The Green Revolution is Destroying UK Jobs, Livelihoods and Communities

From THE DAILY SCEPTIC

The UK Office for National Statistics (ONS) appears to be at least a month late in producing its latest estimate of so-called green jobs. Don’t bother is good advice. Hunt the green job – a category that cannot be defined since all jobs that avoid direct processing of hydrocarbons can be rebranded with a virtuous label – is an annual statistical joke. Last year, the ONS informed us that in 2023 the number of people employed in “environmental charities” was similar in number to the 47,000 at work in renewable energy.  But the truth is starting to dawn. There will be no green revolution no matter how much state money is thrown at the project. Few recent projects in the UK demonstrate this more clearly than plans to waste £22 billion of public money to capture carbon dioxide from the same British factories that Net Zero deindustrialisation is already closing at a rapidly gathering pace.

Led by the energy policies of the Mad Miliband, the economically illiterate Labour Government is diverting vast sums of money from productive job-creating use to fund technologies that are unproven, unlikely to scale and simply uneconomic. This latter class includes wind power, where the lie is told that it is cheaper than gas while British electricity suppliers drive away productive business by charging prices as high as any in the developed world. This presumably comes under the heading of a ‘Noble Lie’, a convenient and much used political weapon embedded throughout the entire fast-fading fake climate emergency project.

Barely a day goes by without the laws of physics intruding on the green boondoggle. In 2020, flush with £1.5 billion of cash from the French government, Airbus promised an emission-free hydrogen-powered plane by 2035. Nobody it seems told them that huge on-board insulated tanks storing highly explosive hydrogen at minus-253°C made no technical or economic sense. Airbus has now quietly dropped the project, returning to the real world where everybody else knew it was totally unfeasible.

Hydrogen use is of course still flavour of the month, mainly because the deluded think it can back up unreliable wind and solar power. It can’t of course and in the world governed by the laws of science only gas can currently do that. But gas is not green and perhaps even worse it is produced by private companies, so the Mad One is pouring concrete down fracking wells in poor areas of the North, and refusing to issue new oil and gas licences for offshore explorers in soon-to-be-poor towns in Scotland and the North East of England. Meanwhile His Madness is having a quiet word in China’s ear and telling them he would rather the solar panels destined to blanket prime agricultural land were not made by slaves. What next, you might ask. Telling the Congolese not to use children to mine cobalt for the electric cars of the truly virtuous who motor amongst us. Or perhaps taking note of the growing evidence that onshore windmills the size of the Eiffel Tower are having a devastating effect on wildlife and clearing the countryside of everything from the smallest fly to the largest eagle. Perhaps not – economic cluelessness goes hand in hand with rampant hypocrisy in the grisly green echo chamber.

The so-called green revolution relies almost entirely on state-directed diversion of capital under cover of the fake climate emergency, a narrative curated by governing elites and their trusted mainstream messengers for decades, and almost any whacky scheme can be justified. And few are whackier than wind power, a technology first seen in Britain in the reign of Henry II (1154-1189). Nobody would build a windmill these days unless the state bribed them with huge subsidies – payments that add £15 billion to electricity bills paid by rich and poor alike every year. Payments that are slowly and surely helping to destroy what remains of Britain’s manufacturing base. Payments, it might be noted, that could build 20-30 modern hospitals in Britain’s run-down cities – every single year.

As with most if not all state direction of industrial capital, the jobs destroyed in the private sector will not be balanced, and certainly not increased, in the new make-believe green world. For starters, they are often in the wrong place. Any new jobs will be dispersed across the UK, while many industrial jobs relying on hydrocarbons are concentrated in well-established industrial regions. It is presumably assumed that workers will move towards the new jobs, but that largely failed to happen in the 1980s when deindustrialisation wiped out coal mining. Few workers were retrained and the valleys of South Wales have never really recovered their proud working class traditions and livelihoods. Arguments can of course be made that industries naturally die away and are replaced by superior technologies. But anyone making that argument for the green revolution is frankly an idiot. The harm is all self-imposed and is part of a wider global Net Zero collectivist agenda. Under a Labour Welsh Government today the green revolution means cancelling a bypass planned to reduce the bottleneck in the vital M4 Newport tunnel and closing steel blast furnaces in Port Talbot, throwing thousands out of work.

