The National Gas Council of Great Britain and Ireland, also known as the National Gas Council, was established in 1916 to speak and act on behalf of the employers in the gas industry. It was abolished upon the nationalisation of the gas industry in 1949.
The Council was made up of members of the governing bodies (boards of directors) of organisations involved in the British gas industry. Over the period of its establishment, it had three presidents:
A technical committee was appointed in 1922 to investigate the issues around the installation and use of gas geysers for water heating.
In 1937 a proposal was made to pipe methane gas from collieries to domestic consumers.
In the 1920s the National Gas Council was located at 28 Grosvenor Gardens, London SW.
The pre-nationalisation gas industry was managed, controlled and represented by several corporate bodies.
In 1934 the British Gas Federation was established as a forum to provide a consensus on general matters of gas industry policy and to represent the collective interests of the following organisations:
In 1937 the National Gas Council became one of the organisations located in Gas Industry House, Grosvenor Place, London. Other co-located organisations were the:
In 1943 a British Gas Association was proposed by a merger of the British Commercial Gas Association and the National Gas Council of Great Britain and Ireland; this proposal was not implemented.
In 1946 the British Gas Council was established from a merger of the British Commercial Gas Association and the National Gas Council of Great Britain and Ireland; it worked to oppose nationalisation of the gas industry. The chairman was Edgar Sylvester, later to become chair of the Gas Council.
The National Gas Council of Great Britain and Ireland was abolished in May 1949 upon the nationalisation of the British gas industry.
At the time of nationalisation there were four national gas bodies which were taken over:
Oil and gas industry in the United Kingdom