clean, green energy, produced of cleethorpes in the north sea, and we are going to be massively increasingolume of that output, mr. speaker. >> mr. speaker, a thriving steel industry is the foundation of a more productive and resilient britain, yet bickering between the chancellor and the businesses secretary is blocking the chance to tackle the sky-high energy prices that our steelmakers have been facing since long before the current price spikes. with the pathway to net zero dependent on steel firms using more electricity, not less, will he urged his colleagues around the cabinet table turn now put in place a wholesale energy price caps, along with long overdue reductions in network connection costs? mr. speaker, cop will not work without a cap. pm johnson: mr. speaker, he is making a very important point about the high energy costs for energy-intensive industries, and that is why we have abated them with about £2 billion since 2013. but the answer is to do what we are doing, which is to break up the long-term baseload needs of this economy by investing in nuclear, as i am afraid labour