MPs considered Lords Amendments to Energy Bill
9 May 2016
MPs debated amendments made by the House of Lords to the Energy Bill on Monday 9 May 2016.
- Watch Parliament TV: Consideration of Lords Amendments: Energy Bill
- Read Commons Hansard: Consideration of Lords Amendments: Energy Bill
- Read Votes and Proceedings, item 6: Energy Bill: Consideration of Lords Message
- Read the Lords Amendments to the Energy Bill
- Read current Parliamentary material in Topics: Energy
Related information
Summary of the Bill
A Bill to make provision about the Oil and Gas Authority and its functions; to make provision about rights to use upstream petroleum infrastructure; to make provision about the abandonment of offshore installations, submarine pipelines and upstream petroleum infrastructure; to extend Part 1A of the Petroleum Act 1998 to Northern Ireland; to make provision about the disclosure of information for the purposes of international agreements; to make provision about fees in respect of activities relating to oil, gas, carbon dioxide and pipelines; to make provision about wind power; and for connected purposes.
Progress of the Bill
This Government Bill was introduced to Parliament on Thursday 9 July 2015 and had its First Reading in the House of Commons on Thursday 5 November 2015. It had its second reading on Monday 18 January 2016.
The Bill completed its Committee stage on 4 February 2016. Remaining Commons stages were debated in the Commons on 14 March 2016.
The Bill then went to the House of Lords for consideration.
Keep up to date with all the proceedings and documentation, including amendment papers on the Energy Bill and find out how a Bill becomes an Act of Parliament.
House of Commons Library analysis
The House of Commons Library produces briefing papers to inform MPs of key issues. The papers contain factual information and a range of opinions on each subject, and aim to be politically impartial.
Lords Amendments
When a Bill has passed through third reading in both Houses it is returned to the first House (where it started) for the second House's amendments (proposals for change) to be considered.
Both Houses must agree on the exact wording of the Bill. There is no set time period between the third reading of a Bill and consideration of any Commons or Lords amendments.
What happens after consideration of amendments?
Once the Commons and Lords agree on the final version of the Bill, it can receive Royal Assent and become an Act of Parliament (the proposals of the Bill now become law).
Watching proceedings from the public gallery
UK residents and overseas visitors can watch proceedings in the House of Commons by visiting the public gallery.
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