| The following two open letters, published in the Observer and elsewhere today, are a direct response to things mentioned in the Chancer’s (sic) Autumn Statement last week. As such, they do not even touch on the litany of environmental mismanagement dished up by this Government elsewhere, such as the fracking issue.
LETTER 1: For 15 months, we have observed with growing concern this government’s failure to live up to its promise to be the “greenest ever”. Now, following the chancellor’s autumn statement, we can say that the coalition is on a path to becoming the most environmentally destructive government to hold power in this country since the modern environmental movement was born. As George Osborne sat down, our political culture crossed a line and became a little more like that which dominates Washington DC. We know from experience not least by observing events across the Atlantic – that when such a line is crossed it is extremely difficult to retrieve lost ground. The chancellor has proposed: Tax breaks for the country’s most polluting industries. A revision of the basic safeguards that protect our most precious wildlife sites from development. A major expansion of airport capacity in the south-east of England Support for a major expansion of the road network. Aggressive implementation of a new presumption in favour of development in the planning system. Osborne has proclaimed that protecting the environment is against the public interest something no senior politician in this country has done in recent history. George Monbiot author; Jonathon Porritt, Tony Juniper former directors, Friends of the Earth; Joss Garman co-founder, Plane Stupid; Tamsin Omond co-ordinator, Save England’s Forests campaign; Caroline Lucas MP Green Party leader LETTER 2: The environmental movement has spoken out repeatedly against policies that put short-term profit ahead of our countryside and wildlife, eroding our natural capital and quality of life, but rarely have we been as incredulous as we were last Tuesday, hearing the autumn statement. The stunning disregard shown for the value of the natural environment not only flies in the face of popular opinion but goes against everything the government said in June when it launched two major pieces of environmental policy the natural environment white paper and the England biodiversity strategy. It is increasingly clear that society needs a new economic model that accounts properly for our natural capital. Yet with this statement, its “red-tape challenge”, sudden cuts to solar subsidies and its ill-conceived planning reforms, the government is continuing an out-of-date approach that casts regulation and the environment as enemies to growth. Is the environment really an obstacle to economic productivity or is it in fact the very basis of it? Not a hard question to answer and there is an increasingly powerful body of evidence that demonstrates this, including the government’s own national ecosystem assessment. How can the prime minister tolerate this gaping intellectual and political inconsistency and walk with open eyes down a path that condemns future generations to a lower quality of life and to a massive and costly struggle to rebuild the country’s natural riches? We appeal to him to champion long-term, sustainable economic policies that will bring much-needed prosperity without destroying all that millions hold dear. Mike Clarke chief executive, RSPB; Shaun Spiers chief executive, Campaign to Protect Rural England; John Sauven executive director, Greenpeace; Stephanie Hilborne chief executive, Wildlife Trusts; Andy Atkins executive director, Friends of the Earth |
Author Archives: Bridgend's Green Leftie
Wales Is The Fuel Poverty Capital Of Britain
| Only yesterday I flagged up the Wales’ Government’s Fuel Poverty programme – NEST.Today, the news emphasises just how inadequate attempts to solve the problem have been in Wales to date:
http://news.sky.com/home/uk-news/article/16122145 Here are the levels of fuel poverty by region, with the percentage of people affected and the average household energy bill over the year: 1. Wales, 32%, £1,312. The problem with NEST, and its predecessor HEES, is that it is money made available for people that know that it is available. Efforts to promote the schemes to those that need them are virtually non-existent and rely on people like us, in the Green Party, and charitable organisations like Groundwork, to get out and try to ensure people get what they are entitled to receive. Fuel poverty has a significant impact on the health, social and economic well-being of householders. It also impacts on the resources of public sector services, such as the NHS, through increasing the need for householders to access services or increasing the level of support they require. By reducing the risk of householders living in fuel poverty in Wales we can help reduce the negative impact on peoples lives and the pressure on public services. By tackling fuel poverty, we will make a contribution in tackling the following negative impacts: Health Increased respiratory illnesses including asthma. |
Increased blood pressure and risk of heart attack and stroke (cardiovascular disease).
Increased levels of slips, trips and falls, particularly in older people as cold can reduce mobility and cause a worsening in the symptoms of arthritis.
Stress and mental health issues driven by concerns over bills and/or energy debt.
Increased pressure and cost on health and care services.
Fuel poverty contributes to excess winter deaths: (ONS data)
- There were an estimated 25,700 excess winter deaths in England and Wales in 2010/11, virtually unchanged from the previous winter
- As in previous years, there were more excess winter deaths in females than in males in 2010/11
- Between 2009/10 and 2010/11 male excess winter deaths increased to 11,200, but female deaths fell to 14,400
- The majority of deaths occurred among those aged 75 and over; however, deaths in this age group fell between 2009/10 and 2010/11, whereas deaths in persons aged under 75 increased
- The excess winter mortality index was highest in Wales in 2010/11, whereas in the two previous winters it was highest in the South East of England
Education
Fuel Poverty impacts on education achievement where only one room may be properly heated, resulting in the lack of a quiet, warm space to study or increased levels of absenteeism as a result of sickness.
