The Impossibility Of Net Zero Finally Being Exposed
Rishi Sunak could not have done less to correct the Net Zero mess. But what he has done is a good thing. And it includes setting a trap for the eco-catastrophists
The more they howl and wail, the more they will expose their utter contempt for ordinary people.
Rishi Sunak’s ‘watering down’ of certain Net Zero targets is the first time that the green policy agenda has had ANY scrutiny of any consequence, despite many failures, starting with the ruinously expensive Renewable Obligation, extending into the totally failed CfDs that allowed wind farm developers to lie to achieve planning consent over rival generators and technologies.
Not one part of the green policy agenda has lived up to any promise to deliver good to the British public.
It was the mildest possible reversal. It is in fact an attempt to save Net Zero, not roll it back.
Complaints that it has left Britain without an ‘industrial policy’ or has left ‘investors’ without ‘confidence’ are for the birds.
It has put the UK in the same policy position as the EU (more on which in a bit), and there is no evidence of green policies having delivered any significant industrial development to these shores.
No green jobs. No green growth. No green industrial revolution. Not even a BritishVolt. It is a farce.
Politicians, who know nothing of the subject in fact, have been misled into believing that strong climate targets encourage domestic manufacturing.
That is a lie.
The main beneficiary of UK & EU climate laws has been China, of course, which benefits from cheaper energy prices (among other things) precisely because China does not have energy policies like ours.
Strict targets are not industrial policy. Nobody was looking to develop ‘Gigafactories’ in the UK for the fact of the UK having the earliest ICE car sales ban.
It’s a nonsense.
Sunak has taken stock of the simplest elements of green policy failure:
1. No politician has any clue how to realize Net Zero targets
To understand this, you need to drill down into the Climate Change Committee’s advice to Parliament, and advice from wonks and academics to the CCC itself.
They speak more candidly the deeper you investigate. The promises of upsides are simply lies. There are no drop-in replacements for the things that make our lifestyles today.
That is why the CCC told Parliament that up to 62 percent of emissions reduction is going to come from ‘behavior change’, which is to say that Net Zero requires the government to use criminal law and price mechanisms to regulate what people can do.
That is what Sunak means when he says that previous governments have not been straight with the public. It is a fact.
2. The green lobby has LONG promised lower prices and greater energy security but has failed to deliver
There have been many claims that the costs of wind power have fallen based on low ‘strike prices’ offered by wind farm developers since the Contracts for Difference (CfD) scheme was introduced in 2017.
None of those miraculous strike prices have been achieved. The wind farm developers simply reneged on them. They were never going to take them up. They calculated that they would never have to.
This came to a crunch in the latest auction when the government removed the wind farm operators’ ability to walk away from the contract — they called the wind sector’s bluff. No bids were offered.
The major promise of renewable energy has been utterly debunked by the green lobby’s own actions.
3. Behind the scenes, the failure of both global and national climate policy has been known for a long time
The PA is not in fact a ‘global agreement’; it allows countries to determine their own commitment. And all that has done in turn is reignite the talking point that beset global climate policymaking in the 1990s and 2000s: the ‘free rider’ problem.
Some emerging one-time ‘developing’ economies are now booming, whereas much of the West/G7 is stagnant and facing deindustrialization, precisely as critics of climate policy had argued, decades ago.
This is why there has been so much emphasis since the PA on LOCAL governments, such as LTNs/ULEZ/CAZs, using ‘air pollution’ as a proxy battle in the climate war.
This was encouraged by the central government, which accelerated this fake ‘localism’ during lockdowns by making large grants available to local authorities to restrict private car use.
Sunak has seen the robust response to this in London, Wales, and in cities that have adopted them, and has realized that the public has been setting down its own red lines.
The green agenda is now visible to all and politically toxic.
See more here climatechangedispatch
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Sunak’s actions are a direct consequence of the by-election win. His eyes are opened to a way to stay in power if he bends. Problem is, will he change tack if the election is won again since he’ll have another 5 years to do what he wants, and currently, time is short so he needs to act fast. I guess we’ll see.
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