The Professor of Energy Policy at Oxford Dieter Helm told FPA members
there was no reason to expect any more decisive action on climate change
at the UN conference in Paris next year.
Europe had exported CO2 emissions to China in the past few years by
cutting manufacturing; globally, nothing had changed. Meanwhile, £100
billion was being invested across Europe in wind farms, which – along
with solar panels – made precisely zero difference. Europe should
invest just some of that money in research, a “European MIT”, and there
were reasons for hope: solar energy could make a massive difference in
the future as experts widened the light spectrum and found materials
other than panels to apply solar energy. However, said Professor Helm,
demand would not fall; energy would just be cheaper. Thanks to shale gas
extraction or “fracking” the price of American gas was a quarter of
that in Europe. For most of his career nobody had been much interested
in energy as there had been massive excess supply; now, everybody cared.
We didn’t have security of supply, we had less competitive and
affordable energy, and emissions globally were still going up. The Uk
was facing an energy crunch in the next 18 months and action was needed.
No comments:
Post a Comment