The electricity market is not inelastic! Not in the short term, not in the medium term and not in the long term. Not for retail customers, not for industrial customers, not for wholesalers, not for producers, and not for manufacturers.
Consumers can and do cut demand (smart meters for real-time, buying panels and batteries, time-shifting, insulation, etc), for example.
And blithely ignoring global supply chain economies of scale and learning is just madness. Turbines costs are down by 60% over a decade; panel and battery costs are down so much that families in Pakistan and many African countries are now buying them to avoid grid issues in their own countries. We are just not going to replicate those global effects in a single country, and you are not thinking straight if you dismiss this as unimportant. You want to help British people with the cost of living, right? So don’t push a policy that will mean they are stuck with wildly expensive “British” turbines or panels or whatever, especially when it’s impossible to sever connections with the global supply chain completely: raw materials, electronics etc are all still going to have to come from overseas.
I promise you that I care just as much as you do about a better deal for British consumers, and about seeing British industry thrive, and I’m entirely at peace with nationalised industries where it makes sense, including in energy where a national public retail supplier would make great sense. But your solution to that is objectively worse than mine, not least because you start from incorrect premises about how the relevant markets operate.