Growing Public Revolt Against Net Zero Has EU Politicians Scrambling

The headlong rush to net zero ‘carbon’ emissions by 2050, pursued for so long by democratic governments across the globe regardless of cost, has finally hit the buffers of voter resistance

Mainstream politicians of the left, right, and center still mouth their consensual net zero platitudes but they are rowing back from the policies required to achieve it at some speed, not least here in Britain.

It has, at last, dawned on Prime Minister Rishi Sunak that a population already reeling from a vicious cost of living crisis does not need to be lumbered by the extra burden of the expensive and intrusive green agenda of a political elite that will not itself suffer any hardship from it.

So he has delayed the ban on new petrol and diesel cars and the fatwa on new residential gas heating systems until 2035 (from 2030 and 2025 respectively). Expect more delays to come.

Sunak and his team justified his U-turn because ‘governments of all stripes have not been honest about the cost and trade-offs‘, because the drive to net zero would impose ‘unacceptable costs on hard-pressed British families‘, and because ‘we’re not going to save the planet by bankrupting the British people.‘

Fair enough. Better late than never. But we must still file the PM under ‘slow learner’.

When I interviewed then Chancellor Sunak in June 2021 during my mercifully brief broadcasting career at GB News (only eight shows over two weeks), I asked him to tell us the cost of net zero.

He couldn’t.

I suggested it would be in the trillions and it was surely the Treasury’s duty to come up with a price tag.

He obfuscated.

He said after the interview that nobody had ever asked him the cost before. He’s taken his time to find out, if he has.

The fact is net zero was backed by such an overwhelming political consensus and a cheerleading media (which failed to do its job challenging the consensus) that questions of cost were regarded as an unnecessary spanner in the works by unhelpful naysayers.

Rough estimates turned out to be hopelessly optimistic.

Three years ago, Paul Johnson of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, whose analysis of all things economic is lapped up unquestioningly by journalists, opined (as a member of the official Climate Change Committee) that the overall cost should be ‘more than manageable’ and might even be ‘remarkably low’.

That turned out to be nonsense, as he now recognizes.

Johnson now admits there is a ‘fog of uncertainty over how we are actually expecting to decarbonize household heating, further massively increase zero-carbon electricity production and distribution, revolutionize agriculture and all the rest.’

Far from being ‘rather low’, he now warns it’s going to be ‘costly’ requiring ‘vast amounts of money … not in the billions, but in the trillions.‘

From the start, it is people and families on modest incomes who’ve been expected to pay for the transition to net zero, which is why there has been a growing public revolt against it.

Far from being confined to Britain, the pushback is everywhere, forcing politicians to renege on their green virtue signaling and slow or even halt the process.

In France, President Macron has ruled out banning gas boilers and refused to give a date for phasing out of ‘fossil fuels’, bar coal, which France barely uses.

His first term was almost derailed by the ‘yellow vest’ protests against ‘green’ increases in fuel duties. He has no desire to repeat that upheaval.

New Zealand’s Labour government is almost certainly heading for defeat in next weekend’s general election after its plans to tax livestock emitting methane (a Kiwi global first!) and turn sheep and cattle farms into pine plantations provoked a revolt, with 58 percent of those living in rural areas telling pollsters they will vote for right-of-center parties.

Anti-net zero Dutch farmers have shaken their political system in response to anti-farming measures by the Dutch government. The right-wing Farmer-Citizen Movement, only four years old, is now the dominant party in the Dutch Senate (upper house) and every provincial assembly.

The net-zero revolt is Europe-wide. Even the center-left Politico website is forced to report that ‘as the 2024 European election approaches [for the European Parliament], a notable shift is occurring across major countries in the EU: voters are turning away from Green parties amid a rising tide of right-wing populism and anti-EU sentiment … a significant portion of this shift can be attributed to voter dissatisfaction with the EU’s climate transition policies.‘

The revolt is most stark in Germany, which has long thought itself in the vanguard of Europe’s transition to net zero and whose Green party is a prominent member of its ruling coalition government.

Plans to phase out oil and gas heating in homes nearly broke the government this summer and had to be watered down. Pressure is growing for further concessions on the EU’s 2035 ban on combustion vehicles. Stricter energy efficiency rules for buildings have been shelved.

Germany’s green credentials are somewhat in tatters. It plans to bring on stream this winter several moth-balled coal plants; otherwise, the government fears it can’t keep the lights on.

It’s a repeat of last winter but more serious since the coalition closed the country’s remaining nuclear reactors last spring. Seven out of the ten most polluting coal plants in the EU are German.

The UK now accounts for one percent of global CO2 emissions, China almost 30 percent. What difference will ripping out a cheap gas boiler for an expensive heat pump make to the climate?

China claims its carbon emissions will peak in 2030 and hit net zero by 2060. But look at what it’s doing, not what it says: it is giving planning permission for two new coal-fired power plants every week (yes, every week).

Last year, it approved a record-breaking 106 gigawatts (GW) of new coal-fired power capacity. Permits are being handed out at an even higher rate this year.

The pace of construction is also increasing. China now has 243 GW of coal-fired capacity permitted or under construction.

One gigawatt is the equivalent of a coal power plant.

America has the third-biggest coal-fired electricity generation capacity in the world. India is second (after China) and is building more coal plants too, as are Bangladesh, Cambodia, Indonesia, Japan, Pakistan, the Philippines, South Korea, and Vietnam. The Asia-Pacific now accounts for 80 percent of global coal demand.

Even if America closed all its coal capacity tomorrow, it would quickly be more than matched by all the new coal plants coming on-stream in China.

The grim truth is that China and other parts of Asia are now building so many new coal plants so fast that the ‘energy transition to net zero‘ that British and other Western politicians so obsess about is effectively meaningless.

To go crazy over a few more oil and gas licenses in the North Sea or one new coal mine in the north of England is absurd, given what is happening on the other side of the world.

See more here climatechangedispatch

Header image: Zerocarbonworld

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Comments (1)

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    VOWG

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    There can never be any such thing as net zero, government math aside.

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