Social Exclusion
Fuel Poverty can increase social isolation because of a reluctance to invite friends into a cold, damp home.
High fuel bills leave householders with less money available for food, other day to day expenses and social activity.
Economy
Fuel poverty impacts negatively on the economy because of increased levels of sickness.
Tackling fuel poverty and reducing the amount of money spent on energy bills can have positive effects on local regeneration because people have more money to spend in the local economy. The key element of official Green Party Policy is:
EN400 The distribution mains for electricity and gas will be brought into a fully accountable public sector. Energy production would be a mixture of public and private enterprises.
Only by bringing the control of the the energy infrastructure, and strict regulation of the energy markets, into public hands can we stop the energy companies profiteering (in the news yet again today: http://www.guardian.co.UK/business/2011/DEC/02/energy-firms-accusations-profiteering-electricity?newsfeed=true ) at the expense of the fuel poor. It is also the only way we are going to re-structure the energy mix we use to become truly sustainable; alongside the only way forward, in terms of alleviating fuel poverty, that we currently have – i.e. making our homes more energy efficient.
GPMediaNet Green MP Named Biggest Influencer In UK Politics ThisYear
| OFFICE OF CAROLINE LUCAS, MP FOR BRIGHTON PAVILION *** NEWS RELEASE *** 02 December 2011 GREEN MP NAMED BIGGEST INFLUENCER IN UK POLITICS THIS YEAR Green MP Caroline Lucas has been recognised by a prestigious political body as the MP who has most influenced the political agenda in 2011. Since her election to the constituency of Brighton Pavilion in 2010, the UK’s only Green MP has made a significant impact through her work on a range of issues – from putting pressure on the Government to tackle fuel poverty and drop Trident, to campaigning for Parliamentary reform and fairer rail fares. Lucas received the Political Studies Association award for ‘Influencing the Political Agenda 2011′ from Channel 4 News presenter Jon Snow at a packed ceremony in Westminster this week. Caroline Lucas said: “I am honoured and delighted to collect this award from the Political Studies Association – and appreciate the judges’ recognition that having even one Green in Parliament can make a positive difference.” The panel of judges at the Political Studies Association said: ‘Caroline Lucas has made unprecedented steps forward in raising the profile of the Green Party. The achievement of winning a seat in Parliament under the First-Past-The-Post electoral system should not be underestimated. “When considering these factors alongside her role in influencing the AV debate, we felt she was a worthy winner of the 2011 award for Influencing the Political Agenda.” ENDS The Political Studies Association is the leading organisation in the UK linking academics in political science and current affairs, theorists and practitioners, policy-makers, journalists, researchers and students in higher education. For information about the 2011 award winners, visit: http://www.psa.ac.uk/PSAPubs/Awards2011.pdf Melissa Freeman |
Local good news & bad news on the energy front
The good news: The Replacement scheme to HEES (Home Energy Efficiency Scheme) – aimed at reducing fuel poverty is now well established. It is called NEST: http://nestwales.org.UK/
Nest is the Welsh Government’s fuel poverty scheme. It aims to help reduce the number of households in fuel poverty and make Welsh homes warmer and more fuel-efficient places to live. If you’re worried about the cost of heating your home, you can call 0800 512 012 free from a landline or 0300 456 2655 from a mobile phone. The friendly advisors can give advice on:
You may also be eligible to receive home improvements at no cost to you, to help make your home warmer and reduce the cost of your energy bills. We need to do all we can to raise awareness and uptake of these benefits. There are 240,000 homes suffering fuel poverty in Wales and NEST had less than 4000 enquiries in its first 3 months of operation. Alleviating fuel poverty is fundamental to everything the Green Party stands for, so let us ensure we spread the word. Now the bad news: As expected, the Government’s disgraceful moving of the goal posts with regards to feed in tariffs has led to the Community Solar Project that we have been involved with, through Sustainable Wales, being put on hold. Margaret Minhinnick has issue this letter to all those that registered an interest: In recent months, you have registered interest in Sustainable Wales’ PVs for Free scheme. Unfortunately, we regret to inform you that the Government recently announced that by12 December 2011, there will be a fifty per cent cut in ‘Feed in Tariffs’ which formed the financial back bone of the project. There is a slight chance that Government may extend the ‘Feed in Tariff’ scheme and we have been in communication with our AMs and MPs urging them to support this. If you feel so inclined, we would be grateful if you could do the same. Consequently, until we hear otherwise, we are putting this project on hold, but will contact you immediately if any further changes are announced. We would like to apologise for any inconvenience caused and thank you for your patience. So yet another worthy project gets Con-Dem-ed! I would urge you all to express your dismay, as suggested to: Carwyn Jones AM(Mention his appalling inaction on the fracking issue while you are at it!) 01656 664320 Carwyn.Jones And Madeleine Moon MPConstituency Office at 47 Nolton Street is open for appointments with my caseworkers on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays from 10am to 12 noon. You can contact her:
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Support the strike if you can and the strikers if you can’t
