United Kingdom - Sept 10
by Staff
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The policy proposals will of course all be scrutinised, and they will be individually assessed for what benefits they might deliver. Collectively, however, the proposals will need to do a wider political job of bridging the great chasm between what is necessary and what is acceptable. Although there is an increasing awareness and acceptance of the need to slash emissions, some of the actions needed to do this remain surprisingly controversial. Hysterical headlines about bins and recycling, the imaginary war on motorists and the propaganda against wind turbines are among a familiar mix of topics that often substitute for informed debate and stifle bold policy making. If David Cameron and his party are to successfully move on the discussion about climate change and natural resource conservation, they will need to anticipate these and other predictable reactions and to take the initiative. Cameron can do this by being the first of the main party leaders to set out the positive vision of how life could be in a greener society.
Cutting our emissions by 80 per cent in fewer than 50 years demands a universal response. But it is the rich countries which have caused the problem and profited most from the pollution, so we have to provide the solutions. We won't succeed unless China and India join in, but we can't expect the poor to pick up the baton before we have even run the first lap. Nor can Britain stand on the sidelines, reminding the world that the US produces 25 per cent of the world's pollution with less than 5 per cent of its population. President Bush has been a disaster, but that doesn't let us off the hook. The UK has a huge carbon footprint. It's our historic pollution that is causing much of today's climate chaos. John Gummer is a Conservative MP and a former Environment Secretary.
As someone who works in the UK oil industry, I thought you might be interested in a view of how prepared the UK is for possible (!) future oil shortages.I have just finished a stint as an engineer [company name removed to protect identity of writer] on the Forties pipeline terminal. Prior to that position I had spent some 30 years working in various parts of the oil and nuclear sectors as a chemical/process engineer. The career outlined above has enabled me to gain an acute insight of how the UK oil industry is preparing for the (dim) future. Essentially the oil industry is abandoning the UK. BP has either sold-off or closed all its UK refineries ( the last one to go was their Grangemouth refinery) and now only retains the Forties & Sullom Voe interests. Shell is planning to swap over to Middle-east crude around 2011 at its single remaining UK refinery and is busy selling off most of its European refineries. Any questions as to whether any Middle-east crude will be available to the UK in 2011 are studiously ignored in Shell. The general attitude is one of, 'Since we will need the oil, it will be available'. All of the above points to the oil companies foreseeing a pretty bleak future for their UK and European refining operations. Within BP, the message from senior management is that their Forties terminal will still be in operation 20 years from now. What they fail to mention, even to their own employees is just how little oil and gas will be coming out of the North sea then. This is quite weird given that North Sea production dropped another 10% last year, despite Buzzard crude coming ashore. The value of that oil will certainly sustain the future of the terminal, they just might not be able to send the petrol tankers out too far. Quite cute really. With much of the thinking inside the UK oil industry often delusional, outside of it we pretty much in La-La land.
The coalition which was asked to provide evidence to inform the debate believes the government has failed to fairly reflect the arguments for presentations that will be given to more than 1,100 members of the public that are due to start tomorrow. The process was forced upon the government by the high court, which ruled in February that a previous consultation was "seriously flawed" and "manifestly inadequate and unfair". At least six groups, including Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth, WWF and Green Alliance, claim the government is distorting the evidence and say they are considering whether to take the case to court again. The accusations are damaging because the government is bound by its own guidelines to keep an open mind on new nuclear power stations until after the "fullest public consultation". If the government is forced into a third consultation it could delay major energy decisions being made for at least a year. |
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