Any justification for Ed Miliband’s Net Zero climate policy, whether real or imaginary, has vanished with the official abandonment by the IPCC of the scariest concentration scenario RCP8.5. Even Tony Blair can now perceive that the pursuit of Net Zero is unwarranted and harmful to Britain.
It’s now 20 years since the publication of the ‘Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change‘ in 2006: a review commissioned by Gordon Brown, then Chancellor of the Exchequer, in a Labour government led by Prime Minister Tony Blair. This review began the UK-drive towards the crazy carbon-phobic policies which are helping to impoverish the nation, aided by unrealistic scenarios. There is some irony that Blair is now calling for the abandonment of Net Zero: when the Review was published he warned about the disaster that would come from inaction. It was his government that helped to pave the way for the excessive climate policies we have today, and scaring people was a tool of risk management, as Lord Giddens noted in the Lords March 1st 2005.
The Stern Review claimed that the risk from global warming was such that there was imminent danger to international standards of living. But in reality, the review made totally unrealistic claims in its assessment of warming and economic impacts. It brazenly asserted that there was more than a 50% risk of global temperatures rising by 5°C by the end of the century. Given that scenario, the cost of inaction would be 5% of global GDP per annum. The review called for nations to spend between 1% and 2% of GDP as a matter of urgency to reduce carbon dioxide emission by 80%. It was effectively a call for economic self-flagellation. The scary scenario outlined by Stern’s review was based on the ‘Special Report on Emissions Scenarios’ (SRES) strong A2 pathway, which morphed into the RCP8.5 which is familiar to us. The Representative Concentration Pathways (RCPs) were first proposed in 2007 and adopted by the IPCC’s ‘Fifth Assessment Report’ (AR5) of 2014. While RCP8.5 was an extreme and unlikely scenario, like its forerunner SRES A2 it was widely treated as the ‘business as usual’ case by climate alarmists.
Lord Nigel Lawson, former Chancellor of the Exchequer in the Thatcher government, responded critically to the Stern Review in a lecture in 2006 for the Centre for Policy Studies. This was expanded into the book An Appeal to Reason, published in 2008. Lawson pointed out the uncertainty in the IPCC modelling: the SRES A1 pathway, for example, had a spread of between 1°C and 6°C temperature rise by 2100 (2.0°C to 5.4°C for A2). Given this spread, the high temperature rise outcome must be considered a low likelihood, certainly much less than 50%.
Further criticism by Lawson was that these high scenarios had assumed unrealistic population growth rates and not modelled the efficiency of energy use accurately. Energy intensiveness has declined in the past 50 years. In terms of economic costs in agriculture and food production, the Stern Review had not taken into account the benefit of higher carbon dioxide levels for plant growth (global greening) and overlooked the ability of farmers to adjust as necessary to a changing climate by growing different or hardier crops.
Lawson pointed out that the cost of decarbonising the economy is uncertain, but would be enormous. He quoted figures (in 2006 prices) of between $80 billion and $1,100 billion a year globally, with the cost falling primarily on Western nations. The higher figures are likely if society moves more quickly to cut carbon, which is what Stern called for. The installation of renewable energy infrastructure also requires subsidies and back-up in the form of carbon fuel power stations. The cost of de-carbonising would also impact poorer consumers and nations more, especially as hydrocarbon fuel prices and subsidies are forced to increase.
In sum, the Stern Review miscalculated the risk of a 5°C temperature rise by 2100 and overstated the economic impact of climate change by not taking into account the ability of agriculture to adjust, nor the economic benefit of global warming in some instances. The review had also not taken into account the extremely high costs of removing carbon fuels from the economy. When those errors are acknowledged, any justification for a reduction in carbon emissions by 80% (or 100% i.e., Net Zero) is removed.
Instead, Lawson argued that it would be more beneficial to direct invest towards adapting to a changing climate instead. The obligation of the West is then to extend finance and technological know-how to poorer nations through development programmes. One reason for doing this is that some of the problems societies faces are not new, such as sea level rises, and so direct mitigation through development would offer enhanced protection even without the question of climate change.