Our public service workers deserve your support tomorrow. They put up with years of terrible pay and poor conditions for the promise of a decent pension. This issue is absolutely crucial to the morale and esteem of all those people we rely so much on. The government is picking on the wrong people and we must let them know as much.Video from UNITE |
Beware the Iron Lady
“Economic inequality and social decay. An economy rigged in the interests of the few while the many struggled to cope. £200 billion of privatisation and North Sea oil receipts frittered away paying the benefits bill of the mass unemployment she created.”Sound familiar?This is where Cameron and Tory Blair learned it all from.http://www.leftfootforward.org/2011/11/margaret-thatcher-was-every-bit-as-bad-as-we-remember/Beware the distortions in the forthcoming Thatcher biopic movie. |
The blatant lies of the frackers and their friends
| They ask us to trust them and their assurances that we have nothing to worry about, but then tell the most obvious and blatant of lies in public places.Nothing illustrates this better than what they try to tell us about the content of frack fluids.Take our old friend Nick ‘Greedy’ Grealy. He was at the Co-op/Caroline Lucas sponsored event for MPs that Lousie Evans and I attended yesterday. Bold as brass, in front of a very clued up audience, he said of Cuadrilla: “They only use one chemical”. As if I would let that ridiculous porky go!!I quickly jumped on him to point out that Cuadrilla themselves tell somewhat different, conflicting lies. I had the following web pages to hand:
http://www.cuadrillaresources.com/what-we-do/technology/fracturing-fluid/ offers the lie that they use just three chemicals, namely: polyacrylamide (frequently contaminnated with or degrades into the nerve toxin acrylamide), biocide (poison) and hydrochloric acid (corrosive to human tissue). This is confirmed verbally by CEO Mark Miller in the video. However, some simple maths – that simple that an intelligent man like Mark Miller wouldn’t make such a crass mistake surely – reveals that all the declared ingredients only add up to 99.955% Careless or what? So here we have Mark Miller confirming Nick Grealy is a pathetic liar, but how do we know Mark Miller is a liar, and not a careless mathematician? Because his company supplies us with this: So is this data sheet, the complete story? NO it is not. How do we know this? These Cuadrilla sources also serve to highlight another common misconception about frack fluid. The required composition is highly variable. It will vary with different stages of each frack job at each site. There is no one recipe. It is almost constantly varying. Mark Miller himself points this out with his explanation that hydrochloric acid may only be needed in initial stages. The data sheet shows major variations between the stages listed. So can we collate all this information that Cuadrilla has so kindly supplied us with and assume we have the full picture? I don’t think so. We know from world renowned Dr Theo Colborn, in Gasland and other places, that she alone has evidence of around 980 products used in the US industry of which 78% are highly dangerous; in some cases even in microscopic quantities. The industry does not, presumably, use these additives for fun. The sequence near the end of Gasland that shows the industry man squirming as he is forced list the chemicals his company uses is fascinating. It corroborates evidence from Australia that shows that the industry regularly needs to use the following:
So if the the industry everywhere else in the world needs all these additional (underlined) components, how is that Cuadrilla can do without them? Finally, let us nail the myth that there has to be full disclosure of chemicals used. There is no such UK legislation that I can find. Even if the industry were legally obliged to divulge all their little secrets, would they? EA’s sampling methods are totally inadequate. If the companies keep their secrets, they are likely to get away with it, unless caught red-handed, as they are banking on getting in, cutting and running before the slow, insidious affects of their poisons have done their damage and been able to be proved. The EA recognise these companies ability to get away with it here: “For example, at present company directors can legitimately walk away from environmental liabilities they have caused (e.g. Polluting groundwater and public drinking water supplies) by forming a new company and leaving a financial liability with the insolvent old company (Hunts Refuse Ltd at Helpston). This has resulted in public funds having to be used to clean up the pollution and protect public health.” I rest my case. Andy Chyba Additional information: |
Emphatic rejection of fracking in the UK
This poll is now closed. |
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GUARDIAN fracking poll
Do you think hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, for natural gas should go ahead?’ Another poll by The Guardian. Get voting people!http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/poll/2011/nov/18/forward-with-fracking-poll?CMP=twt_gu&fb=nativeThe ‘No’ votes are currently winning by 3 to 1 – just 11 hours to go. 4 to 1 by the end is possible if you all act quickly! |
Wales Green Party Conference final details
| 19th November – Aneurin Bevan Room, Cardiff Student Union From: Matt Townsend Secretary, Cardiff and Vale Green Party Conference Organiser, Wales Green PartyFrom this link you can download the minutes of the previous conference and the final agenda including details of motions, etc. I recommend you print off all these things to bring with you to help you follow proceedings if you are staying for the AGM. http://my.greenparty.org.uk/event/wales-green-party-conference-and-wgpc-agm If you have problems accessing the link please let me know and I will 10:45-11:00 Conference Welcome with coffee/tea – Aneurin Bevan Room, 11:00 Conference Opens (Open to all) 11:35-11:50 Break with coffee/tea 11:50 Chris Williams, West Midlands regional development officer who has 12:45 -13:30 Buffet lunch 13:30 AGM Opens (members only) 14:40-14:55 Break with coffee/tea 17:00 Conference close 19:00 Bar close |

