This sounds great in theory. However, it seems Labour has been swayed by the fossil fuel lobby, which has pushed CCS for years. This announcement represents a massive bet on a still unproven technology, and will lock the UK into fossil fuel dependence for decades to come. The Climate Change Act mandates the UK should achieve net zero emissions by 2050, yet this will be impossible if carbon capture leads to the UK building new gas power stations instead of wind and solar farms.I don't follow any of this, I'm afraid. The Teesside gas power station is already going ahead, none of the other projects are for new gas power stations. Why do they lock us into fossil fuel dependency for decades to come?
We do not deny that both carbon capture and “green” hydrogen (derived from water not methane) may be needed for specific uses in a zero-carbon economy. Carbon capture and storage should be used on existing fossil fuel infrastructure to reduce its emissions as it is phased out
JWexTheSpahttps://bsky.app/profile/jwsidders.bsky ... r4holtnz2u
@jwsidders.bsky.social
I disagree with this thread. If you want buy-in to a Net Zero policy, it is important to separate it from those who are associated with extreme, disruptive, sometimes destructive, immensely unpopular, direct action. Because without buy-in no Net Zero policy can actually work.
The housing minister has written to Homes England telling it to focus the remainder of the Affordable Homes Programme on maximising social housing delivery.
In a letter to Peter Freeman, chair of the government agency, Matthew Pennycook re-iterated the new government’s ambition to deliver 1.5 million new homes in this parliament and set out his “expectations of how the Agency can best support our ambitions”.
The Weeping Angel wrote: ↑Tue Oct 01, 2024 11:04 pm What are people's thoughts on this?A view on what might be happening here. I think this is defensible, but it'll be difficult to get investment back up to where it should be very fast.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/20 ... cture-cuts
Ministers are being asked to draw up billions of pounds in cuts to infrastructure projects over the next 18 months despite Rachel Reeves pledging to invest more to grow the economy, the Guardian has learned.
Members of the cabinet have been asked to model cuts to their investment plans of up to 10% of their annual capital spending as part of this month’s spending review, government sources said.
The demands would mean big projects such as hospital improvements, road building and defence projects being slowed down or stopped altogether as the government looks for ways to repair what they say is a £22bn black hole in the public finances.
John Hannen
@jhannen.bsky.social
On this, I'm told the budget will look to divert resource to stop councils, etc from falling over as part of a one year settlement. Investment will be sacrificed in short term
The comprehensive spending review in the spring will look at investment and reform
The Weeping Angel wrote: ↑Sun Oct 06, 2024 1:42 pm Sue Gray has quit.Inevitable. She's done the right thing but it'll no doubt be totally twisted.
The Weeping Angel wrote: ↑Sun Oct 06, 2024 1:42 pm Sue Gray has quit.No doubt this will be on the news rounds. This, plus actual poor decisions made by the cabinet, will reinforce the (media) perception that the government is in a repeated perpetual crisis. On top of their genuine policy mistakes (net-zero, lebanon, chagos islands)
The Weeping Angel wrote: ↑Sun Oct 06, 2024 3:04 pm I'd like you to explain how the Chagos Islands was a wrong decision.I’d go further - it wasn’t even effectively a decision so much as completing a process the Tories had put in motion. There really wasn’t much of a “choice” at all. So what could they have done?
NevTheSweeper wrote: ↑Sun Oct 06, 2024 3:02 pmBritain's possession of the Chagos Islands has been ruled a breach of international law, at a time when Britain (with others) is demanding that other countries respect international law, they were an own goal so obvious that even James Cleverly could spot it.The Weeping Angel wrote: ↑Sun Oct 06, 2024 1:42 pm Sue Gray has quit.No doubt this will be on the news rounds. This, plus actual poor decisions made by the cabinet, will reinforce the (media) perception that the government is in a repeated perpetual crisis. On top of their genuine policy mistakes (net-zero, lebanon, chagos islands)
The Weeping Angel wrote: ↑Sun Oct 06, 2024 3:04 pm I'd like you to explain how the Chagos Islands was a wrong decision.Firstly, the government didn't announce it in the parliament, which they should have done. Secondly, the decision, although agreed by the Conservatives, didn't have the support of many of the descendants of the islanders. Thirdly, it exposes the government's failings on foreign policy at a time of geo-political crisis.
We have created lots of YouTube videos just so you can achieve [...]
The best flat phpBB theme around. Period. Fine craftmanship and [...]
All you need is right here. Content tag, SEO, listing, Pizza and spaghetti [...]
this should be fantastic. but what about links,images, bbcodes etc etc? [...]