BobKowalski
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 17 May 2007
- Messages
- 21,511
Having had time to read and digest all of your post now, the following quote struck me:
"China, not being a dogmatic country though, also understands that renewables are a medium term solution that will catapult them into the world's leading economic power. But that in order to industrialise and modernise some of the poorer parts of its incredibly humongously large country, it needs energy now. China isn't mass building coal plants because it doesn't care about renewables, it's building coal plants because it cares about civic expansion."
Well precisely. We should also not be dogmatic. I am not proposed we abandon all our renewables efforts, merely that we are being extremely dogmatic about it. It makes no sense to import gas when we have our own. It makes no sense to import oil (or steel) when we can make our own. We have resources we should be using, not shutting them off due to ideological dogma.
Our high energy costs (highest in the developed world) are driving to point where manufacturing in the UK is no longer viable. This is a terrible policy, especially considering that growth is the only way out of our fiscal malaise.
We aren’t being dogmatic though. Hence the decision to save the Scunthorpe blast furnace for future steel production. Our decision to phase out coal was pragmatic. It impacts less on the environment we live in and no one is arguing that breathing polluted air is a positive - what am I saying of course they do with the battle against clean air initiatives. People eh? Dumb as fuck. Probably all that lead in petrol rotted their brains before we banned it. And that was a battle as well! “Too costly, it will ruin my engine (fuck my brain I don’t use it)” etc etc
Over 50% of our electricity is now from renewables/nuclear sources. On what planet is that not a good thing and yes I am pro nuclear power. That’s 50% generated in this country. That’s 50% and growing where we are not relying on someone else or worrying about running out of oil and gas. Seriously, what is the issue?
You asked in another post why China does what it does and the answer was in the part you highlighted. An aim to be the dominant economic power. You can add India to that ambition. Half of the world’s population lives in Asia. They have the resources, the people and it seems the drive to get there. They are not, unlike the US, trying to turn the clock back or protecting their non EV car industry with trade barriers. A decision that will suppress investment in future tech and depress innovation. Investment and innovation is how developed economies grow.