
How Europe’s Pursuit of Net Zero Is Wedded to Chinese Slave Labour
In its shift to renewables, Europe appears to be unmoved by solar power’s connections with modern slavery.
In its shift to renewables, Europe appears to be unmoved by solar power’s connections with modern slavery.
Labour’s dash for Net Zero would override local democracy and bury acres of farmland under photovoltaic cells.
Implosions are plaguing the ‘green’ energy sector.
The EU is installing solar panels faster than expected, but the market is collapsing.
“Energy policy has become security policy,” the local official in charge of transitioning to sustainable energy production said, calling for better collaboration between agencies.
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.
Solar parks, requiring regular water use for cleaning, are being recklessly approved in a country already devastated by drought.
The letter refers to the unprecedented danger that the massive deployment of wind and photovoltaic industrial estates pose for biodiversity.
The judge declared the expropriation null and void and added a word for the energy company: “The action (of Iberdrola) is surprising. Nonsense has no name.”
The Energy Performance of Buildings Directive was passed, despite intense opposition from conservative groups in the European Parliament.