On the day when the long heralded UK general election was finally called, I posted up a thread so that people could begin to discuss what I expected to be a series of climate related issues that would emerge as campaigning got under way. That is not to say that I expected AGW to be a major debating point between the parties, but I did expect that it would figure somewhere down the list of concerns that were likely to be of interest to voters. After all it is so often referred to as the greatest challenge of our times, not least by a failing government which has built a vast edifice of policies around that belief.
The reality of the election campaign has been very different. During the four and a half hours of TV debate that have provided the main platform for the party leaders, just one question was aimed at this subject. Although I didn’t time how long the discussion lasted, my impression was that this was less than for any other question during the whole series of debates. It seemed as though the speakers wanted to mouth the necessary platitudes and get-the-hell-out-of-it as quickly as possible. Not even Nick Clegg, whose Lib Dem Party has criticised the present administration for not doing enough to limit carbon emissions, seemed reticent. David Cameron, who will perhaps be our next prime minister, seemed only to have a home insulation scheme to offer, with due lip service to the ideal of more alternative energy, but no specifics. Gordon Brown effortlessly morphed the subject into the realms of economic recovery by claiming that 400,000 new jobs can be created in green technology.
And then everyone heaved a sigh of relief and moved on. In the final debate, which focused on our nations economic woes, the subject was touched on again, but only in the context of more vacuous hopes of deliverance from fiscal meltdown. No one, of course, was prepared to ask whether vastly increasing the cost of energy would be a smart contribution to rebuilding our shattered economy.
I have said more than once on this blog that I did not think that, in the aftermath of Climategate, Copenhagen and the IPCC scandals, political consensus and a headlong commitment to the crusade against climate change could survive a general election campaign in this country. In the light of this subject’s relegation to the outer fringes of the hustings it would seem that I was wrong about that; or was I?
Not only has climate change been a non-event so far as the campaign is concerned, but recently, for the first time in years, it seems to have virtually disappeared from the media too.
I am certainly not going to try to anticipate the outcome of this general election, but there is one thing that is quite certain. By the end of this week, the radical change in the political landscape that so many commentators have identified ever since Nick Clegg’s spectacular – if possibly transient – emergence as a major force on the current British political scene as a result of the first TV debate, is likely to be a reality. The electorate will have spoken, and their message is likely to rock the two major parties to their foundations. Continue reading »
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