Lib Lab Lip Service

Posted by admin on April 17, 2007
Apr 172007

Yesterday, the UK’s third political party – The Liberal Democrats – launched their Climate Change Starts at Home campaign.

Menzies Campbell unveiled bold proposals that demonstrated how upgrading Britain’s homes could reduce carbon dioxide emissions by millions of tonnes, save energy, and lead to significant cuts in energy bills.

Last week BBC2′s Newsnight featured a review of a journalist’s gruelling year-long attempt at ‘ethical living’ which reduced his family’s ‘carbon footprint’ by two tonnes. But as Bjorn Lomborg pointed out on the program, if that reduction were to be acheived by families nationwide, the saving would postpone the effect of global warming by a mere seven hours by the year 2100.

‘Millions of tonnes’ sounds big, and makes good copy, but it doesn’t change the planet at all. This leaves Menzies with only the claim that insulation, paid for with ‘Energy Mortgages’ secured on homes, would shave hundreds of pounds a year off consumers’ energy bills. But with an added risk of losing that home on top of having to pay back the loan, it seems unlikely that this scheme will make much of a difference to anyone for whom £300 a year makes a difference.

Away from home, UK Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett is due to take the issue of climate change to the security council on the basis that ‘the cumulative impacts of climate change could exacerbate these drivers of conflict, and particularly increase the risk to those states already susceptible to conflict.’[DEAD LINK]

Perhaps this is a case of Blair attempting to secure his legacy by getting the world to move on climate change. Indeed, it’s not like him to be against things that ‘exacerbate the drivers of conflict’. Or perhaps it’s just an attempt to offset all that carbon used in the Gulf war…

The Church of God the Ecologist

Posted by admin on April 17, 2007
Apr 172007

Late respects to the late Kurt Vonnegut (1922 – 2007) R.I.P.

1,780,000 have already said ‘So It Goes’. So, we’re not going to.

11,100 have cited ‘The Church of God the Utterly Indifferent’. Um.

Ah, hardly anybody mentions ‘The Church of God the Ecologist’. Perfect. If only Vonnegut had written that.

It’s also a shame he’s not around to read this. It isn’t entirely unconnected.

In line with all the mainstream political parties and some of the supposedly more radical ones, Christian groups are also seeing the light in an ever deeper shade of green. Indeed religions around the world are turning to Gaia for guidance, according to Andy Crouch. It’s just those pesky ‘evangelical Protestants’ left to convert, apparently.

Your atheist, humanist hosts at Climate Resistance hope they resist. Opposition to the necessity of urgent action against climate change is possibly the only thing we have in common with your average evangelical Protestant (and probably for different reasons). Kurt Vonnegut wouldn’t have agreed with us on that one. He wrote some cracking books, though.