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UK Steps Towards Zero-Carbon Economy (bbc.com) 240

The UK is taking a tentative step towards a radical "green" future with zero emissions of greenhouse gases. From a report: The government is formally seeking Climate Change Committee (CCC) guidance about how and when to make this leap. If it happens it would mark an extraordinary transformation of an economy built on burning fossil fuels. The decision was prompted by last week's UN report warning that CO2 emissions must be stopped completely to avoid dangerous climate disruption.

Climate minister Claire Perry told BBC News: "The report was a really stark and sober piece of work -- a good piece of work. "Now we know what the goal is and we know what some of the levers are. But for me, the constant question is what is the cost and who's going to bear that, both in the UK and in the global economy. The question is: what does government need to do, where can the private sector come in, and what technologies will come through?"

Ms Perry has declared this week to be Green GB Week, which aims to raise debate in society about how to tackle climate change while also growing the economy. The UK's current target is a reduction of 80% of emissions by 2050 based on 1990 levels. But the CCC is warning that the UK will drift further away from this goal unless new policies are introduced.

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UK Steps Towards Zero-Carbon Economy

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  • Oh sorry, we're not talking about Brexit.
    • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 ) on Sunday October 14, 2018 @07:25PM (#57477978) Journal

      It's not a step anyway, this is what the UK does went they don't want to do anything, they deflect criticism and say we're studying it, we're commissioning a report, which is nice for their think-tank friends who they pay millions for some report to get mostly written by some intern, whilst their school friend chum pockets some nice wedge, nudge nudge wink wink.

      "But the CCC is warning that the UK will drift further away from this goal unless new policies are introduced." AKA they're not actually doing anything meaningful.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 )
        At least the UK is studying it, not claiming that global warming is a Chinese conspiracy.
        • yeah, but with the Tories in power, it'll just be lip service to make it look like they are doing something
      • by mikael ( 484 )

        At least knowing the things you can do and can't do is one step.. For the record, everyone used to be able to afford to live in a city, take a bus or walk to work and not need a car... but when the universities expanded to take in more international students, all those apartments and houses that used to go to first time buyers and young couples have gone to buy-to-let landlords instead. The most desirable properties are the Victorian townhouses in the cities which usually sell for around £50K per bedr

        • 50k per bedroom? Employers want you to share a room through AirBnB? What planet do you live on? 50k per bedroom would be very cheap.
        • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

          "Two-thirds of British people think the government should ditch the policies that have all but killed off the UK's onshore wind industry, according to a new poll.

          Since new rules governing the construction of onshore turbines were introduced following the election in 2015, planning applications for new wind farms have plummeted by 94 per cent."

          They actively stopped new on-shore wind farms. A very bad step.

          "Fracking opponents have reacted with anger after ministers unveiled measures to help projects through t

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        The UK has just reduced the tax break on electric cars by £1000 and removed it entirely for lower range plug-in hybrids. It's not serious about this.

        • If electric cars are not cost-competitive without large subsidies, then wouldn't it be prudent to not subsidize them and spend the money on better things, such as more nuclear? Why should we subsidize uncompetitive vehicles for the rich?
          • ICE cars are not cost-competitive either without large subsidies in form of ignored negative externalities.
          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            The subsidies are to help the bottom end of the market. Someone buying a £80k Tesla won't care, but someone buying a £20k Zoe will.

            When you look at how much it adds to finance deals on sub £35k cars like the recently released Kona it's quite a significant hit for people.

            And the reason to subsidise them is that it's worked to drive the cost down quickly and get demand up, which increases the roll out of infrastructure etc. We need to get rid of most of the fossil vehicles

  • by UpnAtom ( 551727 ) on Sunday October 14, 2018 @07:34PM (#57478008)

    The Tories reversed the law on new homes needing to be zero carbon three years ago.

    https://www.theguardian.com/en... [theguardian.com]

  • by blindseer ( 891256 ) <blindseer@noSPAm.earthlink.net> on Sunday October 14, 2018 @07:49PM (#57478062)

    The means to get to a zero carbon economy exists today, nuclear power and hydrocarbon synthesis.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

    I keep hearing about how if we don't reduce our CO2 immediately then we will create runaway global warming. We have a technology that can provide energy that is zero carbon (or rather closer to zero than wind and solar), plentiful, inexpensive (again compared to wind and solar), reliable, domestically sourced (no matter how you define "domestic"), and exists today.