The same economic arguments have continued in recent years, with RCP8.5 often treated as ‘business as usual’, even though it is now officially considered an implausible scenario by the IPCC. As with the errors of the Stern Review, the scenario assumed a massive increase in coal production and higher population growth rates while ignoring technological advances in energy efficiency. For example, the internal combustion engine has nearly doubled in energy efficiency in 50 years. But RCP8.5 has continued to be used to justify the drive towards Net Zero in recent years. The impact of doing little or nothing to move away from carbon use is overstated, while the cost of action is understated or hidden in subsidies that are passed onto consumers.
It’s becoming increasingly evident that any justification for Net Zero has been demolished, as even Tony Blair has noticed. In a recent foreword to a report of the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change, ‘The Climate Paradox: Why We Need to Reset Action on Climate Change‘, he wrote that “any strategy based on either ‘phasing out’ fossil fuels in the short term or limiting consumption is a strategy doomed to fail”. He observed that ordinary people are increasingly sceptical of excessive climate action when other nations are not following suit. At the same time, he noted that the tone and arguments of the climate alarmists are “riven with irrationality”. Of course, Blair has an eye on the establishment of power-hungry AI data centres and the promotion of digital ID, and he still calls for the installation of hugely expensive carbon capture technologies, but it’s a step in the right direction.
The economic justification for an 80% reduction in carbon use, or Net Zero as it is now, was always flawed, based on unrealistic inputs into the scariest climate scenarios. But now with the RCP8.5 pathway officially acknowledged to be implausible, any remaining reason to pursue Net Zero has vanished. The economic case now should direct investment towards developing mitigation strategies to alleviate floods and droughts globally (whether or not they increase as a result of a changing climate), combined with improved weather forecasting and impact modelling and technology transfer to developing nations.
Andrew Sibley is a semi-retired chartered meteorologist with an MSc in Environmental Decision-Making and an MPhil in Theology.
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Hardier crops? The hardiness zones on seed packages is all about crops resistant to colder conditions not warmer.
You have never perused a commercial seed grain catalog have you? Depending on crop, there are kinds of varieties from soil type, rainfall, etc. to examine.
The hardiness zones you are examining are mainly based on cold temperatures for perennial plants, trees, and shrubs. That is so they can survive extreme cold temperatures during winter.
Grain crops are not perennial, they are planted and harvested in the same growing season. Seed manufacturers recommend seed varieties based upon location, and use high temperatures as one of the determining factors.
Could Blair’s selective pull-back from the most extreme cost projection of net zero be prompted by his continuing involvements in other forms of “carbon reduction” programs that are in line for taxpayer funding?
In other words, competition for “other people’s money” got too hot, and he wants to get his gigs up before the inevitable happens –
“other people’s money” runs out.
I think Blair senses that the Labour party is in dire danger of being finished off by the current crop of Labour MPs – hence all the Blairite sheepdogs, particularly in the Lords. But Labour’s backbenchers can’t be easily controlled and they don’t revere Tony Blair, either.
You can’t really make this stuff up; Keir Hardie started the Labour party and Keir Starmer is killing the Labour party
The Labour Party once represented Britain’s Working Class, and defended its interests. Nowadays it stands for the “Lanyard Class” (State sector workers, charities, NGO’s, teachers, University staff etc), the unemployed, and recent immigrants, especially Muslims, and actively despises ordinary working Britons.
Back in the day my mother was a NUPE shop steward at Imperial College. Real old Labour values that were in the 1970s deemed to be racist, xenophobic, *.phobic etc
Labour is the party of the middle and upper middle classes that believes they (being university educated) know better than the lower orders.
As Blair once put it: “It’s my job to listen to you and then tell you why you are wrong“.
These days it would be good not to have a Keir in the world.
Not just that, his son has fingers in the IT world that Blair is trying to divert taxpayers money into
The Justification for Net Zero Has Vanished with the Demise of RCP8.5
Yet no mainstream media is interested. Government certainly wants this one swept under the green carpet. The one thing that stands out for me is the fact that nobody in science in the UK is saying the quiet bit out loud – their jobs and salaries come before the truth.
Everything the CCC told us is in the words of their masters at the UN IPCC: “implausible“. Just a matter of days ago we had their latest forebodings and it’s (RCP8.5) business as usual:
Reaching 4°C above preindustrial levels by the end of the century cannot yet be ruled out.
