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To: Eric who wrote (1427023)12/2/2023 11:52:15 AM
From: Maple MAGA   Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1572655
 
Have you ever visited Britain? Message 34496004

Did you know they have coal mines there?

UK’s first new coalmine for 30 years gets go-ahead in Cumbria

Michael Gove greenlights £165m project that will produce estimated 400,000 tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions a year

Fiona Harvey Environment editor

Wed 7 Dec 2022 18.20 GMT

The UK will build its first new coalmine for three decades at Whitehaven in Cumbria, despite objections locally, across the UK and from around the world.

Michael Gove, the levelling up secretary, gave the green light for the project on Wednesday, paving the way for an estimated investment of £165m that will create about 500 new jobs in the region and produce 2.8m tonnes of coking coal a year, largely for steelmaking.

The mine will also produce an estimated 400,000 tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions a year, increasing the UK’s emissions by the equivalent of putting 200,000 cars on the road.

The vast majority of the coal produced will be for export, as most UK steel producers have rejected the use of the coal, which is high in sulphur and surplus to their needs.

Where these exports will go is uncertain, as most European steelmakers are turning away from the use of coal and adopting green methods such as electric arc furnaces and renewable energy.

The government said the mine was possible within the UK’s climate legislation, which requires the UK to reach net zero emissions by 2050, as operations will shut down by 2049.

In its report sent to Gove, the Planning Inspectorate claimed the mine would have “an overall neutral effect on climate change”. This, it said, was because the likely amount of coal used in steel making would be “broadly the same with or without” it.

A government spokesperson said the coal would be used to make steel that would otherwise have been imported and not to generate power.

Ministers, however, are braced for an almost-certain legal challenge by those who say the decision risks breaching that target.

Critics said the announcement was cynically timed to placate Tory MPs unhappy with the government for ending the moratorium on new onshore wind projects, which was confirmed 24 hours before.

The shadow climate change secretary, Ed Miliband, said the mine was “no solution to the energy crisis”, would not benefit British steel producers and marked “the death knell of any claims this government has to climate leadership”.

The UK should instead create sustainable jobs in renewable energy, he said, adding a Labour government would make Britain “a clean energy superpower”.

Zarah Sultana, Labour MP for Coventry South, said: “The Tories again show they put the fossil fuel industry before people and planet. Shameful.”

Green MP Caroline Lucas called the decision “a climate crime against humanity”. She said: “Instead of backing 1000s of green jobs & sustainable, long-term economic revival, Govt has backed a climate-busting, backward-looking, stranded asset coal mine.”

The decision “cancels out all the progress Britain has made on renewable energy”, said Tim Farron, the former Liberal Democrat leader who is the party’s environment spokesperson and a Cumbrian MP.

Environmental groups said the new mine would prove a costly and harmful mistake for the climate.

Greenpeace said the UK risked becoming “a superpower in climate hypocrisy rather than climate leadership” and that the mine would do “absolutely nothing” for the country’s energy security because the coal it contains can only be used for steelmaking.

Friend of the Earth said the mine would become an “expensive stranded asset” and would not replace Russian coal.

Laura Clarke, CEO of environmental law firm Client Earth, called the decision “unforgivable”. “Makes no sense in terms of the science, the economics, or indeed the UK’s legally binding netzero commitments,” she said.

The prime minister, Rishi Sunak, has faced down objections from green MPs within his party. The decision will be welcomed by Conservative rightwingers for whom the mine has become talismanic.

The mine’s backers have been trying to get the project off the ground since 2014. It got local approval in 2020 and was greenlit by ministers in 2021. But for the past two years the project has been beset by planning delays as the government rescinded its approval as it prepared to take on the presidency of global climate talks ahead of the Cop26 UN climate summit in Glasgow in November 2021.

The UK government handed over its presidency of the UN climate negotiations last month to Egypt, a year after the widely lauded Cop26 resolved to limit global temperature rises to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels, an achievement the Cop president, Alok Sharma, warned was “fragile”.

