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Energy Discount Schemes: Are You Paying More Than You Need To?

Written by True Group | Mar 18, 2026 1:46:33 PM

When organisations review their electricity costs, attention sometimes turns to the unit rate.

But for many energy-intensive businesses, some of the most meaningful savings sit elsewhere, within the policy levies and tax elements embedded in electricity bills.

The UK government operates several schemes designed to reduce some of these costs for eligible businesses. Yet eligibility is not always obvious and relief is rarely automatic.

As a result, some organisations continue paying charges that, under the right conditions, could be reduced or removed.


Why These Schemes Exist

Electricity prices in the UK can be structurally higher than in other European markets, partly due to policy and network charges applied to bills. For energy-intensive industries competing internationally, this can create a significant disadvantage.

To address this, the government has introduced targeted mechanisms aimed at protecting qualifying sectors and supporting competitiveness.

These schemes do not reduce wholesale electricity prices. Instead, they lower the non-commodity components of the bill: the policy, network and tax elements that sit alongside the unit rate.

The Main Relief Mechanisms

Depending on sector and electricity intensity, businesses may qualify for one or more of the following:

  • The British Industry Supercharger (BICS) provides enhanced exemptions from policy levies such as Contracts for Difference (CfD), the Renewables Obligation (RO) and Feed-in Tariffs (FiT), while also reducing certain network charges including TNUoS and BSUoS. It is targeted at internationally competitive, high-electricity-use sectors.
  • The Energy Intensive Industries (EII) exemption offers relief or compensation from specific policy levies for businesses that can demonstrate high electricity intensity and exposure to international trade.
  • Climate Change Agreements (CCA) allow eligible organisations to receive significant discounts on the Climate Change Levy (CCL) in return for committing to agreed energy efficiency or carbon reduction targets.
  • Mineralogical and Metallurgical (Min/Met) exemptions provide relief from CCL for qualifying industrial processes such as glass, ceramics, cement and metal production, often delivering substantial tax savings for eligible manufacturers.

For qualifying businesses, these mechanisms can materially reduce annual electricity costs.

The Practical Challenge

While the schemes are established, eligibility is rarely static. Electricity intensity can change, operational structures evolve and policy frameworks are updated.

In many organisations, responsibility for monitoring these developments is fragmented between procurement, finance and sustainability teams. Without clear ownership, opportunities can be missed, not through negligence, but through complexity.

A More Structured Approach

Because eligibility depends on sector classification, intensity thresholds and regulatory updates, reviewing discount schemes is not a one-off exercise.

It requires ongoing assessment and, where appropriate, careful application and implementation.

Rather than expecting internal teams to track evolving criteria, some organisations choose to take a managed approach, monitoring eligibility, validating qualification and overseeing applications where relief is available.

This can often be structured on a share-of-savings basis, aligning incentives and reducing upfront risk.

Part of a Wider Cost Strategy

Discount schemes should not be viewed in isolation.

When considered alongside non-commodity optimisation and sustainability planning, they form part of a broader commercial strategy, one that reduces structural cost and creates capacity for reinvestment.

Want to Understand Where You Stand?

In our upcoming webinar, Turn Secrets into Savings, we’ll explain these discount schemes in detail, including the criteria, how to apply and how to monitor your position moving forwards.