The Climate Change Committee (CCC) has recommended reducing meat and dairy consumption to meet the UK’s net zero goals, focusing on freeing up land used for livestock farming.
…
the CCC advocates for a greater emphasis on plant-based alternatives, including plant proteins and innovative food technologies like precision fermentation and cell-based meats.
That land is needed for all those solar panels. You could say that their reaction to the demise of RCP8.5 has been – as usual – to double down.
Well said Sir,
The climate scare game is over, but the bureaucrats and carpetbaggers don’t want the public to know this. So, they try to silence debate and carry on their economic depreciations as usual, however, the public is finally waking up to this political nonsense and will demand an accounting at the ballot box. The sooner the better for the UK and Australia.
But hasn’t “implausibility” been the main problem all the way through?!
In other words, was any of this nonsense – RCP8.5 itself and Net Zero by 2050 – ever subject to even scoping-level feasibility analysis?
Well, no, it wasn’t – the whole shooting match was swallowed hook-line-and sinker by so-called decision makers who were clearly totally unqualified to make decisions on our behalf on matters science and engineering.
RCP8.5, for example, which required coal production to be increased 5-fold, which would have resulted in the depletion of known global coal Reserves again and again. So not just implausible – totally and utterly impossible!
Similarly with Net Zero, just looking at the demand on one metal needed to get there by 2050: the amount of copper which has to be produced between now and 2050 in order to enable Net Zero to happen is 6 BILLION tonnes. Meanwhile, current global copper production is 25 million tonnes per annum (Mtpa), which means at current rates of production it would take 240 years to get there.
Or, if anybody was idiotic enough to believe that overnight by tomorrow morning, copper production could be increased from 25Mtpa to 240Mtpa (required to achieve Net Zero by 2050), then global copper Reserves of 880 million tonnes would be depleted in . . . less than 4 years.
So ALL OF IT is not just impossible – IT’S DOWNRIGHT BLOODY STUPID . . . and a number of simple scoping-level feasibility studies would have shown as much right from the beginning.
Even a napkin and a pencil to them is as a crucifix to a vampire
Gaslighting Special
Press release
Energy security, jobs and investment boost through climate action
Families and businesses will continue to reap the benefits of the clean energy transition in the coming decades. – gov uk
Delusion just isn’t a strong enough term for this…er, delusion.
Britain’s largest retailers have cut nearly 18,000 jobs over the past year according to Bloomberg. You’ll never guess what they blame…
Higher taxes and wages under Labour have squeezed supermarkets
https://order-order.com/2026/06/05/supermarkets-shed-18000-jobs-and-blame-labour-taxes-and-wage-hikes/
The welfare bill is ballooning.
Unemployment hits highest rate in nearly five years
Getting a job is likely to be harder than before, as redundancies increase and the number of unemployed people per vacancy reaches a new post-pandemic high. – Sky
War is peace and all that.
Remewables are about energy security and, as can be seen in spain, shield from volatile fossil fuel prices caused by just-stop-oil trump.
https://cepa.org/article/europes-renewables-loosen-energy-stranglehold/
Maybe you need to update your talking points.
as can be seen in spain
Spain power outage: First deaths emerge including tragic family-of-three
The Iberian blackout shows the dangers of operating power grids with low inertia
That’s why France was spared, its grid has inertia. Maybe 11 dead is a price you deem acceptable. I can’t say I do.
Found this little chart of Spain’s electricity prices..
Its a bit blurry, but still easy enough to see what is happening as they put in more solar and wind.
Maybe you need to update your talking points.
They still hold true and quoting one blackout that had multiple points of failure (as the other posters did) doesn’t change that.
How solar has saved Europe €136 million per day since the start of the Iran war
https://www.euronews.com/2026/06/05/solar-saved-europe-3bn-in-fossil-fuel-imports-in-march-which-country-is-leading-the-way
We know why France was spared, its grid has inertia.
You choose to completely ignore the mortality associated with your OP: energy security and, as can be seen in spain…
It killed 11 people – totally unnecessarily. No fossil fuel or nuclear has managed that. Well done, renewables. 11 down, several billion to go.
