
Britain’s Net Zero Police State
The new green-energy law is less a power grab by the Conservative government than a power handover to unelected technocrats.
The new green-energy law is less a power grab by the Conservative government than a power handover to unelected technocrats.
British PM still set on decarbonising country by 2050
Even the most ‘right-wing’ officials in the Conservative Party are sucking up to Beijing to reach climate goals.
Despite a triumph during March’s regional elections, hopes for Dutch agrarian populists have turned into mud, as the political mainstream prepares to assert itself during November elections.
High installation costs and poor efficiency in below-freezing temperatures make heat pumps a bad choice for Scotland.
The senior VP of a Finnish dairy questions the research behind breeding “low-emission cattle” by pointing out that methane is produced by microbes in the gut, not the cow itself.
It is feared that Beijing could gain access to “huge” amounts of information about British citizens due to the Conservative Party’s drive to carbon ‘net zero.’
The prime minister made it clear these licences are not intended to disrupt his drive towards carbon ‘net zero.’
China has made its way to the top of the market by relying on cheap coal and cheap labour, work conducted under conditions that would not be allowed in a European country due to human rights violations and net-zero policies.
Rishi Sunak has signalled that he wants to “soften” his green policies, but it is unclear whether any changes to rhetoric will do anything to substantively alter the drive towards net zero.