Worker mobility is an issue rarely considered by politicians, who often view themselves as citizens of anywhere. Few considerations of family and community ties seem to trouble their decisions. Recent research in the United States highlights a lack of mobility in the working class communities and suggests that the geographic mismatch between current fossil fuel workers and any emerging green job opportunities is a significant bar. In fact, the authors suggest that only 2% of fossil fuel workers are likely to transition without significant policy interventions. The UK is of course a much smaller geographic area but similar constraints are likely to apply. As can be noted, previous phases of deindustrialisation have tended to leave many communities high and dry. The slow materialisation of new jobs in industrial areas battered by green policies, and almost certain limited worker mobility, will present significant challenges in the future. Quite possibly the British Government is hopeful that any labour constrictions can be solved with its near open border policy and the arrival of hundreds of thousands of mobile migrants every year.

In the meantime we look forward to the latest, one might say heroic, attempt by the ONS to convince us that green jobs are increasing in the British economy. ‘My old man’s a dustman’, ran the 1960s song, an occupation now relabelled by the green bean counters as ‘My old man’s a sustainable recycling operative’. Titles might change but the job does not, and he probably still wears a dustman’s hat, is possessed of a pair of cor blimey trousers and lives in a council flat.

Chris Morrison is the Daily Sceptic’s Environment Editor.

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April 25, 2025 2:10 am

Story Tip, from the Guardian

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2025/apr/25/mps-question-value-of-billions-in-subsidies-granted-to-drax-power-plant

A government spending watchdog has questioned the value of the multi-billion pound subsidies granted to the Drax power plant in North Yorkshire – and said that plans to hand over billions more may not represent value for money.
The government has provided about £22bn of public money to businesses and households that burn biomass pellets as fuel over the past three years, including £6.5bn for the owner of the Drax plant.

The power plant, which generates about 5% of the UK’s electricity, is expected receive more than £10bn in renewable energy subsidies between 2015 and the end of 2026 – despite ongoing concerns that wood pellets are not always sustainably sourced.

The Public Accounts Committee has said that biomass generators have been left to “mark their own homework” when it comes to proving that their fuel met the sustainability standards set by the subsidy scheme.

The committee added it was not convinced by the government’s plan to heap a further £2.5bn in subsidies on the Drax plant by extending its support beyond the 2026 deadline for a further five years while it invests in carbon capture technology.

Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown, MP and chair of the committee, said: “Billions upon billions of government support has been provided to the biomass sector over the past two decades. Rather than taking it on faith that the woody biomass burnt for energy is a sustainably sourced low-carbon alternative fuel, it is long past time a true assay was made of what taxpayers are getting for their money.”

April 25, 2025 2:20 am

And in more news from the Guardian….

Britain will go “all out” for a low-carbon future and accelerate the push to net zero instead of slowing down as some have demanded, the prime minister said on Thursday.

In his strongest declaration yet of support for the net zero agenda, Sir Keir Starmer told a conference in London of more than 60 countries that tackling the climate crisis and bolstering energy security were “in the DNA of my government”.

He said: “This government is acting now, with a muscular industrial policy, to seize the opportunities [in low-carbon technology] to boost investment, build new industries, drive UK competitiveness, and unlock export opportunities. That is the change we need. We won’t wait – we will accelerate.”

Starmer’s speech – made in front of the European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, and the US senior energy official, Tommy Joyce – made clear that the prime minister sees renewable energy as core to the UK’s future prosperity and national security.

“We’re paying the price for our over-exposure, over many years, to the rollercoaster of international fossil fuel markets, leaving the economy and therefore people’s household budgets, vulnerable to the whims of dictators like Putin,” he said. “It’s our determination that working people should not be exposed like this any more.”