A report by the International Energy Agency last year, commissioned by the UK government while Cop president, found that no new fossil fuel development – of coal, oil, or gas – could take place if the world was to remain within the 1.5C limit.

Sharma told the Observer last weekend he was firmly against the mine. He said: “Over the past three years the UK has sought to persuade other nations to consign coal to history, because we are fighting to limit global warming to 1.5C and coal is the most polluting energy source.

“A decision to open a new coalmine would send completely the wrong message and be an own goal. This proposed new mine will have no impact on reducing energy bills or ensuring our energy security.”

Philip Dunne MP, the chair of the environmental audit committee, said: “Coal is the most polluting energy source, and is not consistent with the government’s net zero ambitions. It is not clear-cut to suggest that having a coalmine producing coking coal for steelmaking on our doorstep will reduce steelmakers’ demand for imported coal.

“On the contrary, when our committee heard from steelmakers earlier this year, they argued that they have survived long enough without UK domestic coking coal and that any purchase of coking coal from a potential site in Cumbria would be a commercial decision.”

Nicholas Stern, the acclaimed economist who has worked on the climate, development and public policy, said the mine would be damaging to the UK, and the world.

“Opening a coalmine in the UK now is a serious mistake: economic, social, environmental, financial and political,” Lord Stern said. “Economically, it is investing in the technologies of the last century, not this, and that is the wrong path to growth. Socially, it is pursuing jobs in industries that are on the way out, creating future job insecurity.

“Environmentally, it is adding to world supply and thus consumption of coal and releasing greenhouse gases when there is an urgent need to reduce them. And politically, it is undermining the UK’s authority on the most important global issue of our times.”



To: Eric who wrote (1427023)12/2/2023 12:38:31 PM
From: miraje1 Recommendation

Recommended By
golfer72

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1572655
 
It's sad that Sunak wants to take Britain back to the stone age.

You have no clue as to what's going on in the UK. I was born in England and have US/UK dual citizenship. I have lived and worked there and have friends and family who live there. My late father worked in a coal mine in Staffordshire as a teenager, before joining the Royal Navy.

I wouldn't return to live there now, as the cost of living and inflation are untenable. In addition, the hordes of foreign riff raff are destroying the native culture, as they are in most of the rest of Europe. The high latitude and rainy overcast weather in the country renders your precious solar panels pretty much useless for half the year. And the public is getting fed up with windmill monstrosities polluting the countryside. Scotland and the north of England in particular.

In addition to the opening of another coal mine, the oil and gas deposits in the North Sea continue to provide much needed energy and shale fracking onshore will be happening in the future as the public demands affordable base load energy.

Hydrocarbon energy will be powering the world for many decades after you're sprouting daisies. Here's another dose of that reality at the link below..

Message 34495963



To: Eric who wrote (1427023)12/2/2023 8:40:37 PM
From: Maple MAGA   Respond to of 1572655
 
Cumbria: Plans for UK's first deep coal mine in 30 years thrown into doubt after local council reconsiders application

The local council had previously approved the application for the UK's first deep coal mine operation in 30 years.

Wednesday 10 February 2021 09:17, UK



Image:The project is planned for a site near Whitehaven. Pic: West Cumbria Mining

Plans for a new coal mine in Cumbria have been thrown into doubt after the local authority said it would think again about the move following widespread criticism.

The local council had previously approved the application for the UK's first deep coal mine operation in 30 years.

Government ministers had declined to intervene in the go-ahead for the mine on the basis it was a local decision.


Boris Johnson risks hypocrisy and mixed messages over Cumbria coal mine

Cumbria County Council said it would reconsider the planning application by West Cumbria Mining for the project near Whitehaven after new information had come to light.

A spokesperson said: "This decision has been taken because in December 2020, the Government's Climate Change Committee released its report on its recommendations for the Sixth Carbon Budget, a requirement under the Climate Change Act.

"The report, among other things, sets out the volume of greenhouse gases the UK aims to emit during 2033-2037.

"This new information has been received prior to the issue of the formal decision notice on the application.

