Tory MPs call the green transition
‘unaffordable’. Europe is proving that’s a lie
George
Monbiot
The latest wave of climate deniers claim green schemes
are ‘unaffordable’. Success stories from around Europe prove that’s not true
Wed 23 Mar
2022 10.00 GMT
While all
eyes were on another horror, our war against the living world went nuclear. Over
the weekend, temperatures at some weather stations in the Arctic rose to 30C
above normal. Simultaneously, at certain weather stations in the Antarctic they
hit 40C above normal. Two events, albeit off the scale, do not make a trend.
But as part of a gathering record of extreme and chaotic weather, these
unprecedented, simultaneous anomalies are terrifying.
On their
heels came news of another horrific event: mass coral bleaching on the Great
Barrier Reef during a La Niña year. La Niña is the cool phase of the Pacific
cycle. Until now, widespread bleaching had happened only during the warmer El
Niño years. The likely impacts of the next El Niño are too awful to
contemplate.
We knew
that climate breakdown would happen abruptly. Earth systems that seemed stable,
lives that seemed safe, would slip from under us. All that we took for granted
would suddenly be in play. It could be happening now.
A
characteristic of complex systems is that it’s hard to tell how close to their
critical thresholds they may be until they have been crossed. Are we now
passing the tipping points? The only rational response is to act as if it’s not
too late, and as if we have the briefest of opportunities to stabilise the
system before it slides.
Instead, as
if to announce its intention to push us past the point of no return, the UK
government floated plans to cut fuel duty this week. Since the Cop26 climate
summit last November, it has approved one new oil and gas field in the North
Sea and proposes to approve six more. A paper published yesterday by Dr Dan
Calverley and Prof Kevin Anderson at the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change
Research shows that to permit just a 50% chance of staying within 1.5C of
heating, rich nations need to end all oil and gas production by 2034. In other words,
just as these new concessions start to deliver, they will need to be closed
down.
But
perversity is the norm. The government discourages energy efficiency
improvements by subjecting them to the highest rate of VAT (20%). When it
slashed green renovation grants in 2013, the number of loft insulations fell
from 1.6m a year to 126,000, and the rate has never recovered. We could see
this as an experiment: what happens when you remove government incentives and
leave it to “the market”? Ah yes, we discover that energy transition is
entirely dependent on effective state policy.
As the
government’s own Climate Change Committee observed this month, though, the UK’s
strategy for decarbonising buildings relies on “voluntary targets” and “an
untested market-based approach”. There are massive funding gaps, missing plans
and a shocking absence of regulatory levers: it’s impossible to see on the
basis of current policy how the government could meet even its own pathetic
targets, let alone contribute meaningfully to preventing climate breakdown.
Climate
denial comes in waves and the current variety, endlessly recited by rightwing
Tory MPs, is to insist that the energy transition is “unaffordable”. But as the
committee’s report shows, the average total cost of decarbonising homes is
under £10,000. Even if every home in the UK were fully renovated, it would cost
less, on these figures, than the government’s spending on either the pandemic
or the 2008 financial crisis. The jobs created would ensure that it recouped at
least some of the money. Yet again, we must ask ourselves why governments bail
out banks but not the planet.
Some have
begun to step up. In Italy, the government provides a remarkable 110% of the
cost of home energy improvements, which it pays as a five-year tax credit (the
10% covers financial and transaction costs). This superbonus scheme pays for
everything: insulation, ventilation, new windows and doors, solar panels, heat
pumps. It has design flaws – for example, it creates no incentive for builders
to limit their costs and was, at first, open to fraud – but these issues could
be easily addressed.
Finland has
equipped roughly one-third of its homes with heat pumps. It installs about
twice as many every year as the UK does, though it has only about a 10th of the
number of homes. Almost every day, I hear professional ignoramuses announce
that “heat pumps wouldn’t work in our cold climate”. But they work just fine in
Finland, which is much colder.
The
Netherlands proposes to disconnect all its homes from the gas grid. In Estonia,
the capital city, Tallinn, and most other counties offer free public transport.
If Italy and Estonia can afford it, so can we.
As the
Climate Change Committee points out, if gas prices remain as high as they are
at the moment, decarbonising the whole economy would save money (0.5% of GDP).
It would also lift people out of fuel poverty, which is greatly exacerbated by
leaky homes and a reliance on fossil fuels. It would ensure that we were no
longer beholden to Vladimir Putin and other fossil-fuelled autocrats.
The truth
is that we can’t afford not to transform our economies. It’s not
decarbonisation that’s unaffordable; it’s climate breakdown. If climate systems
tip, our money will be as worthless as Boris Johnson’s promises. Yet this
government values it above life itself.
George
Monbiot is a Guardian columnist. He will discuss Regenesis at a Guardian Live
event on Monday 30 May. Book tickets in-person or online here

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