UK’s Net Zero Plans Pose ‘Critical Risk’ To National Security

The UK government’s Net Zero green agenda plans risk exposing the country to “critical risk”, a report drafted by MPs has claimed.

According to the report by the Joint Committee on National Security Strategy (JCNSS), Britain risks being exposed to “critical risks” regarding both energy and national security as a result of the UK government’s Net Zero green agenda.

Such a warning comes shortly after the country’s incoming Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak, announced that he was doubling down on the Tory climate change crusade, even reimplementing a ban on fracking despite the ongoing energy and cost of living crises in the country.

What does not currently appear to be being considered by government ministers are the knock-on effects their crusade will have, with the JCNSS report indicating that there are concomitant risks associated with the planned transition.

In particular, the report cites the fragility of electricity infrastructure, which will become even more critical in the shift away from domestic gas.

“The transition to net zero is vital, but it will result in the UK becoming increasingly reliant on electricity and ‘renewable’ energy sources, which are more vulnerable to extreme weather than gas and other fossil fuels,” the government report reads.

To make matters worse, the paper indicates that other forms of energy generation, being reliant on the availability of electricity, will be negatively affected by such weather events, a factor that will only increase Britain’s exposure to risk.

Ultimately, the report criticizes the government for not taking nearly enough interest in the risk their current strategies pose to Britain’s critical national infrastructure (CNI), with MPs demanding that the state get a handle on the looming danger.

“As in our previous reports in this Parliament, we have unfortunately uncovered an extreme weakness at the center of Government on a critical risk to the UK’s national security,” it reads.

“It appears that no Minister is taking responsibility for this topic, and there are no cross-Cabinet Committees driving forward the Government’s work on adaptation and CNI resilience,” it continued. “It is hard to imagine the Government taking such a lax approach to any other recognized national security risk.”

Despite such present dangers, the nascent Rishi Sunak government only appears to be even more hellbent on pushing through green reforms.

Sunak himself announced on Wednesday that the government was reintroducing the ban on fracking in England during Prime Minister’s Questions on Wednesday, a move in keeping with the green agenda but not helping the country’s energy independence, to prevent it from falling victim to another winter energy crunch.

Expressing the desire to “redirect the world’s wealth” toward green causes, Sunak told the COP26 climate conference last year that he wanted to “rewire the entire global financial system for net zero”.

See more here climatechangedispatch

Header image: Times of India

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Comments (1)

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    aaron

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    who thinks the powers that be do not know the consequences of their actions?
    all govts are corrupt to the core and are the cause of the majority of societies ills
    stop believing in supposed authority, they only have the power people give them through the people’s belief in authority

    Reply

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