"In light of this the council has decided that the planning application should be reconsidered by the Development Control and Regulation (DC&R) Committee."

Cumbrian MP and former Liberal Democrats leader Tim Farron tweeted: "The very fact that this application is going back to the planning committee because it might not meet the requirements of the Climate Change Act shows exactly why this mine shouldn't be going ahead.

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"The government now need to step in, show some leadership and stop this mine."

Meanwhile, youth activists have helped submit a 111,475-signature petition from the Coal Action Network to the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG), asking Secretary of State Robert Jenrick to stop the planned mine.

Campaigners have criticised the assessment that the greenhouse gases of the mining operations will be carbon-neutral, as the coal would substitute for production elsewhere.

Elijah McKenzie-Jackson, 17, from London, who submitted the petition, said: "In the year where the UK hosts the Cop26 summit, the UK government must call in and refuse an application to mine coking coal, showing its commitment to decarbonising the steel sector."

Isabella Bridgman, 16, from Cockermouth in Cumbria, said: "I call on the secretary of state to call in this mine, in recognition that approving such a mine when the UK is set to host Cop26 this year, and has committed to reach carbon neutral by 2050, is not only ridiculous, but actively harmful."

Analysis: A shockingly embarrassing episode for the government

By Lisa Holland, climate change correspondent

It was surely a matter of time before the foundations under plans for a new coal mine off the Cumbrian coast started to seriously erode.

But it's not because the government is taking a clear stand on the climate emergency. And therein lies the problem.

The government had batted this boiling hot potato back to the county council saying it was a 'local issue' whether or not the planning application for the coal mine goes ahead.

That act failed to stop the avalanche of criticism against the communities secretary for refusing to intervene when he had the power to sink the hugely controversial project off the coast of Whitehaven faster than a gunship.

The council's announcement now may signal the beginning of the end for the mine - but it doesn't erase a shockingly embarrassing episode for the government.

Remember this is a government which is touting itself around as a world leader on the climate in the year it's hosting the critical COP26 climate conference in Glasgow.

It's hard to really understand why the government let this whole issue slide when the arguments against the mine don't stack up.

Environmentalists say all coal must stay in the ground if the use of climate-damaging fossil fuels is to be truly broken and coal from already open mines used up first even if that incurs emissions transporting them from abroad.

Cumbria County Council may have been startled at the amount of attention its planning process received.

One local official who supports the mine because of the jobs it will create furiously told me within minutes of the announcement the council had 'bottled it'.

The government may have dismissed the Cumbrian mine as a local issue but in the end that was far from the case.

Cumbria County Council cites targets by the Committee on Climate Change to reduce emissions in the UK - what's known as the sixth carbon budget announced last December - as 'new information' which influenced its decision to reconsider.

This can scarcely be credible when the UK declared a climate emergency nearly two years ago.

The suspicion will be that the council ran scared of the scrutiny it was under.

This whole saga fires a warning shot to other architects of projects which are detrimental to the climate, whatever the benefit to jobs locally.

In this year of the COP, absolutely everything will have a mirror held up to it and the voices of environmental campaigners are now being heard.



To: Eric who wrote (1427023)12/4/2023 1:06:12 AM
From: Maple MAGA 2 Recommendations

Recommended By
longz
Mick Mørmøny

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1572655
 
Britain is experiencing extreme cold, people are freezing to death in their vehicles. Heat pumps don't work in extreme cold the only thing that works is burning coal.



She wore a black tiara, rare gems upon her fingers
And she came from distant waters, where northern lights explode
To celebrate the dawning, of the new wastes of winter
Gathering royal momentum on the icy road

With chill mists swirling, like petticoats in motion
Sighted on horizons for ten thousand years
The lady of the ice sounds, a deathly distant rumble
Titanic breaking children lost in melting crystal tears

Oh, sunshine, take me now away from here
I'm a needle on a spiral in a groove
And the turntable spins, as the last waltz begins
And the weather man says, something's on the move

Capturing black pieces in a glass fronted museum
The white queen rolls on the chessboard of the dawn
Squeezing through the valleys, pausing briefly in the corries
The ice mother mates and a new age is born

