Author: Iowa Climate Science Education

The hypocrisy of Labour’s attacks on Reform’s net zero plans–Ross Clark

By Paul Homewood

 

A good piece by Ross Clark in the Spectator:

 

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The net zero lobby just gets sillier and sillier. According to energy minister Michael Shanks, Reform’s policy of abandoning net zero targets is an ‘anti-growth ideology’ which would cost nearly a million jobs. Coming in a week when the Office of National Statistics (ONS) reported that the number of payrolled employees across the UK fell by 135,000 during Labour’s first year in power – with 25,000 lost in May alone (the month after the higher rates of employers’ national Insurance came into effect) – you might think that government ministers would want to avoid talking about job losses just at the moment, but no matter.

Shanks’ ‘evidence’ for his claim is a report by the CBI and the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit (ECIU) claiming that the ‘net zero sector’ provides jobs for 951,000 people in Britain – 273,000 directly and 679,000 in the supply chain. It consists of 22,800 companies, who employees are apparently 38 per cent more productive than UK employees as a whole.

That, of course, all sounds fantastic. But the problem comes, as with so many of these things, when you start to look up the methodology. Who are these 22,800 companies who are counted as part of the net zero economy and whose existence is supposedly threatened by Reform’s climate policy? I did ask the ECIU when it published its report back in February for a list of these companies, but was told I couldn’t have it – as it is ‘proprietary data’ provided by an organisation called the Data City. Just try using that argument when trying to get a paper in scientific journal.

But it did provide the following definitions. The count includes ‘organisations dedicated to energy management and energy infrastructure development’, ‘companies focusing on landfill management’, ‘companies providing services and technology for the mitigation of pollution’, ‘companies dedicated to solid waste removal, management and processing’, ‘companies focusing on the technology and development of electric vehicles’ and ‘companies providing services for increased energy efficiency in buildings’. The first category could well include everyone who works for the National Grid, the second and fourth every waste management company in Britain, the fifth anyone who works for, say, Nissan, and the sixth any company that manufactures loft insulation or any builder who fits it.

Full story here.

As Ross Clark points out, the CBI analysis was a deliberate attempt to deflect attention away from the utter failure to produce all the green jobs we have been promised over the years:

The 951,000 net zero jobs claim seems to me little more than crude propaganda to cover up the fact that Britain has failed miserably to capture more than a token share of global jobs in renewable energy. According to the International Renewable Energy Agency, Britain has a total of 57,000 in renewable energy – 0.3 per cent of 16.2 million jobs worldwide.”

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July 22, 2025 at 03:44AM

CFACT takes stage, delivers important message to ALEC atendees

CFACT sponsored four model bills.

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July 22, 2025 at 03:27AM

Vauxhall owner Stellantis slumps to £2bn loss after botched bet on hydrogen

By Paul Homewood

 

h/t Ian Magness

Stellantis has many problems, but wasting money on hydrogen and EVs has not helped!

From the Telegraph:

 

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The owner of Vauxhall has slumped to a €2.3bn (£2bn) loss after cancelling an expensive bet on hydrogen-powered vehicles and electric cars.

Stellantis, which also owns Fiat and Peugeot, said scrapping plans for a fleet of hydrogen-powered vans as well as soaring restructuring costs and the impact of Donald Trump’s trade war would push it into the red for the first half of 2025.

In results on Monday, it reported a €3.3bn hit to costs because of the cancelled hydrogen plan as well as plans to divert spending from electric to hybrid vehicles.

Stellantis had planned to launch a range of hydrogen vans this year under its Pro One division, which were poised to be built in France and Poland.

However the plans were ditched after being deemed too “niche” and expensive. The company’s European operating chief, Jean-Philippe Imparato, said last week the hydrogen market had “no prospects of mid-term economic stability”.

Full story here.

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July 22, 2025 at 03:18AM

WILD EXAGGERATION OF FOSSIL FUEL SUBSIDIES

Those seeking to promote renewable energy often claim that fossil fuels receive huge subsidies which exceed the subsidies given to renewables. That is nonsense which is clearly explained in the following article: 

The $7 Trillion Fossil Fuel Subsidy Swindle | NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT

It is the massive subsidies given to solar and wind that are the problem, plus their intermittency which means you need to have constant back-up supply. But rather than admit this obvious point they would rather muddy the water by claiming that it is the other way round.

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July 22, 2025 at 01:33AM