Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change

Last updated
United Kingdom
Secretary of State for
Energy and Climate Change
Royal Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom (HM Government) (St Edwards Crown).svg
Royal Arms as used by Her Majesty's Government
Department of Energy and Climate Change
Style The Right Honourable
(Formal prefix)
Energy Secretary
Appointer Elizabeth II
Inaugural holder Ed Miliband
Formation3 October 2008
Final holder Amber Rudd
Abolished14 July 2016
DeputyMinister of State for Energy
Website www.decc.gov.uk/

The secretary of state for energy and climate change was a British Government cabinet position from 2008 to 2016. The Department of Energy and Climate Change was created on 3 October 2008 when then-Prime Minister Gordon Brown reshuffled his Cabinet.

Contents

Between 1974 and 1992, the post was known as secretary of state for energy.

The energy and climate change secretary revived the earlier post of the secretary of state for energy as head of the Department of Energy, existing from 1974 to 1992. After which, the Department of Energy was merged into the Department of Trade and Industry under the Conservative government of Sir John Major in 1992.

Sixteen years later, immediately prior to the creation of the new department, energy policy was the responsibility of the Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform (itself now a defunct government department, superseded by the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills).

Former Labour leader Ed Miliband was the inaugural secretary of state at DECC. After Labour lost the 2010 general election and the Cameron–Clegg coalition was formed, Chris Huhne was appointed as his successor. On 3 February 2012, Huhne resigned from the post after it was announced that he would be prosecuted for perverting the course of justice, in relation to accusations that he passed on speeding penalties to his ex-wife to avoid losing his own licence. The post was taken over by Ed Davey on the same day, and served until the Liberal Democrats left government, and Davey lost his seat, in 2015. [1]

Amber Rudd was the final secretary of state at DECC, until she became Home Secretary. The post was formed into the new Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy by new prime minister Theresa May in July 2016.

The role is now part of the portfolio belonging to the secretary of state for energy security and net zero.

List of secretaries of state

Colour key
   Conservative    Labour    Liberal Democrats

Energy (1974–1992)

Secretary of StateTerm of officePolitical partyPrime Minister
The Lord Carrington 8 January 19744 March 1974 Conservative Edward Heath
Eric Varley 5 March 197410 June 1975 Labour Harold Wilson
Tony Benn 10 June 19754 May 1979 Labour
James Callaghan
David Howell 5 May 197914 September 1981 Conservative Margaret Thatcher
Nigel Lawson 14 September 198111 June 1983 Conservative
Peter Walker 11 June 198313 June 1987 Conservative
Cecil Parkinson 13 June 198724 July 1989 Conservative
John Wakeham 24 July 198911 April 1992 Conservative
John Major
Department abolished 1992. Functions transferred to the Department of Trade and Industry.

Energy and climate change (2008–2016)

Secretary of StateTerm of officePolitical partyPrime Minister
Ed Miliband Ed Miliband election infobox.jpg 3 October 200811 May 2010 Labour Gordon Brown
Chris Huhne Chris Huhne MP (5980495891).jpg 12 May 20103 February 2012 Liberal Democrats David Cameron
(Coalition)
Ed Davey Edward Davey.jpg 3 February 20128 May 2015 Liberal Democrats
Amber Rudd Amber Rudd 2015.jpg 11 May 201514 July 2016 Conservative David Cameron
(II)
Department abolished 2016, merged into Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy.

See also

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