Benny Peiser’s Global Warming Policy Foundation Reports the UK
Chancellor To Abolish Coalition’s Green Tax Target.
Furthermore, Britain’s Climate Change Department May Be Cut To The Bone.
UK Chancellor To Abolish Coalition’s Green Tax
Target - The cost of
subsidising new wind farms is spiralling out of control, government sources
have privately warned. Officials admitted that so-called “green” energy schemes
will require a staggering £9 billion a year in subsidies – paid for by
customers – by 2020. The Chancellor believes the figures demonstrate the need
to rein in the cost of policies to tackle climate change. As a first step, he
will use this week’s summer Budget to announce that he is abandoning targets
set under the coalition to increase the level of environmental taxes in a move
he hopes will save customers and businesses billions of pounds. --Tim Ross, The Sunday Telegraph, 5 July
2015Britain’s Climate Change Department May Be Cut To The Bone - The
Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) could be facing a 90 per cent
cut in staff over the next few years, an environmental think tank has warned.
The prediction has prompted politicians and academics to issue dire forecasts
for Britain’s economic future, but the right-wing campaign group the TaxPayers’
Alliance (TPA) has offered an alternate solution to DECC’s impending staffing
crisis: they suggest that the department be scrapped and its responsibilities
handed over to another government department, saving £billions each year. --Donna
Rachel Edmunds, Breitbart News, 3 July 2015
Nigel Lawson Calls For DECC To Be
Broken Up - Nigel Lawson, a former editor of The Spectator (amongst other
things), has an intriguing idea in a letter to today’s FT: just break up the
Department for Energy and Climate Change. It has done nothing to encourage the
development of shale gas, which could keep Britain in energy for the next 100
years without the need to build another windmill. Cameron believes in cutting
the size of government. This could be a perfect place to start. –Fraser Nelson, The Spectator, 8 February 2012'
Imperial' BBC Is A Threat To Free Press Warns UK
Chancellor - George Osborne has accused the BBC of being ‘imperial in its
ambitions’ as he warned it faces huge cuts. The Chancellor launched a stinging
attack yesterday on the Corporation’s well-funded website, saying it was
creating unfair competition to the free press. Mr Osborne also said it was time
for the BBC to contribute to money-saving efforts. He is expected to use
Wednesday’s Budget to force the Corporation to meet the cost of free TV
licences for the over-75s. This would cost the BBC £650million – around a fifth
of its annual income. --Daniel Martin, Mail on Sunday, 5 July 2015
Will High Court ruling save our most glorious coastline from wind farms invasion?
Cornwall's 'green strategy' in turmoil as council's unlawful backing for
turbine is quashed - Plans to erect thousands of wind turbines across some of
Britain’s most picturesque vistas have been thrown into disarray by a landmark
High Court ruling. Cornwall County Council has been forced to accept it acted
unlawfully when it gave the go-ahead for a 250ft eyesore near a beautiful
stretch of coastline – throwing doubt on about 4,000 other turbines it wants to
erect. --Simon Trump, Mail on Sunday, 5 July 2015
If Lancashire won’t frack we
will, insist Yorkshire residents - The campaign to start a British fracking
industry is to shift across the Pennines, with an application yesterday in
North Yorkshire for the first of up to 50 wells. There is stronger local
support for fracking in North Yorkshire, where the value placed on the economic
benefits of new industries was demonstrated this week with the approval of the
world’s biggest potash mine in the North York Moors National Park near Whitby.
Lorraine Allanson, who runs a holiday cottages and bed and breakfast business
four miles from Third Energy’s site, has established a campaign group to
support fracking in the area. She said: “We are very proud of Yorkshire’s long
history of producing energy for the nation. We are used to the gas industry in
this area and it contributes to our rural economy. I have every faith that the
Environment Agency will regulate fracking properly.” --Ben Webster, The Times, 4 July 2015
US
renewables industry seeks tax breaks to compete with gas - The US wind and solar power industries face a
fall in investment in 2017 after tax credits expire, their trade body has
warned as it appeals to politicians for more financial support. Plunging costs
for wind and solar power have made them increasingly competitive against fossil
fuels, but the American Council on Renewable Energy argues that the fall in the
price of natural gas caused by the US shale boom means they still need additional
tax breaks. --Ed Crooks, Financial Times, 6 July 2015
Amazing! US Shale Oil Drilling Breaks Even Below $40 Per Barrel - US
shale companies have increased the number of rigs in the field for the first
time in nearly seven months when oil prices were trading around $70 per barrel,
compared to under $60 per barrel in the current market. The number of rigs rose
in almost every main shale basin across the US according to data gathered by Baker
Hughes. Industry experts have suggested that as a result of last year’s price
crash, shale exploration firms have cut their break even costs by anything up
to $20 per barrel. A Bloomberg analyst suggested that the cost of drilling
services have fallen between 20% and 50% with break even prices in parts of the
Permian and Eagle Ford below $40 per barrel. --James Perkins, Shale Energy Insider, 3 July 2015
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