
New Prime Minister Boris Johnson hasn’t had to wait long for critics of his approach to energy and climate to open fire.
In his first session as PM in the House of Commons, Boris Johnson made two notable statements yesterday, writes Ben Pile @ The Conservative Woman.
First, he declared that the Conservative Party is the party of democracy, and that as such it will defend the result of the referendum.
Second, he reaffirmed his commitment to the Net Zero 2050 target – the policy that Theresa May had stolen from his leadership campaign to secure her own ‘legacy’. Only one of those statements can be correct.
Many believe that the Net Zero 2050 (NZ2050) target lacks a democratic mandate.
It is a fact that the green sympathies of the British people, and their willingness to take the burden that NZ2050 will impose on them – likely trillions of pounds – have not been tested.
The cross-party consensus on climate change in Westminster has been formed by the work of an army of green blob lobbyists behind closed doors, not by transparent, open and public debate.
Many are also of the view that NZ2050 will require a dramatic transformation and undermining of our ways of life. Over the next 30 years, it will create burdens greater than anything the EU ever managed to impose on the population of Europe.
Moreover, ‘leading the world in setting a net zero target’ seems to be intended to create a more massive, inflexible global bureaucracy than anything any European federalist ever imagined.
What is the point of leaving the EU only to foist on Britain and the world another monolith that denies nation states democratic self-determination?
Full article here.
via Tallbloke’s Talkshop
July 26, 2019 at 04:43AM

Reblogged this on Climate- Science.
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