    Why don't we have more nuclear power? Because some nuclear waste is "scary"? You want me to believe that some nuclear waste is a greater threat to humanity than global warming? I'm not convinced. You want me to believe that "any day now" wind and solar will displace coal, oil, and natural gas? Well, we've been trying to do that for decades now and it's not happening very quickly. For an island nation like the UK the ability to meet their energy needs from wind and solar is likely impossible. Maybe they have enough friendly neighbors across the channel to get more wind and sun. What of Japan? They don't have any friendly neighbors, what should they do?

    Again, which am I to fear more, nuclear power or global warming? Pick one, because we are running out of time for wind and sun to save us.

    • The Mad Max series of documentaries provides a stark picture of what could happen to us if we wait too long to wean ourselves off of fossil fuels.
    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Re Why don't we have more nuclear power?
      The UK did a lot of that for it nuclear mil projects and for power generation.
      Worked well while been supported with tax funded projects.
      Then the real cost of keeping up with investing in new nuclear tech and later decommissioning gat factored in.
      Low cost power from nuclear could not cover the build cost, the working costs, the later support cost and finally the decommissioning.
      The only "win" in funds was the design and material needed for nuclear weapons producti
    • Both. At this point, nuclear power is better than fossil fuel power.

      But nuclear power is still plenty dangerous. The first problem is that it can provide the material to make nuclear weapons. Won't do us much good to avert Global Warming if some rogue nation starts World War III with nukes. The second, more insidious problem is that human corruption and incompetence is scarily likely to lead to another major accident such as Fukushima. We know how to operate nuclear power with reasonable safety, but

      • by blindseer ( 891256 ) <blindseer@noSPAm.earthlink.net> on Sunday October 14, 2018 @08:39PM (#57478192)

        Both.

        That's a non-answer as it tells me nothing on how to act. If this means we can't have nuclear power then you are by default kicking the problem down the path hoping for a solution to present itself before the problems of global warming are upon us. We can continue down this path, keep looking for a non-nuclear solution, but that is waiting for a ship that may never come to port.

        But nuclear power is still plenty dangerous. The first problem is that it can provide the material to make nuclear weapons. Won't do us much good to avert Global Warming if some rogue nation starts World War III with nukes.

        The material to make nuclear weapons is in the dirt and dissolved in seawater. Where do you think that the U-235 for the first nuclear weapons came from? They didn't need a reactor to make it, they just "distilled" it from the dirt. This was done with 1940s technology, repeating this with modern materials and equipment is becoming nearly trivial any more. The limitation is primarily the energy needed to enrich the U-235.

        The second, more insidious problem is that human corruption and incompetence is scarily likely to lead to another major accident such as Fukushima.

        This again? All a bunch of bullshit based on 50 year old nuclear technology. Nobody builds reactors like those any more.

        We know how to operate nuclear power with reasonable safety, but can we do so, for all nuclear power plants, for decades?

        Yes, we do in fact know how to operate nuclear power plants safely for decades. There are over 400 operating commercial nuclear power reactors on this planet. There's at least 100 military nuclear power plants in ships at sea as well. We know how to make this work. Bringing this up as scaremongering for not implementing what is demonstrably the safest energy source we have today is unbelievable.

        You want me to fear nuclear power more than global warming? Really? Then tell me that global warming isn't the threat it's been made out to be, because I'm really thinking that we are running out of options right now and nuclear power it looking really nice by comparison.

        • Global Cooling is more harmful.

          If you over compensate and cause cooling, thats worse.

          You can grow food if its sub zero C. Its frozen solid.

          Short term frost can kill plants.

          In all history, short term cooling has been a real bad things for human populations, causing massive dissease and crop losses. Heat has been a positive to cause great thriving populations.

        • But nuclear power is still plenty dangerous. The first problem is that it can provide the material to make nuclear weapons. Won't do us much good to avert Global Warming if some rogue nation starts World War III with nukes.

          Given this is an article bout the UK: that's not relly much of a problem since the has at the best estimate a few hundred warheads already.

          The second, more insidious problem is that human corruption and incompetence is scarily likely to lead to another major accident such as Fukushima.

          Tha

          • how many natural disasters do you suppose there will be in the next 500 - 1000 years, how much human incompetence. It is utterly unpredictable, with the exception that there will certainly be some. The consequences of which, when mixed with nuclear power, will be horrendous. The reality is that as long as we keep creating nuclear fuel it is only a matter of time before something worse then Chernobyl happens either through accident, or by human malice.

          • The biggest incident relted to nuclear power was the 2005 leak at the reprocessing plant where a 20 tons of nuclear fuel disolved in acid leaked out of a pipe and into a containment vessel.
            You must be very young ...