Oh, sunshine, take me now away from here
I'm a needle on a spiral in a groove
And the turntable spins, as the last waltz begins
And the weather man says, something's on the move

Driving all before her, un-stoppable, un-straining
Her cold creaking mass follows reindeer down
Thin spreading fingers seek, to embrace the sill warm bundles
That huddle on the doorsteps of a white London town

Oh, sunshine, take me now away from here
I'm a needle on a spiral in a groove
And the turntable spins, as the last waltz begins
And the weather man says, something's on the move

She wore a black tiara, rare gems upon her fingers
She came from distant waters, where northern lights explode
To celebrate the dawning, of the new wastes of winter
Gathering royal momentum on the icy road

Oh, sunshine, take me now away from here
I'm a needle on a spiral in a groove
And the turntable spins, as the last waltz begins
And the weather man says, something's on the move



To: Eric who wrote (1427023)12/4/2023 2:50:00 AM
From: Maple MAGA 2 Recommendations

Recommended By
longz
Mick Mørmøny

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1572655
 
Fire and Ice

Posted on December 3, 2023 by Baron Bodissey





The climate alarmists have been warning us about “global boiling”, but Central Europe is currently experiencing a cold snap with record amounts of snow. Nevertheless, it’s still “climate change” — whenever the weather shifts into a new pattern, it’s evidence of “climate change”, all because of that pernicious CO2. In order to fix it we just need to eat the bugs and pay higher taxes.

Many thanks to Hellequin GB for translating this article from eXXpress:

Green says at -5° and half a meter of snow: “The earth is burning!”

Record cold temperatures, masses of fresh snow — just right winter: That doesn’t stop Katharina Schulze (38), Bavaria’s Green Party leader, from currently warning about global warming. She says on Instagram: “Even if it doesn’t look like it: the earth is burning.”

“Even if it doesn’t look like it: We are ruled by madmen,” comments a user on X (Twitter) on the recent video clip of the Bavarian Green Party leader. And another social media user says: “Almost all of Germany is covered by a centimeter-thick blanket of snow, and the green homunculus says: ‘Even if it doesn’t look like it, the earth is burning.’ The only thing burning brightly at the moment is the fuse in the green skull.”

And in many other comments, the irritating video appearance of Katharina Schulze (38) is mostly judged negatively — the politician, standing at the window of her winter garden, said that “the earth is burning”, even “if it didn’t look like that now”, because the (burning?) nature outside lies under a massive blanket of snow.

Because “the earth is currently burning” (Schulze quote), it is so important to jet to the World Climate Conference in Dubai, says the Green politician. Another user has Katharina Schulze add: “Basically, we are having a hot trans summer right now, which just feels like winter. Who are we to judge?”

Austria’s Greens are already a bit smarter: they currently don’t write anything about climate change or global warming on their social media channels.

Afterword from the translator:

Even if she of course means “the Earth” and not Germany, which is currently in winter, the Earth is still not burning, at least not here in South Africa where I live. It’s actually quite cool for this time of the year; it’s like living on the West Coast again instead of inland and in the mountains where the average temperature is about 10°C higher in the summer because the lovely cool breeze of the South Atlantic and the Benguela Stream is missing.

All serious INDEPENDENT scientists state that there is NO warming. On the contrary: there are even numerous scientists who claim that we are moving towards a new, small ice age. Regardless, there are no reliable measurements of temperatures. In some places in the world there are many measuring devices, in other places there are no measuring devices at all. Many devices are also installed incorrectly so that they cannot provide empirical data, like those at airports. This is all complete NONSENSE — thought up by fraudsters who use this method to get research money and are busy for YEARS. And WE are also — unfortunately the majority of us — so stupid as to swallow this nonsense from them. If I just think about how many people have deregistered their cars or replaced their heating systems or no longer want to have children or started to eat unhealthy crap because of these actually obvious lies… or invest a lot of money in “renewables” WITHOUT EVEN THINKING FOR THEMSELVES, then… I feel sick for humanity.