The Green Industrial Revolution Is A Lie

As we gear up for a Federal election in May, you can be sure that Labor and the Greens will peddle the fantasy about “Green Jobs”. It is a lie, like the one about renewable energy being cheaper than coal, not to mention the whole climate change scam.

Ben Pile writes on spiked:

The green industrial revolution is a lie

The UK’s green sector has not grown in nearly a decade.

The green industrial revolution is a lie

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TopicsPOLITICSSCIENCE & TECHUK

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) published data earlier this month which showed that the UK’s ‘low-carbon and renewable-energy economy’ (LCREE) had not grown significantly between 2014 and 2020. This performance is a far cry from the promises of plentiful ‘green jobs’ and a ‘green industrial revolution’ that have echoed around Westminster for the past decade and more. It turns out that the much heralded green growth was nothing more than mould.

This news should surprise no one. As I have argued elsewhere on spiked, the green industrial revolution is a lie. Since the 2008 Climate Change Act, successive governments have embraced the fantasy of leading the world in the ‘transition’ to a low-carbon economy. And it’s all been to no avail. The rest of the world continues to increase its consumption of fossil fuels despite endless COP meetings, and Britain’s green industrial revolution stubbornly fails to materialise.

Back in 2009, the then Labour government, led by Gordon Brown, claimed the green economy was already thriving. He promised to add 400,000 new ‘green jobs’, taking the total number of people working in the green sector to 1.3million. These claims were based on proprietary data produced by an economic research company, which refused to share its data, as did the government even after freedom-of-information requests.

Even without access to the data, I was already able to point out in 2009 that growth in the ‘green economy’ is an illusion – or better still, an accountancy trick. The government was effectively compelling sectors of the economy, through a variety of green regulations, to ‘decarbonise’ their operations. It was then adding said sectors to the green economy and so the green economy appeared to be growing. This was happening even when the sectors in question had been harmed and diminished by the new regulations.

It took me until 2013 to obtain the data on which successive governments were basing their figures, policies and predictions. By then, it was being claimed that the ‘green economy’ was worth £122 billion. But it had only reached this size because the figure included sectors of the economy that simply do not qualify as ‘green’ in any meaningful sense. It even included the production, transportation and sale of liquefied natural gas and liquefied petroleum gas – otherwise known as fossil fuels – merely because such businesses were now subject to environmental regulation. My analysis at the time suggested that through such tricks, the government’s financial wizards had inflated the value of the ‘green economy’ by something in the region of 700 per cent.

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Reflection on Colossians 4:7-18

Scripture

And say to Archippus, “Be sure to carry out the ministry the Lord gave you.”

Observation

The letter concludes with personal greetings.

Paul is sending to Tychicus and Onesimus with the letter to give reports on what the Lord is doing.

Aristarchus and Mark send greetings, along with Justus. Epaphras and Luke also send greetings.

Paul tells the church to encourage Archippus to be sure to carry out the ministry that the Lord had given him.

Application

We don’t know who this Archippus was or what the ministry was that God had called him to do. But Paul thought it was important enough to mention.

I often wonder how many people get an idea about ministry, perhaps a conviction, but they failed to follow through. I know of some people who would definitely called by the Lord to be pastors,but they chose to say”No” to God. Perhaps others have been called to be missionaries, or to be evangelists, or simply to oversee the church’s children’s ministry, and they fail to say “Yes”.

Some people feel overwhelmed by the idea of serving the Lord. They might feel unworthy or unable. But God knows our limitations, and He equips us for the tasks to which He calls us.

Some people lead very complicated lives and struggle with drugs, alcohol, and juggling children from multiple relationships. Life can be messy, but again God uses all of this.

Whatever reason there is for avoiding doing the ministry, we need to remember that God is bigger.

Prayer

Thank you Lord for the knowledge that you can enable me and equip me for the tasks you are calling me to do. Amen