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Birmingham Post
Birmingham Post
Business
David Laister

Governor of Bank of England hears how the Humber is a leading light in the future of energy security

Governor of the Bank of England, Andrew Bailey, has been told how the Humber will be at the centre of resolving energy security issues as rising prices send ripples through the economy.

The prestigious visitor was a guest of Hull and Humber Chamber of Commerce, and he addressed 100 business leaders at a special breakfast event.

Welcomed by Chamber president Mike Whitehead at the Mercure Hull Grange Park Hotel, he told Mr Bailey how it has been a very difficult couple of years for businesses which have had to deal with all manner of challenges, from the Covid-19 pandemic, to rising energy prices and now the fall-out from the war in Ukraine.

Read more: Huge Humber ferry terminal plan for ABP and Stena Line is scaled down

He said: “We are all aware of the inflationary pressures, interest rate rises and how the war has changed policymakers’ views about supply chain and energy security issues.

“The Humber is the Energy Estuary and the growing renewables capital of the UK and will be at the centre of resolving those energy security issues for the nation”.

Against a backdrop of three interest rate rises in a year, Mr Bailey explained some of the difficulties of forecasting monetary policy in a complicated world which is currently trying to cope with a major war in Europe and the re-emergence of Covid in China on a large scale.

His address was given on a non-reportable basis.

Thanking the Governor for coming to Hull in a good-humoured exchange, Chamber chief Executive Dr Ian Kelly referenced former Grimsby MP Austin Mitchell, who had worked with Mr Bailey earlier in his career during the financial crisis to ensure Iceland’s fishing industry served Grimsby’s need for fish and in particular kept the UK’s national dish of fish and chips served up across the country.

He also noted how the Chamber had set up the Humber LEP when asked to do so by Secretary of State Greg Clarke some 12 years ago and how it had helped to create the enterprise zones which are now home to Siemens’ blade factory in Hull and Orsted’s operations on Grimsby docks. A decade later we were now reaping the reward for those investments and he also highlighted the hopes for the Humber’s next steps on Freeport status and how Michael Gove’s ambitions for “Opportunities Humber” could yet shape the region’s green future at a faster pace.

In his vote of thanks, he asked the Governor to remind his friends in the “small provincial town” where his Bank is based called London that the Humber is now increasingly the capital of our rapidly growing green renewables industry in the UK and beyond.

He also highlighted the importance of the Chamber’s Quarterly Economic Survey which feeds into the British Chambers National Survey, which in turn is fed up to the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee, asking people locally to complete the survey and tell the Governor exactly how they see this part of the world’s economy and business environment.

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