’. At that point, key transitional measures expired and notable shifts started to apply across the UK’s legal framework. The UK’s exit from the EU likewise meant departure from Euratom. Any changes pertinent to this content are outlined below. Following IP completion day, the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018 (EU(W)A 2018) introduced a new category of domestic law—‘retained EU law’ (REUL)—comprising EU-derived rights and legislation preserved in the UK after Brexit. On 29 June 2023, the Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Act 2023 (REUL(RR)A 2023) received Royal Assent...

Read More Right Arrow
PRACTICE NOTES
Consumer Rights Act 2015 (UK) services: statutory rights, standards, binding information, price/time defaults, remedies, liability limits, arbitration, limitation periods, and CCR 2013 interface

Practice Note: Consumer Rights Act 2015—services This Practice Note reviews the Consumer Rights Act 2015 (CRA 2015) insofar as it concerns services, and outlines consumers’ statutory entitlements under the CRA 2015 in relation to contracts for services. It also examines the standards applicable to the provision of services and the consumer remedies where services are non-conforming. For a general overview of the CRA 2015, including definitions of key terms such as ‘consumer’ and ‘trader’, see Practice Note: Consumer Rights Act 2015—summary. For consideration of how the CRA 2015 applies to goods, digital content and unfair terms, see Practice Notes as follows: Consumer Rights Act 2015—goods Consumer Rights Act 2015—digital content Consumer Rights Act 2015—unfair terms Helpful guidance on the CRA 2015’s application to services has been produced by the Chartered Trading Standards Institute (CTSI Guidance) and the Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy, now part of the Department for Business and Trade (BEIS Guidance), which may assist lawyers...

Read More Right Arrow
PRACTICE NOTES
Employment Tribunals Rules of Procedure 2013 (Great Britain): consolidated text as at 5 January 2025, including claims, responses, time limits, case management, hearings, decisions and costs — Archived

ARCHIVED: This Practice Note is retired and is no longer maintained...

Read More Right Arrow

View the related Q&As about Energy Act 2013

Q&As
Section 21 validity: 2013 AST with no EPC or gas certificate

This Q&A considers the requirements in order to serve a valid section 21 notice pursuant to the Housing Act 1988 in circumstances where a six-month fixed term tenancy commenced in 2013 and, thereafter, became a statutory periodic tenancy. The obligations to be complied with when giving a section 21 notice to a tenant became markedly more onerous in practice following the coming into force of the Deregulation Act 2015 (DA 2015) together with the Assured Shorthold Tenancy Notices and Prescribed Requirements (England) Regulations 2015, SI 2015/1646. Notably, DA 2015 stipulates that, for any tenancy starting on or after 1 October 2015 (renewals included), the landlord must supply the tenant with an energy performance certificate and a gas safety certificate before the tenancy begins as a prerequisite. On the face of it, the landlord here arguably appears able to issue a valid section 21 notice, given that the fixed term ended before 2015 and therefore preceded the 2015 requirements...

Read More Right Arrow