The wars for oil beg to differ and you may want to read the final report om the blackout, as well what are the causes of death attributed to the blackout.
https://cordis.europa.eu/article/id/22113-fossil-fuels-responsible-for-tens-of-thousands-of-deaths-a-year-claims-report
Well done, fossil fuels. Thousands down, several billion to go.
unrestrained consumption of fossil fuels is killing tens of thousands of people in Europe
That is patently false. In fact I have to ask, are you really that naive?
Are you seriously comparing fossil fuel and nuclear power stations and dependable despatchable energy to modelled claims about “automobile emissions”?
It’s what we’ve come to expect.
Oh, right. You don’t believe in “Emissi*ns”, “P*llution” or “P*rticle M*tter”. Sorry, somehow I just can’t post feel good articles sanctified by Koch and Heartland. Must be a character flaw.
I grew up in London when we had lead water pipes, 4 star leaded petrol and paraffin heating, and diesel etc.
The last revision to the Clean Air Act was 1993. The air has never been better. To claim it’s worse than ever as you do is risible.
Not too long ago someone did a study of particulate matter on UK roads.
There was actually very little… UNTIL you went down onto the railways stations.
It is PUBLIC TRANSPORT, particularly trains, that creates by far the most particulate matter.
The Tube is by far the worst place to be in London.
The use of fossil fuel products ALLOWS the lives of many many MILLIONS.
Allows them to exist… that includes you. !
And it should be pointed out that there is not one scientifically supportable premise in that whole report.
It is all based on pure speculation.
There is no war for oil. The “war” that involves Iran is to keep them from obtaining nuclear weapons and blackmailing the entire world over their use.
Maybe you will be happy living under the threat of nuclear war caused by insane mullahs, but most of the world is not. Why do you think China isn’t visibly outright supporting Iran? They are as frightened as everyone else of Iran obtaining nuclear weapons.
Not just Iran. So far trump has made the situation worse than it was before.
Actually, no he hasn’t. His actions have helped a lot of people all over the world.
Ridiculous.
Here’s a clue: Preventing murderous, religious fanatics from acquiring nuclear weapons is a good thing.
Doing so with minimal casualties is also a good thing.
Exposing Western European leadership as feckless and delusional about fuel supplies is also a good thing.
And more.
it must be a scary world you live in. You are made more safe, yet appear to be more fearful. You don’t recognize your true situation.
Yes, to the religious fanatics in Iran, the Chinese are Infidels, too.
The religious fanatics in Iran say, “Death to Infidels?”
If they could, they would do to the Chinese what they want to do to the Western world: Kill, or enslave them.
Nuclear weapons make things much easier for religious fanatics who want to bring devastation to the whole world.
This June 2004 CORDIS piece is really showing it’s age – early‑2000s “fossil fuels are killing us” messaging. Show us the bodies, I say!
It relies heavily on a WHO estimate of 40k deaths from traffic‑related particulates in three Alpine countries. The problem is that these figures come from broad statistical models, not anything like direct causation.
Teasing out what’s from fossil fuels versus dust, agriculture, wood burning, or natural sources is messy, if not downright impossible. The article frames traffic as the villain while barely touching other contributors or the trade‑offs of restricting mobility and raising energy costs.
And you forget, or don’t care, that this was pre‑Euro 6, pre‑diesel crackdowns, pre‑coal phase‑outs. European air quality has improved a lot since.
There’s a familiar pattern here: highlight harms, downplay benefits, and push for taxes/limits.
Yes, pollution matters and regulations have helped, but these older claims tend to over‑attribute deaths to fossil fuels and under‑acknowledge the huge gains in health and longevity that affordable energy has delivered.
You’ve failed yet again to apply any critical thinking to the guff you post.
Doubt he even read it. Just saw the headline and posted.
Wind and solar have cost the European economy MANY MAGNITUDES more that that. !
Manufacturing has been totally decimated because of high electricity prices and erratic supply.
So the Ukraine war and the severing of the following pipelines had nothing to do with it?
Nord Stream 1 and 2: The primary undersea gas pipelines supplying Germany were damaged in underwater explosions and are inoperable.
Ukraine Transit Gas Pipeline: On January 1, 2025, Ukraine officially ceased the transit of Russian natural gas to Europe, ending the 2019 contract.