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/apr/24/britain-will-accelerate-push-to-net-zero-starmer-tells-energy-summit

He could not do more for Reform if he was trying.

Corrigenda
Reply to  michel
April 25, 2025 2:32 am

But it is clear – and has been clear for a few years now – that CO2 is most certainly NOT a cause of global warming. Why then have we a UK government that cannot even grasp this, that wastes huge sums on ridiculous remedial attempts and STILL has not reversed policy?

Idle Eric
Reply to  Corrigenda
April 25, 2025 3:11 am

Why then have we a UK government that cannot even grasp this,

Too few of them have the kind of scientific/analytical education/background that would allow them to question the net-zero project.

For example, it should be obvious too all that wind cannot power a modern economy, you only need to look at the historical pattern to see that weeks of low output are a regular occurrence, but the belief seems to be that if we just build more of them, that will make the wind blow.

None of this is complicated stuff, it’s mostly just basic high-school maths.

Neil Lock
Reply to  Corrigenda
April 25, 2025 3:59 am

Corrigenda, the UK establishment, Tories and Labour alike, are all-in on the UN’s “Sustainable Development Goals,” which require the shutdown of Western industrial civilization. The policy is a result of religious zeal, and nothing else.

Reply to  Corrigenda
April 25, 2025 5:27 am

CO2-based climate alarmism is the Left’s primary economic weapon. Given that the Left has largely ‘marched through the institutions’, all geological evidence that CO2 is not the ‘control knob’ of the climate, or that modeled ‘projections’ of future temperature rise are based on the faulty assumption of radiative heat transfer by so-called GHGs in the lower troposphere have been, and will continue to be, actively suppressed.

Reply to  Corrigenda
April 25, 2025 4:45 pm

Reversing a policy is anathema to any politicians, who wish us to believe that they are all infallible

CD in Wisconsin
Reply to  michel
April 25, 2025 2:38 am

“That is the change we need. We won’t wait – we will accelerate.”

This reminds of Hitler late in WWII. Instead of admitting that Germany was losing the war, he would double down on his fantasy that they could and would still win it.

The two sets of behaviors seem to be similar here, and I imagine that there probably is a term for it in psychology. It might be said here that history is repeating itself in the UK today to some degree.

strativarius
Reply to  CD in Wisconsin
April 25, 2025 2:53 am

Hitler refused to listen to his Generals etc. Military minds like Guderian and Mannstein were tossed in the bin in favour of the Fuehrer’s superior strategems.

Nobody in Parliament really doubts net zero, they disagree on timing and details like that.

cgh
Reply to  strativarius
April 25, 2025 9:36 am

Mostly wrong. It was the generals who did all the planning before 1943 and thus lost the war. The generals deserved to be tossed in the bin. And it’s just as well for the rest of us that Nazi Germany turned out to be so inept at organizing a modern war.

strativarius
Reply to  cgh
April 25, 2025 9:59 am

Mostly wrong.

Lol Excellent stuff.

Reply to  CD in Wisconsin
April 25, 2025 5:01 am

“This is the change we need.”

So Starmer admits a change is needed.

I guess “doubling down on stupid” is one form of change.

It’s going to be very difficult for these guys to admit they were wrong. They are going to hang on to their Net Zero delusions as long as possible, which doesn’t bode well for the economy of the UK, since these people will only see the light after the economy has crashed and burned. It’s in a slow-motion crash right now.

CD in Wisconsin
Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 25, 2025 7:59 am

Politicians rarely if ever admit to being wrong about anything. It seems to be a cardinal rule in politics that you don’t admit to being fallible.

I’m not sure I want to know what the UK’s economy and energy costs will be like by the time the next parliamentary elections roll around. Nigel Farage and the UK need each other more than a lot of people probably know.

Reply to  CD in Wisconsin
April 26, 2025 5:13 am

I’m genuinely worried about the fate of the UK.

Destroyed by CO2.

Destroyed by Delusions about CO2.

Destroyed by Delusional People.

another ian
April 25, 2025 2:36 am

Hmmm! I’ll ask a driller friend about this as being an impediment

so the Mad One is pouring concrete down fracking wells”

IIRC drillers use concrete fill and re-drill as routine error correction.