            The biggest incident was Sellafield/Windscale, which nearly lead to a Chernobyl like disaster.

            https://www.theguardian.com/en... [theguardian.com]

            You can google easily for more about this incident ... youtube is full with videos about it.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          That's a non-answer as it tells me nothing on how to act. If this means we can't have nuclear power then you are by default kicking the problem down the path hoping for a solution to present itself before the problems of global warming are upon us.

          Surely it's the exact opposite. Nuclear takes so long to build, and you have to dedicate yourself to maintaining the supply of fuel and the processing of waste for many decades, it's a long term commitment to emit more CO2. Depending on where you get your fuel from nuclear can be up to 110g/kWh [www.ipcc.ch].

          On the other hand we have proven low emission technologies that can be built up much faster than nuclear. Best of all they provide a decent return on that investment, rather than being a money sink. People are lining

        • Where do you think that the U-235 for the first nuclear weapons came from?

          First nuclear weapon. Only one (1) nuclear weapon has ever been made using U235. That was the Hiroshima bomb. The rest have been made with Plutonium, which requires a specially designed reactor to make. Which is why there are so few countries with nukes. Civilian reactors won't get you there....

          likely to lead to another major accident such as Fukushima.

          Yeah, Fukushima was such a major accident that it killed almost as many peo

          • it's not the number of people killed it's the territory made uninhabitable for 10000 years. Let's just say we have 2 Chernobyl every century.
            The habitable area of the earth is around 900000 sq/m and the area poisoned is around 10000 sq/ miles, however , the are where radiation is elevated in quite a bit larger area, and when you count radiation poisoning if there was two areas near each other things would get considerably worse so if you figure half the livable land was poisoned that would probably be enoug

    • at least not in the United States. Here we're afraid of private businesses operating unsafe reactors to save a buck. Worst case with a natural gas plant is a big explosion. With a nuke plant you're talking decades of contamination.

      What you need to do to get folks like me to buy into nuclear is convince me it's cheaper to run a safe plant than an unsafe one. And not just because "We'll be sued". Fukushima has more or less proved that there's no real consequences for the folks in charge. They'll be dead b
    • by ljw1004 ( 764174 )

      Because some nuclear waste is "scary"?

      Yes, precisely because it's "scary" -- in financial terms. The free market has pretty much definitively said that a financial investment in nuclear power has too low a rate of return. I think that's because the cost to build a plant is so great that it spends too much of its operating lifetime servicing its debt, and then the decommissioning costs are uncertain but large. That's why we've only seen nuclear power used when supported by large government subsidies.

    • Again, which am I to fear more, nuclear power or global warming? Pick one, because we are running out of time for wind and sun to save us.

      Nice job with the scare tactic - nuclear power or we all die! The sky is falling! And nice try in your post below, in using the very specialized case of the US Navy in their attempt to project power around the globe with boats. Fortunately US consumers have a few more choices and a little more flexibility than the Navy.

      Scare tactics and false dichotomies aside, there's a long history behind the two old arguments you are making, now cleverly rolled into one. And they're both a shell game. Where's the p

    • by Bongo ( 13261 )

      George Monbiot, in a column in The Guardian, some years ago, wrote about his debate with Caroline Lucas (I think, then leader of the Greens), about her rejection of nuclear.

      He'd realised himself that nuclear was the only solution to the sheer scale of the problem, and yet all along, Lucas would insist that the alternatives would continue to develop and advance and improve etc., yet she rejected the notion that nuclear could develop and advance and improve. I don't think he managed to get to the bottom of wh

      • by amorsen ( 7485 )

        I'm all for nuclear power. Build away!

        But damnit, don't make me pay £0.092 per kWh at 3 am in the morning for electricity I don't need or want. Wind and solar can do it for less than half the price. And if you order a new off-shore wind farm today, it'll be installed in 3 years. If you order a new nuclear reactor today, it might be installed in 10 years, if you're lucky.

    • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      Why don't we have more nuclear power? because no matter how well you build a nuclear reactors you can know 100% for certain that you will have planned for accidents and what percentage of them will make large area's of the earth uninhabitable. over enough time ( 1000, 10000, etc. years is hard to say) you virtually guaranteed to make large parts planet uninhabitable and poison significant portions of the res

  • by EzInKy ( 115248 ) on Sunday October 14, 2018 @10:29PM (#57478436)

    Even if you don't believe in climate change wouldn't it be nice to enjoy cleaner air and purer water? It sure would make those hunting and fishing trips much more enjoyable now wouldn't it? No matter which side of the great "climate debate" you fall on, it makes no sense to be against improving the environment we all have to live in.

"All the people are so happy now, their heads are caving in. I'm glad they are a snowman with protective rubber skin" -- They Might Be Giants

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