Can you provide some reputable source which supports the claim that achieving net zero by 2050 will NOT adversely affect industry and the people of the UK?
It will come at a huge cost and make out industries uncompetitive I've no doubt and if not properly managed will harm our economy and the living standards of the people of this country and for what?
It will make virtually no difference to the total world output whatever we do in relation to the harmful emissions unless it's in unison with the other heavy polluters but I suppose it will make the virtue signallers feel good about themselves.
If you're hoping for investment in future technologies by UK companies to lead the world that's a good start but then the first thing to do is get rid of this bunch of lying rabble that's in government as we speak.
This country is never going to lead anything while these buffoons are in charge unless it's to the bottom.
Am I to understand from this that "you have no doubt", yet you have no reputable source? Just your assumption with no real evidence or substance?
Your claim in bold is profoundly unsubstantiated. It is also profoundly unqualified within any timescale or lacks acknowledgement of whether investment might lead to future payback or profit - either in domestic terms, domestic market terms, or international market terms. There is not a single qualified determinant or metric in your claim. In other words, it appears to be a closed minded claim.
You make no acknowledgement of how the UK is currently moving to a renewables based electricity generation ecosystem - which is actually making our electricity
cheaper, not more expensive. We have passed the tipping point and continue at a good pace. Adoption was slow to begin - because there was no existing expertise or industry and the resources were expensive. Now that we have large economies of scale we are moving much, much faster. From memory, I think it took us 10 years to get to a specific point in the electricity produced by renewables, but only one more year to double that capacity. This is not harming the economy at all - in fact as early adopters, we can perhaps take a global lead and profit from our expertise (business acumen required here, but we are at a good start point) - and this would be a net positive for the economy, not a harm as you claim. Individuals who have the strong opinion that it is not our place to aim for net zero are the ones who may actually be harming the future of our economy!
Did you know that over 90% of the electricity production that has been added to the Chinese network is renewables based, and that coal generation licences have been cut markedly (over 50%) by China?
It is specifically
because and as a
direct consequence of the UK having approx halved CO2 output in the last 20 years that we can take a leading role in persuading other nations to sign up to new commitments to reduce CO2 output, but ONLY if we also commit to doing more ourselves - this is called diplomacy and world leadership - and it is not being pursued at an unreasonable pace (ie. not one which could "harm or ruin the UK economy"). Only by being in the mix can we hope to be some kind of leader in the field - shouting to other countries that "you have to do your bit - but we aren't going to do anything ourselves" is a fools errand.
Another reason why the UK
should adopt an ambitious target is because the UK has a history. First industrial nation - past leader amongst the "first world" nations in CO2 output (per capita), and one cannot, with any conscience, demand that nations that have yet to achieve developed status stop their development - that, too, is a fools errand and can only lead to the diminishment of the UK as a globally respected leader and the diminishment of the opportunity for developing a world leading renewable industry.
There is so much more interconnectedness than appears to be acknowledged in your claim that transition could harm the UK economy - there is so much more data and evidence that I doubt you have accessed or acknowledged. I dunno. Maybe you have - and maybe you just
prefer the naysayers such as Tice and the Tufton Street lobbyists who are funded by fossil fuel concerns?