Yamal-Europe Pipeline: Gas flows through this pipeline, which runs through Belarus and Poland, were shut down.
Druzhba Oil Pipeline (Damaged): This major crude oil pipeline crossing Ukraine has suffered disruptions, including closures following military strikes on the Brody pumping station.
Costs were heading upwards and manufacturing already heavily depleted by the time the nonsense started in Ukraine.
And who’s fault was it that Germany and others were reliant of Russia gas in the first place… it is not as though they weren’t warned !
All part of the green anti-civilisation agenda.
Try again.
The April 28, 2025 outage could very well have spread to other European countries if the connections with the Iberian Peninsula had not been cut very quickly after the blackout. Fortunately, there are systems designed to separate power grids and prevent this kind of failure from propagating. Once the problem had been contained, it was possible to “turn the lights back on” in Spain and Portugal using electricity supplied from France and Morocco.
It’s fortunate that there are safeguards ready to trip at the borders in case some of our neighbors’ enthusiasm for renewables happens to plunge them into darkness.
Fossil fuels are about energy security, and, as can be seen in Spain, shield from the disastrous consequences of nationwide blackouts caused by over-reliance on renewables.
“Remewables are about energy security”………… (is that about 2nd hand cats ??)
If you meant to type “renewables”, that is patently a LIE, from the very start.
No grid that runs on wind and solar can ever be “secure”
It will always be erratic, intermittent and unstable, as Spain found out recently
well ….it certainly mews a lot …
😉
How many power outtages did they had in Spain during the fossil fuel era?
The day they announced to have reached their renewable goals they instantly had one( and blamed it on atmospheric events to keep the lie alive).
And volatility? – the price volatility is nothing compared to the volatility of sun and wind in regions with heterogeneous weather patterns.
I used to live near Barcelona, mate, you’re talking through your backside
When?
not long ago
You notice something? He or she has stopped invoking global warming and the climate catastrophe as the justification for UK Net Zero. That argument has become impossible to sustain.
Instead the argument has moved to the equally absurd claim that wind and solar will deliver cheaper and more secure electricity.
The answer is wind and solar and EVs and heat pumps. Now, what was the question?
Stern review or not, nothing the UK did or did not do could detectably alter the global consequences of CO2 releases simply because the nation’s releases were and are too small; less than 1% of all. The demise of RCP 8.5 is simply an excuse for a policy that has been worse than fruitless since its beginning.
“The Justification for Net Zero Has Vanished with the Demise of RCP8.5”
Overall, this is a good article in terms of policy reasoning.
BUT this continuing reference to the retirement of RCP8.5 misses the more important point about attribution of ANY portion of a reported warming trend to rising concentration of CO2.
In 1938, British meteorological experts Sir George Simpson and Professor David Brunt described perfectly well why Guy Callendar’s proposed attribution of a warming trend to emissions of CO2 could not be justified physically. Modern numerical modeling of the general circulation supports their view.
More here, with quotes from 1938 and with supporting plots from the ERA5 reanalysis model.
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2026/03/15/open-thread-181/#comment-4174555
In my view, it is important for skeptics of climate alarm, even while understandably making noise about the demise of RCP8.5, to stop giving unearned credit to the more moderate but fundamentally unsound claims of a perceptible “climate” influence from emissions of CO2 and other IR-active trace gases.
There was never any good physical reason to accept the assumption that the minor improvement in IR absorbing power MUST operate as a “forcing” to which amplifying “feedbacks” arise. This “forcing” + “feedback” FRAMING of the issue was unjustified from the start.
Thank you for your patience in this matter.
Some of the ‘great’ environmental horror stories of the 20th century include Ozone Hole, Acid Rain, Coming Ice Age, etc. and now Catastrophic Global Warming – Climate Change. None of these has officially ended, nor will they. They just withered away, “not with a bang, but a whimper. Climate Change is now entering the whimper stage. It will soon be replaced with a new “catastrophe”.
If you believe that Miliband will be influenced by this I’m sorry to say that you are delusional. Miliband is a zealot, who has surrounded himself with like-minded cronies, and will not countenance any dissent from his messianic decarbonisation agenda.
