Fuels Industry UK is proud to be an Association Partner of Energy Landscape UK Conference & Exhibition

Fuels Industry UK is proud to be an Association Partner of Energy Landscape UK Conference & Exhibition
As the UK's principal advocate for the downstream oil sector — representing organisations that refine and supply over 85% of Britain's transport fuel — we are delighted to be partnering with ELUK 2026 at this critical moment for Britain's energy future.
Energy Landscape UK 2026 (ELUK2026) is where Britain's most senior energy leaders come together to convert ambition into action — and where the decisions that will shape the UK's energy system for decades get made.
Taking place on 3–4 November 2026 at The Kia Oval, London, and themed The Energy Trilemma: Britain's Three-Front War It Cannot Afford to Lose, ELUK2026 is a two-day conference bringing together government, regulators, investors, utilities, infrastructure developers, industrial operators and digital innovators in one room, with one mission: turn policy commitment into delivery.
This is not a celebration of incremental progress. It is not another roadmap. It is the platform where the people who hold the levers of delivery face the questions the sector has spent years avoiding — and leave with named, time-bound commitments submitted directly to government through the ELUK 2026 Energy Leadership Declaration.
We are especially pleased to announce that our Chief Executive, Elizabeth de Jong will be speaking at ELUK 2026 as a panellist on Panel 10 — Decarbonise to Dominate: How Britain's Industrial Heartlands Become the Clean Energy Manufacturing Powerhouse of Europe. Elizabeth will bring our perspective to one of the most consequential industrial debates of the year — on the future of Britain's refining and fuels sector, energy security, and the managed transition that keeps the UK's economy running while alternatives scale.
Across ten panels and two closing debates, delegates will confront the key pillars defining how the UK delivers Net Zero.
The solutions exist. The capital is available. What is needed now is the coordination and long-term planning to deliver — ensuring that Britain's industrial base, including its vital refining and fuels sector, remains competitive and resilient throughout the transition.
As Elizabeth has written: "The UK is steadily losing the industries that produce the essential materials, energy and products our economy depends on. That is leaving us increasingly exposed to global instability and reliant on imports for critical supply. What we are seeing in the Gulf is a clear warning. In an unstable world, relying on overseas supply chains for the essentials of your economy is a vulnerability. Without urgent action, we risk further industrial decline and deeper dependence at precisely the wrong time”.
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