Net zero leaves UK on ‘precipice of industrial collapse’ | Politics | News


Britain stands on โ€œthe precipice of industrial collapseโ€ because of surging energy costs that have been pushed higher by net zero policies, according to a new report from the Prosperity Institute. It warns: โ€œOur energy-intensive industries, from steelmaking to ceramics, from poultry processing to industrial gases, are at just 50% of their annual output in 2000.

“The industry has gone from over 800,000 jobs to under 413,500, despite Britainโ€™s population increasing by nearly 11million in this time.โ€ The report โ€“ Destroying the Foundations: How Net Zero Could Wreck British Industry for Good โ€“ claims high energy prices are โ€œincreasingly becoming the number one issue leading to factory closures and job lossesโ€. Author Rian Chad Whitton insists a โ€œthriving industrial sector is essential for British prosperityโ€.

The report has been welcomed by Richard Tice, the deputy leader of Reform UK.

Writing in the introduction, he states: โ€œNet zero is the greatest act of financial negligence ever imposed upon the British economy by Westminster. We cannot be a rich nation without cheap energy.โ€

He blames the push for net zero for โ€œsubsidising unreliable and unprofitable green energy, whilst punitively taxing and restricting fossil fuels and neglecting nuclear developmentโ€.

Warning of the threat to production sectors such as concrete, glass, steel, petrochemicals, and fertilisers, he warned: โ€œWithout these products, other industries such as farming, manufacturing, and construction would collapse, spelling local and national economic ruin. Whichever industries managed to survive would see astronomical price rises due to reliance on imports.

โ€œWe would have gone from the cradle of the Industrial Revolution to a client state dependent on others for our most basic materials, all because we dressed up economic stupidity as ecological virtue.โ€

The report warns: โ€œWe are entering a far more turbulent period than we have enjoyed for over 50 years, and we must have a strong industrial base.โ€

Its publication coincides with research from the National Energy System Operator suggesting the drive to make the UK net zero by 2050 could cost the country ยฃ350billion more than a slower approach.

A Downing Street spokesman said protecting future generations โ€œfundamentally reduces our exposure to fossil fuel markets which have caused half of all recessions since the 1970sโ€.

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