Unless it is super good government standard concrete.

More when I find more

Reply to  another ian
April 25, 2025 5:36 am

Cement (pronounced see-ment), not concrete, is usually what is used to plug and abandon (P&A) wells, support casing strings, etc.

strativarius
April 25, 2025 2:47 am

Miliband has spent the last week or so “doubling down” on his over zealous devotion to the net zero idea.

And that is really all it is in the end; a fantastical, impractical, unachievable and hugely expensive pipe-dream. And it will fail.

Ed & chums recently held an Energy Summit in London. He got a talking to from a certain Tommy Joyce…

““Some want to regulate every form of energy besides the so-called renewables, completely out of existence and in favour of a net zero. We oppose these harmful and dangerous policies. This is not energy security, and we know exactly where it leads. The focus during the last administration was on climate politics and policies leading to that (energy) scarcity. These policies have been embraced by many, not just the United States, and harm human lives.”
https://order-order.com/2025/04/24/us-energy-official-slams-harmful-and-dangerous-net-zero-policies-at-london-energy-summit/

“When and where their energy is scarce or restricted, humans suffer. Unfortunately, the focus during the last [U.S.] administration was on climate politics and policies leading to that scarcity,” Tommy Joyce, a Trump supporter who is acting assistant secretary of international affairs at the U.S. Energy Department, told a gathering of ministers and representatives from around 60 countries.

“These policies have been embraced by many, not just the United States, and harm human lives,” he added. Joyce’s intervention ran counter to the sentiments expressed by most other speakers at the summit, including U.K. Energy Secretary Ed Miliband and French Minister for Industry and Energy Marc Ferracci

One U.K. energy industry figure said of Joyce’s speech: “That went down like a fart in a phone box.”
https://www.politico.eu/article/donald-trump-official-tommy-joyce-rip-climate-policy-london-energy-summit/

A phone box? How quaint.  

You can see why they are desperate to stop Trump addressing Parliament

“MPs and peers call for Trump to be blocked from addressing parliament during UK visit” – The Independent

“MPs plotting to BLOCK Donald Trump’s address to Parliament – ‘We’ve got nothing to learn from a serial liar!'” – GB News

And tellingly

“UK (Parliament Politics Magazine) – MPs and peers in the UK oppose Donald Trump’s planned address to Parliament, citing concerns over his remarks on NATO, Ukraine, and British democracy.

As reported by The Guardian…
https://parliamentnews.co.uk/mps-reject-donald-trumps-speech-to-uk-parliament

Well, they would, wouldn’t they.

Reply to  strativarius
April 25, 2025 5:17 am

These Leftwing MP’s can’t stand hearing the truth, and Trump is going to tell them the truth about their situation, They know their situation is horrible, and Trump is going to point it out to the Public.

Yeah, they don’t want to give Trump a platform. That’s not going to stop Trump from offering his opinion, though. They will hear from him one way or another.

The UK government is whipping a dead Net Zero horse. Trump will call them on it and make them look stupid.

CD in Wisconsin
Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 25, 2025 8:21 am

“……and make them look stupid.”

Do you think they need any help Tom?

Reply to  CD in Wisconsin
April 26, 2025 5:18 am

I agree, they already look stupid. Maybe I should have said, “Trump will point out their stupidity”. 🙂

Reply to  strativarius
April 25, 2025 6:02 am

It is the way of the modern left to shut down the expression of views with which they disagree. Grown-ups, on the other hand, are able to listen to views contrary to their own. I have mixed views on Trump: at times he can be brilliant; at other times awful. But if I ever had the opportunity to hear him speak I would take it.

Incidentally, I wonder if it was a Labour MP who said ‘We’ve got nothing to learn from a serial liar!’. It would be a bit rich it it were, given the inability of our current front bench to tell the truth about anything.

