British Energy Minister says scrap “Immoral” subsidies to wind power

michael fallon
Michael Fallon says enough is enough.

In further proof that this scam is on its last legs the British Energy Minister, Michael Fallon has called for the obscene subsidies to wind power to be scrapped.

Here’s Utility Week on the trail.

‘Immoral’ subsidies to wind and solar need to be stopped
Utility Week
2 December 2013

“Immoral” subsidies for onshore windfarms and large scale solar farms should be scrapped “as soon as possible”, according to energy minister Michael Fallon.

Speaking at The Spectator’s energy conference in London, Fallon said “mature” renewable technologies, including onshore wind and large scale solar farms, should not receive government subsidies.

He added: “It is not right – it is immoral – for hard working, base rate tax payers to be lining the pockets of landowners by funding the development of large scale renewables that do not need further subsidy.”

Peter Atherton, analyst at Liberum Capital, also said changes need to be made to make UK energy policy more affordable for the taxpayer.

He added: “Energy policy can’t be financed at a cost the public is willing to bear. Is the public willing to pay for this? It is very, very unlikely.”

Malcolm Grimston, associate fellow of energy, environment and resources at Chatham House, went further and said the current “energy policy is not sustainable” and changes are needed to make it more affordable.

The energy minister also reiterated the government’s desire for a European 2030 carbon reduction target, not a renewable target, saying this would make the UK “free to choose the lowest cost pathway to a low carbon future” and would help limit costs to consumers.

Fallon also denied that by seeking only a carbon reduction target and not a renewable target for 2030, the government was abandoning the pledge made by the Prime Minister in 2010 for the coalition to be “the greenest government ever”.

Fallon said: “Being green doesn’t mean being Greenpeace. Signing up to yet more targets irrespective of the impacts on consumers and business is deeply irresponsible.

“In contract being cost effective green is caring. Caring for the worst off and caring for our industry.”

He added: “I made it clear we cannot go on imposing on our poorest households and most vulnerable these immediate costs of trying to comply too quickly with targets ahead of what consumers can stand.”
Utility Week

When something is economically UNSUSTAINABLE it will – eventually – die a natural death.

South Australians are reeling at the loss of its biggest manufacturer, Holden.  In 4 years time the car maker will close its doors for good.

Trying to flog a car that people had little interest in buying (the Commodore) and beaten to economic death by a mixture of cheaper and better appointed foreign imports (eg the Mazda 3) and ludicrously high wages – Holden’s workers earned rates almost double those for comparable work elsewhere (kept up there by a union that would rather see its members earn nothing, than cut their cloth) it was always a matter of when – not if – its American parent, General Motors would pull the plug.

Instead of bailing it out with another round of taxpayer’s cash, the Coalition stood back and let the inevitable play out.  The situation was economically unsustainable – throwing even more taxpayers’ money at the problem was never going to change that fact.

And so it is with the wind industry in Australia.  On the same economic principle it is a question of WHEN? – NOT IF? – this fiasco comes to a grinding natural halt.

turbine down
A question of when – not if.

5 thoughts on “British Energy Minister says scrap “Immoral” subsidies to wind power

  1. Absolutely right, reduction in emissions should not rest solely on Renewable Energy, there are many ways emissions can be reduced and setting a target for Renewable Energy has taken peoples eyes of the opportunity to reduce emissions in other ways. Subsidising the industry with a concentration on Wind has created a situation where fraud and greed have overshadowed what the intention was – reducing emissions, it has created an ideology which puts profit before research, accountability and truth, while not reducing emissions to any degree that could be proved to make the money, heartache and lost time worthwhile.

  2. A pity then that Cameron PM and Co are not doing that. We all agree – but Cameron is just words and NOT deeds on so many issues.

    1. “Cameron is just words and NOT deeds” or should that be misdeeds:

      “David Cameron’s wealthy father-in-law is making almost £350,000 a year from a publicly-subsidised wind farm on his country estate.

      Sir Reginald Sheffield, who is said to be worth £20million, earns the sum in ‘rent’ from the consortium behind the farm – just for having the turbines on his land.

      The 65-year-old calls it a ‘modest’ fraction of the estimated £3.5million the eight 400ft-high turbines generate each year.

      They were switched on two years ago at Bagmoor Farm, part of the 3,000-acre Normanby Hall estate near Scunthorpe that has been in his aristocratic family since the 16th century.”

      Maybe we don’t need to look too far to understand Cameron’s “NOT deeds” when it comes to taxpayer subsidies for the wind industry gravy train.

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