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Rishi’s Empty Thetoric

December 5, 2023

By Paul Homewood

 

 

Over in the Spectator, Fraser Nelson is inviting us to welcome a change in Rishi Sunak’s tone on Net Zero. His interest has been piqued by the PM’s speech at COP28, which he says shows that Sunak has “started the difficulty work of moving the UK climate agenda from fantasy to policy”. There will be no more precautionary-principle daftness, we are told, and attention is drawn to the Prime Minister’s claim that from now on decarbonisation will be pursued “in a more pragmatic way, which doesn’t burden working people”.

Nelson is quite correct that the whole drive for Net Zero drive a fantasy. It is the triumph of political posturing and bureaucratic trickery over rational decision-making. Even when the Climate Change Act was passed, the costs were double the benefits. Recent figures from the Climate Change Committee suggest that the ratio has risen to over 4 to 1, but even that result relies on the Net Zero cost estimate, a dodgy dossier of considerable disrepute [1,2]. A more realistic figure is likely to be 10 to 1 or more [3].

Yes, facing the threat of being one percent worse off, the whole political establishment (and Starmer is just as bad as Sunak) is agreed that we should adopt policies that will make us ten percent worse off instead. It is hard to express just how mad this is.

The result, namely wholesale deindustrialisation, has been predictable. What Nelson proclaims as a triumphant reduction carbon dioxide emissions is in fact just the result of the wanton destruction of manufacturing industry in this country. In the last two months, we have lost our last blast furnace and one of our six oil refineries. Our last aluminum smelter and last fertiliser factory are long since gone. Make no mistake, this is a civilisational threat. And there haven’t even been any reductions in emissions – we have simply exported them to China, while adding some new ones as goods are shipped from Shanghai rather than manufactured here.

Nelson’s idea that Sunak is changing direction is also hard to take seriously. There is a pronounced sense of déjà vu here of course, because we were told exactly the same thing in September, in the Prime Minister’s much-vaunted Net Zero speech. Heralded as a major change of direction, it has amounted in practice to nothing at all. The only concrete effect has been minor delays to a couple of bans and cancellation of a lot of other policies that didn’t exist in the first place.

Meanwhile, there has been a palpable intensification of the Net Zero madness. Offshore windfarms were awarded an extraordinary price increase of 66% plus inflation. In Parliament today, they are voting on the ZEV mandate, which will add up to £15,000 to the cost of a petrol or diesel car. A similar scheme to force people to get heat pumps will follow. For the Prime Minister to say, on the same day, that he is going do Net Zero without “burdening working people” seems utterly shameless to me.

So, if Fraser will forgive me, if I am to be convinced that a change of direction is taking place, I will need more than just another deluge of empty words from the Prime Minister. His speech looks to me like more distraction.

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14 Comments
  1. 1saveenergy permalink
    December 5, 2023 3:13 pm

    “There is a pronounced sense of déjà vu here”
    How many times have we heard that before ?? (:-))

  2. 2hmp permalink
    December 5, 2023 3:24 pm

    Does Rishi realise we are not fools ?

    • gezza1298 permalink
      December 5, 2023 4:43 pm

      No, I think not but even if he did he wouldn’t care as he has to impress the Davos fascists or lose his job.

      • alexei permalink
        December 5, 2023 6:27 pm

        Exactly. That’s what it’s all about. It’s surprising that so many climate sceptics still haven’t made the connection between all the leaders (past and present) of western nations and their affiliation to the WEF who are behind the push for Net Zero with the UN.

    • Phoenix44 permalink
      December 5, 2023 10:40 pm

      But we are. Plenty buy EVs, majorities support Green policies absurdly believing they wont cost them money. Most parrot that we must “do something” about climate change. We watch our taxes rise and our price sky-rocket but think someone else will pay if only we vote Labour. We are stupid.

  3. Harry Passfield permalink
    December 5, 2023 3:54 pm

    Maybe it’s time to publicise more the creeping deindustrilisation which is reducing our – and only our – CO2 contribution. The fact that a blast-furnace lost here but built somewhere else – China? India? – should also be made more public. These things are real, tangible things that people can understand rather than the ephemeral life-giving gas which CO2 is. I can remember how workers got upset in the ’70s when they could see car-plants being off-shored. Well, they need to get upset again.

  4. liardetg permalink
    December 5, 2023 4:17 pm

    There is no chance that the rise in atmospheric CO2 will be checked. There is no chance that the rise in atmospheric CO2 will be checked. There is no chance that anything UK does will make the slightest difference. We aren’t even ‘thought leaders ‘ as was adumbrated by the ludicrously ignorant Select Defence Committee recently. I could weep

  5. December 5, 2023 6:53 pm

    “We’ll implement the same net zero policies a bit more slowly.” Big deal.

  6. Nigel Sherratt permalink
    December 5, 2023 7:06 pm

    At this rate the CCP will be in charge soon with control of all strategic manufacturing. The silver lining is that then we can put two fingers up to Net Zero like our new masters.

  7. Nigel Sherratt permalink
    December 5, 2023 7:16 pm

    ‘It seems such a shame
    When the English claim the Earth
    That they give rise to such hilarity and mirth

    Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha
    Ho-ho-ho-ho-ho-ho-ho
    He-he-he-he-he-he-he
    Hm-hm-hm-hm-hm’

    (apologies to everyone else)

    This absurd hubris will catch up with us very soon.

    ‘Pride goeth before destruction, and an haughty spirit before a fall.’

  8. Gamecock permalink
    December 5, 2023 8:20 pm

    “which doesn’t burden working people”

    And fu&# everyone else?

    ‘Recent figures from the Climate Change Committee suggest that the ratio has risen to over 4 to 1’

    Forcing people to spend their capital on your projects is evil, the ratio be damned. IT’S NOT THEIR MONEY! Even if people made money on it overall, it is still evil.

    Industry leaving the caring West, and going to the uncaring East. It’s not just CO2 emissions, it about pollution, too.

  9. Phoenix44 permalink
    December 5, 2023 10:43 pm

    Sunak is an empty paper bag, a puppet, nothing more. His words are designed to calm the masses a little, to make us ignore his outrageous and dictatorial polices that punish manufacturers who sell us what we want. There is something deeply rotten at the heart of Western democracies, a corruption and disdain for those who are not elite.

  10. December 6, 2023 7:59 am

    ” which doesn’t burden working people”

    Net zero cost to the UK population to date = approx £700 billion (my estimate) . Others have estimated a total cost of net zero at approx £4.5 trillion.

  11. Gamecock permalink
    December 7, 2023 12:42 pm

    “A petrostate hosting a climate conference is a joke to begin with. Making it even more of a joke is the fact that the UAE planned to use the conference in order to pitch oil and gas deals to foreign governments.” — Taki

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