Flabbergasted as I am, I thank the noble Lord and others who are saying, “Hear, hear!” I wondered if we could get through a full day when I started on this process, because, in principle, we agree with the Government’s broad strategy and we certainly want an ONR which is effective, independent, vibrant and innovative. Anything I have said is not intended to restrict that. I am grateful to the noble Baroness for pointing me to paragraph 21 of Schedule 7 about the annual accounts. It would be helpful to have them all in one place, but nevertheless this seems to cover the point.
On full recovery of costs, there will be situations in which regulators cannot do that. They usually have to explain why to the Treasury, certainly if it is done on any systematic basis. There will be exceptions, but I think that the Government have said they will be pursuing the principle of full recovery of costs. I am not therefore pursuing the argument that this needs to be in legislation. At least we have a clear answer that that is the principle and that fees and costs will be covered plus the Secretary of State’s allocation of grant in aid—or whatever we call it these days.
That might still leave a gap which presumably is intended by the borrowing provisions here. As my noble friend Lord O’Neill says, I have proposed deletion, not to say that I am utterly opposed to borrowing powers, but to see to what degree the Government are likely to use them. The Minister has pretty much indicated that they would not use them that often, but they are there. Given that they are there, I think that in some capacity or another, the Government—it could be the Secretary of State in guidance, or whatever—need to be pretty careful of what kind of borrowing the ONR engage in, because this gets into the area of conflict of interest.
This also applies to my amendments in relation to what services the ONR can sell. Because my deletions would still leave subsections (1) and (2) of the clause, which allow the ONR to sell services anywhere in the world which relate to its areas of purpose—that is, nuclear safety in the widest sense—all the objectives of selling services to other states that are interested in developing nuclear power would be allowable, even if my full deletion was accepted. I am worried about a provision that says we can also sell services to anyone anywhere that are not related to our purpose. That seems to allow for a money-making venture which is not really related to the role of the ONR.
At the end of the day, through all of this, we have to remember that the ONR is a regulator. As a regulator it has to be cleaner than clean. It has to have clear sources of operation; clear standards to which it operates; clear standards for the qualification of its staff; and—yes—some limitations on what those staff and the organisation can do. To retain a genuinely world-class regulator in a very difficult and delicate field, we need to be careful not to allow any loopholes which allow a conflict of interest to be claimed, even if it is not for real. I am a bit suspicious about the issue of selling services. I think the Government should reflect on it. For now, I am happy to complete this stage—only 20 minutes in advance, regrettably—and beg leave to withdraw my amendment.