Skip to content

Red Ed’s Climate Change Law

April 29, 2015

By Paul Homewood  

 

h/t A C Osborn

 

image

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-3059932/The-pottiest-costliest-mistake-times-Forget-tax-spend-plans-Red-Ed-s-climate-change-law-Brown-years-cost-50-000-home-says-CHRISTOPHER-BOOKER.html

 

Booker reminds us of the big, fat elephant in the room, which everybody except for UKIP are trying to tip toe around.

 

One astonishing fact not getting a mention in this bizarrely unreal election campaign is that Ed Miliband can already claim to have been by far the most expensive politician in Britain’s history.

This is because it was he more than anyone else who in 2008 was responsible for pushing through the final version of the Climate Change Act — on official figures easily the most costly law passed by Parliament.

Thanks entirely to a last-minute amendment by Miliband, this Act commits us within 35 years to cutting Britain’s emissions of carbon dioxide, or CO2, by a staggering 80 per cent — to a level so low it hadn’t been seen since the early 19th century.

Even on figures sneaked out by the Government a few months later, the cost of this law was then estimated as high as £734 billion, or £18 billion every year until 2050.

But more recent estimates made by the EU and the International Energy Agency suggest that the cost of meeting Mr Miliband’s target will be even higher, at £1.3 trillion — almost equivalent to our entire current national debt, or more than £50,000 for every household in the country.

The story behind how this unprecedentedly far-reaching law came to be passed almost unanimously is itself one of the weirdest political episodes in our history.

The idea for it originated with a young climate activist, Bryony Worthington, when she was the campaign director on climate change for the green lobby group Friends Of The Earth.

In 2007, when hysteria over global warming was at its height — thanks not least to Al Gore’s Oscar-winning film An Inconvenient Truth — Ms Worthington was co-opted by then-Environment Secretary David Miliband to join his department’s staff.

As she described in a talk which can still be seen by googling ‘Bryony Worthington YouTube’, she was put in charge of a small group tasked with drafting a Bill to make Britain the only country in the world committed by law to slashing its ‘carbon emissions’ by 60 per cent.

But in 2008, when the Bill was already well on its way through Parliament, David Miliband was promoted by Gordon Brown to become Foreign Secretary. A new ministry was created, the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC), to be headed by his brother, Ed. It was Ed Miliband who decided, following pressure from green lobby groups, to up the emissions reduction target from 60 per cent to an even more mind-boggling 80 per cent. This alone, on his department’s figures, nearly doubled its cost.

What seems barely credible, if one reads through the lengthy debates in Parliament on this Bill, is that scarcely a single MP showed the slightest interest in how the new target could in practice be met — any more than did Mr Miliband himself.

The CO2 emitted by fossil fuels, such as coal, gas, oil and petrol, is inseparable from pretty well every activity which keeps our economy functioning, from the way we make 70 per cent of our electricity to virtually our entire transport system.

As for electricity alone, we no longer use this just for lighting, heating and refrigeration, as we did in those far-off ‘three-day week’ days of the Seventies.

In the age of the computer, we are now dependent on it for everything from our work and mobile phones to shop and supermarket tills, the cashpoints where we collect our money and the signalling and traffic lights which keep our trains and roads running.

Yet thanks to Mr Miliband, and those MPs who mindlessly voted for his Bill, we are committed to cutting back on what currently makes this possible by such a colossal amount, it is impossible to see how it could be realistically achieved without closing down virtually all our economy.

 

It was Ed Miliband who decided, following pressure from green lobby groups, to up the emissions reduction target from 60 per cent to an even more mind-boggling 80 per cent

+3

It was Ed Miliband who decided, following pressure from green lobby groups, to up the emissions reduction target from 60 per cent to an even more mind-boggling 80 per cent

What our ministers and officials fondly imagine — as we can see from their speeches and policy papers — is that we can somehow meet Mr Miliband’s target by closing down all those old ‘CO2 polluting’ coal and gas-fired power stations, to replace them with tens of thousands of wind turbines and a fleet of ‘zero carbon’ new nuclear reactors (though it looks increasingly unlikely we will get even one of those in the next decade).

The fossil fuel plants we still rely on for more than two-thirds of the electricity we need will be allowed to survive only if they are fitted with ‘carbon capture and storage’, to pipe away their ‘carbon emissions’ to be buried in holes under the sea — a hugely expensive technology which is pure wishful thinking, since it has never yet been made to work commercially, and would treble the cost of electricity even if it was viable.

 

The drive to ‘decarbonise’ our economy by piling on ‘green taxes’ and building ever more hugely subsidised windfarms has already added hundreds of pounds a year to individual electricity bills, helping to drive millions more households into fuel poverty. But even now we are scarcely scratching the surface of meeting our legal commitments.

 

Miliband was also the most intimate Treasury advisers of Gordon Brown when he took the reckless gamble of doubling Britain's spending

 

Miliband was also the most intimate Treasury advisers of Gordon Brown when he took the reckless gamble of doubling Britain’s spending

The one lesson above all we might have learned from Ed Miliband’s brief spell in charge of our ‘energy and climate change’ policy is that he is quite astonishingly out of touch with any practical reality.