Abbas Syed
April 25, 2025 3:15 am

Miliband is a rarity, a conviction politician

Unfortunately, his convictions are wrong, and he’s astonishingly ignorant of the facts, of economics, of science and of engineering

He is literally on a crusade, a jihad, and is going to visit untold misery on the public and UK economy if he’s not stopped

strativarius
Reply to  Abbas Syed
April 25, 2025 3:21 am

Thatcher was THE conviction politician and she changed tack…

Miliband is a religious zealot. A very different thing, altogether.

Scissor
Reply to  strativarius
April 25, 2025 4:37 am

The noose around the goose’s neck should be removed or at least loosened.

https://dailysceptic.org/2025/04/24/net-zero-harms-human-lives-trumps-envoy-warns-starmer/

Neil Lock
Reply to  Abbas Syed
April 25, 2025 5:03 am

He deserves to be a convict politician.

April 25, 2025 3:17 am

Milliband and the other communist hustlers can stop their nonsense. The future is cold, very cold.

https://nos.nl/nieuwsuur/collectie/13871/artikel/2564907-nieuw-klimaatscenario-baart-onderzoekers-zorgen-juist-kouder-nederland

Neil Lock
Reply to  huls
April 25, 2025 4:05 am

My Dutch is a bit rusty, but that looks like another run of the old “gulf stream is going to stop” chestnut. De-bunked many times already.

strativarius
Reply to  Neil Lock
April 25, 2025 4:37 am

Go for double Dutch…

Bruce Cobb
April 25, 2025 4:44 am

Remember the Luddite Revolution?
Neither do I.

strativarius
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
April 25, 2025 4:47 am

Do you remember the Anglo-Ashanti wars?

Coach Springer
April 25, 2025 6:42 am

“The Green Revolution is Destroying UK Jobs, Livelihoods and Communities”
Not the only tool in that toolbox.

john cheshire
April 25, 2025 6:56 am

I would say that not only are these creatures in government economic illiterates, they are also innumerate. I’d be surprised if any of them can count to 10 using their fingers (and thumbs, for the pedants).

mleskovarsocalrrcom
April 25, 2025 7:54 am

For a while you can fool the people with fake news about weather being climate but you can’t fool them about losses of jobs, businesses, lifestyle, and economy.

Sparta Nova 4
April 25, 2025 8:29 am

The pursuit of economic slavery.

jack rodwell
April 25, 2025 11:12 am

We Brits are servile in nature taking orders without complaint yet oddly brave making us good stock for fighting battles. Trouble is we are half asleep most of the time so cult climate has fenagled its way unchallenged into our entire political system.

No way out from the Miliband lunacy unless Trump lasts his term and another Republican President maintains the death grip on cult climate. We might follow a discrete distance behind then.

2hotel9
April 25, 2025 11:27 am

It is doing exactly what it is intended to do.

Westfieldmike
April 25, 2025 1:31 pm

Labour are going to spend 50 million quid on experiments to dim the Sun. Can someone order a convoy of ambulances to take away the MP’s who voted for this to the nearest mental institution.
Any MP backing this insanity, should be judged mentally ill and unfit for public office.

April 25, 2025 4:44 pm

“…he would rather the solar panels destined to blanket prime agricultural land were not made by slaves”

This Youtube article gives a different view on the ‘Chinese solar panels are made by slaves”

https://youtu.be/9NnXqf6s3VY?t=437

This shows an ultra-modern manufacturing facility, most of which is automated so very few ‘slaves’ required.

What it does not show is the source of the materials used for the panels nor the ore processing environmental disasters also attributable to China.

If the 80% figure quoted for China’s contribution to World-wide solar panel manufacture, all other countries are beholden to them, not a good situation for any commodity.

sherro01
April 25, 2025 5:59 pm

“My old man’s a dustman” bears on Cockney rhyming slang. The dustman boots have “such a job to pull them up, he calls them Daisy Roots”.Delightful. Sadly, lesser authors have lost the skill of rhyming slang by simple choice of words that rhyme, ignoring the vital connection between the original and slang words, in this example the dual job to pull them up. That is where the true skill of rhyming slang shows. Geoff S