Nicholas Stern, who produced the Stern Review, was (and is, as far as I know) an economist. In his accounts of the relationship of the future to the present, he used a very low discount rate. Most people don’t know what that means, and I think it was probably intentional that this feature should have been buried from view in this way. I do not have Nigel Lawson’s book to hand, but from memory I think he deals with this thoroughly. Stern I think found a berth at the Grantham Institute, in the London School of Economics. The Grantham Institute is funded by Jeremy Grantham, a billionaire with a bee in his bonnet about fossil fuels; enough said.
Yes, that’s what you get for being a lackey of the establishment: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicholas_Stern,_Baron_Stern_of_Brentford. He has got rich and famous, while making ordinary people in the UK poor. He deserves to be brought to justice.
Which policy crusade will end or change course first, Putin’s invasion of Europe and the Baltic states or UK Net Zero? It’s a tossup.
I would say Putin’s attacks will end before Ed Miliband gives up on Net Zero.
I’m reading stories now claiming Ukraine is winning the war and Russia is suffering unsustainable casualties, tens of thousands killed per month. Russia can’t get past the Ukrainian drones.
“It’s becoming increasingly evident that any justification for Net Zero has been demolished”. Net zero was never about science and technology, it was only a “narrative”. The demise of RCP 8.5, likewise. We have a new beginning in climate discourse.
The Erosion of Objectivity Through One‑Sided Narratives
A consistent pattern emerges when examining how large, complex issues are communicated to the public: objectivity is not usually destroyed by outright falsehoods, but by selective framing, emphasis, and omission. This process is subtle, often unintentional, and highly effective because it shapes not what people know, but how they think about what they know.
At its core, the problem is not misinformation in the traditional sense. It is asymmetric information exposure—where certain perspectives, risks, or influences are repeatedly highlighted, while others are implicitly minimized or ignored. Over time, this produces a coherent but incomplete worldview that feels balanced from the inside.
How One-Sided Narratives Form
The mechanism is straightforward and repeatable across domains:
The end result is not necessarily false. It is structurally incomplete, and therefore misleading in aggregate.
Interesting that RCP 2.6 hasn’t been disavowed.
I think that was dropped along with RCP 8.5 and RCP 7.0.
Isn’t RCP 2.6 the one where we all switched over to using Mr Fusion a couple of years ago?
The next RCP down will become the boogie man. They have to create a crisis.
MSc in PHILOSOPHY?
The thing is however that UK Net Zero never made any sense even under RCP 8.5.
There is no level of RCP which will make it a sensible reaction. Nothing the UK does to lower its own emissions can have the slightest effect on the global climate or global temperatures. This is because the UK only accounts for 1-2% (and falling) of global emissions.
Its like we are being told to stand on our heads every morning because global warming and RCP 8.5 derived predictions. Most of us can’t do it, it will have no effect, it makes no sense, and it would make no sense even if there were an RCP 10 or 11. And then people start arguing about whether the fall of RCP 8.5 means that standing on our heads is not justifiable.
No it doesn’t. It always was a crazy and impossible policy and it still is just as crazy and impossible as it always was.
There are three complete crazinesses in climate ideology.
That there is some kind of CO2 caused climate crisisThat moving electricity generation to wind and solar, Net Zero is possibleThat doing it will avert the supposed crisis.I do not understand what has happened to public policy debates in the UK and elsewhere. The US is just as bad. The political class seems to have lost its capacity for logical connected thought. People keep on citing irrelevant alleged facts (which are not even real facts) as reasons for doing crazy things which they can have no effect on. You see it in debates about gender and race just as much as in the climate and energy debates.
The particular craziness in the UK is that the NHS (socialized health service) is on its knees. And yet what a Labour government has picked as a priority is to invest billions in wind and solar, whose sole effect is to lower the reliability and raise the price of electricity – if it even works at all. To invest these billions despite also having almost no effective defence forces, when there is a Grade One European security crisis.
They wonder why people are voting Reform, or Restore. They don’t seem to understand, living in their little bubble, that even Restore is not the real far right they are slowly unleashing. It was what came after Farage, and that is Restore. But its what comes after Restore, as it will, that everyone should be seriously worried about.