So lost was he in his green fantasy world that his only concern was the ‘climate change’ part of his job title. He showed no interest in the other half of the job he was paid for, the ‘energy’ bit, i.e. how to keep our lights on.

Informed observers at the time noted how the only people Secretary Miliband seemed to want to talk to were green lobby groups, such as Friends Of The Earth, Greenpeace and the canny chancers making millions out of windfarms and the ‘renewables’ subsidy bonanza.

The ‘Big Six’ energy giants — who, whatever we think of them, were actually keeping the lights on — he treated with disdain or outright hostility, as ‘polluting’ capitalists, interested only in making ‘obscene profits’ (unlike those green, clean developers of the wind farms which were increasingly disfiguring our countryside).

Many may recall their shock in September 2013 when Mr Miliband, by then Labour leader, announced one of his first acts on becoming PM would be to ‘freeze energy prices’ for three years (instantly knocking £3 billion off the share value of the big energy companies).

But what made this even more ludicrous was that no one had done more to push up Britain’s fast-rising energy bills than Mr Miliband himself.

 

 

Read the rest here.

 

And this is the idiot who will probably be our next PM!

12 Comments
  1. April 29, 2015 1:20 pm

    While accepting that Milliband was largely responsible for the foolish CCA, the politicking posture of the Mail does not help that much due to its “Red Ed” obsession. The macaroon and his rich pals such as cloggy were also part of the CCA… and are still espousing global warming and their “Greenness”….

    The only party opposing the waste of resources on global warming is UKIP, but the fuhrer does not have a goebels to push his message and I have not heard him mention the very good policy document that dealt with global warming to date.

    Bring back the Monster Raving Loony Party….

  2. A C Osborn permalink
    April 29, 2015 1:44 pm

    This article is NOT of course on the main DM web page and especially NOT in the current Election Section.
    It took the GWPF to dig it out for our attention.
    Thanks for spreading the word.

  3. Derek Buxton permalink
    April 29, 2015 1:57 pm

    But surely, as a “democratic” Nation the evil Act can be repealed in quick time. To do so would boost the Camerloon party to a possible win. I would like to have said if he promised but he doesn’t do promises of that sort, only the auction on May 7th.

  4. emsnews permalink
    April 29, 2015 3:16 pm

    Germany is backing down from the same stupid promises.

    Will the British people do the same?

  5. Retired Dave permalink
    April 29, 2015 5:34 pm

    It would all be extremely ill-advised if the world was warming due to CO2 but given a flat line in satellite temps for 20 years it is the policy of the madhouse. It is what you get if you have politicians with PPE degrees and a green fanatic woman with an English Lit degree drafting policy.

    Also if the world was warming due to CO2 our lack of emissions in the Uk and Europe will make no difference since China and India will produce much much more anyway.

    Given the total lack of grasp of reality amongst all parties (except perhaps UKIP) we have never been lead in the UK by a more useless bunch of idiots.

    The situation going forward is so serious that eventually people will have to be brought to account. That starts with climate scientists who have exaggerated the science, manipulated data and continue to make unscientific claims; and then moves to decision makers, often allied to the gravy train passengers, who have displayed no due diligence in the spending of our money.

    I still think that eventually some people will serve time (like Italian vulcanologists), and given the need of politicians to skip any blame they will divert it to those who have stoked up the theory of cAGW. I am hoping to live that long.

  6. April 29, 2015 5:35 pm

    They seem oblivious to the damage they inflicted and are rather proud of it.

    The last Labour government introduced the Climate Change Act

    #Labour’s Green Plan: Economic suicide note sounds climate alarm klaxon

  7. Kon Dealer permalink
    April 29, 2015 10:22 pm

    Confirms my opinion that you have to be mentally deranged to votes Labour.
    Or a skiver, dole bludger, single interest “victim” group, or an employee of the BBC.
    Take your pick!

  8. Dave N permalink
    April 29, 2015 10:43 pm

    If it is law, I’m curious as to what happens if they don’t meet the target? Do all politicians go to jail? Since everyday people in Britain all consume energy generated from fossil fuels, do they all go to jail, too?

  9. April 30, 2015 5:43 am

    Reblogged this on Wolsten and commented:
    Interesting bit of political history. Apparently hardly any MP had any idea of the costs or practicality of achieving their ludicrous climate targets. The only way the energy companies will be able to cope with capped pricing by a new labour administration is by reducing investment. Vote labour and kiss goodbye to pensions invested in energy companies along with security of supply. If you have never lived through blackouts like those of us of a certain age then you may find this notion fanciful but it’s not much fun in practice. Just hope your business, school or hospital has back up power generation available.

    • john in cheshire permalink
      April 30, 2015 8:15 am

      The 3 day week and electricity blackouts thanks to the communists, I remember it well. What I can’t fathom is why people still vote them into power.

  10. Sonja A Boehmer-Christiansen permalink
    April 30, 2015 8:26 pm

    Would not believe Booker on politics, too single-mindedly deep blue . Stay out of party politics….The climate change act was not opposed by the Tories as far as I know. Could I habve sources please of EU and IEA estimates of the costs. Quotes from them directly would be appreciated.
    Cheers
    Sonja
    Could I have a direct email address please, not word press?

Comments are closed.