Do you want to discuss boring politics? (72 Viewers)

MalcSB

Well-Known Member
They take the public for absolute mugs, this is just narrative building aided by the media to justify why nothing can get better.



Miraculously under the bonnet £3bn is found for Ukraine

They have been receiving briefings and information since January, so either (a) the civil service were lying to them and not providing full disclosure or (b) narrative building as you suggest.

It is a load of bollocks.
 

duffer

Well-Known Member
Of course, the Tony Blair institute is an entirely unbiased organisation.

I'm sure they're not, but the article is in a farming magazine. I'm not exactly a Blairite.

I was looking for something with a bit of data about food security versus solar use. If you've got some alternate research that suggests the figures are different, then get it out there.

Currently the line that there is far more land used by golf courses than solar, seems to stand up.

 

MalcSB

Well-Known Member
I'm sure they're not, but the article is in a farming magazine. I'm not exactly a Blairite.

I was looking for something with a bit of data about food security versus solar use. If you've got some alternate research that suggests the figures are different, then get it out there.

Currently the line that there is far more land used by golf courses than solar, seems to stand up.

I’m just trying to imagine how much land will need to be taken up by solar to meet Labours renewables target. Or wind turbines - I’m not sure if you can still farm around the latter. And of course, what happens when the sun doesn’t shine or the wind doesn’t blow. I suppose we could surround the UK with wave power generators, that might stop the boats🛶.

I wonder which Labour crony and funder has an interest in all this?

And, to repeat myself, some on here assured me that roofs would do the trick and that covering fields with eyesore panels would not be necessary.
 
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shmmeee

Well-Known Member
I'm sure they're not, but the article is in a farming magazine. I'm not exactly a Blairite.

I was looking for something with a bit of data about food security versus solar use. If you've got some alternate research that suggests the figures are different, then get it out there.

Currently the line that there is far more land used by golf courses than solar, seems to stand up.


We aren’t ever going to be food secure. It’s such a weird argument. And it probably wouldn’t be the worst thing to give some agricultural land a couple of decades out of rotation while we build the network up fully. Solar is cheap and can be put down quickly with little long term impact on the area. In places like California it already removes the need for gas during the day mostly and now battery storage is starting to eat into night time gas usage.
 

duffer

Well-Known Member
I’m just trying to imagine how much land will need to be taken up by solar to meet Labours renewables target. Or wind turbines - I’m not sure if you can still farm around the latter. And of course, what happens when the sun doesn’t shine or the wind doesn’t blow. I suppose we could surround the UK with wave power generators, that might stop the boats🛶.

I wonder which Labour crony and funder has an interest in all this?

And, to repeat myself, some on here assured me that roofs would do the trick and that covering fields with eyesore panels would not be necessary.

If you're a Tory supporter, then I think the cronyism argument isn't somewhere you'd really want to go. 😁

Is there any evidence that someone in the Labour party is making money out of this policy or indeed doing it for that reason?

As for how much land, I don't know, but I think that all of the current "solar takes too much land arguments", aren't based on any facts I can find.

Personally, I'm very much in favour of renewables. We've only got the one planet, it would need better not to trash it, imho. We can't sort the whole problem ourselves, but we've got to start somewhere, and right now.

Is your argument really more about the fact that it's a Labour policy, which by definition must make it wrong?
 

duffer

Well-Known Member
We aren’t ever going to be food secure. It’s such a weird argument. And it probably wouldn’t be the worst thing to give some agricultural land a couple of decades out of rotation while we build the network up fully. Solar is cheap and can be put down quickly with little long term impact on the area. In places like California it already removes the need for gas during the day mostly and now battery storage is starting to eat into night time gas usage.

Indeed, and the biggest risk to food security is, arguably, climate change.
 

MalcSB

Well-Known Member
If you're a Tory supporter, then I think the cronyism argument isn't somewhere you'd really want to go. 😁

Is there any evidence that someone in the Labour party is making money out of this policy or indeed doing it for that reason?

As for how much land, I don't know, but I think that all of the current "solar takes too much land arguments", aren't based on any facts I can find.

Personally, I'm very much in favour of renewables. We've only got the one planet, it would need better not to trash it, imho. We can't sort the whole problem ourselves, but we've got to start somewhere, and right now.

Is your argument really more about the fact that it's a Labour policy, which by definition must make it wrong?
Nope. I just don’t like the look of solar farms, personally I prefer wind turbines. I lived in France for a while and there were loads there.

Tory or not, I dont condone cronyism. It’s not a great optic to take so much money from Dale Vince and then within days of taking office change regulations which will benefit him and his company,
 
D

Deleted member 5849

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Nope. I just don’t like the look of solar farms, personally I prefer wind turbines.
Neither are great on the look, it must be said. Not sure I'd want to live next to a massive farm of either of them... but then wouldn't have been keen on living in Binley Village when the pit was there either, or next to Hams Hall power station.

Guess the problem is somebody always gets impacted because the rest of us like things like heat and light!
 

djr8369

Well-Known Member
I’m just trying to imagine how much land will need to be taken up by solar to meet Labours renewables target. Or wind turbines - I’m not sure if you can still farm around the latter. And of course, what happens when the sun doesn’t shine or the wind doesn’t blow. I suppose we could surround the UK with wave power generators, that might stop the boats🛶.

I wonder which Labour crony and funder has an interest in all this?

And, to repeat myself, some on here assured me that roofs would do the trick and that covering fields with eyesore panels would not be necessary.
You haven’t got much of a clue and seem to have some issue with solar.

It is by fair and away the simplest, cheapest and most logical solution for power world wide. It has its place in the UK alongside wind. Wave is great in theory but underdeveloped, technological immature and not as easy to maintain.

To answer a specific question you can graze sheep around it and not all land is arable or suitable for homes anyway.
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
Of course it did

She’s an absolute lunatic. How was she ever let anywhere near government let alone the top seat. It wasn’t even a secret before she was. Mad as a box of frogs seems to have been a label that’s followed her around her whole life.
 

MalcSB

Well-Known Member
You haven’t got much of a clue and seem to have some issue with solar.

It is by fair and away the simplest, cheapest and most logical solution for power world wide. It has its place in the UK alongside wind. Wave is great in theory but underdeveloped, technological immature and not as easy to maintain.

To answer a specific question you can graze sheep around it and not all land is arable or suitable for homes anyway.
You certainly couldn’t graze sheep around the solar fields I have seen locally.
 

duffer

Well-Known Member
Nope. I just don’t like the look of solar farms, personally I prefer wind turbines. I lived in France for a while and there were loads there.

Tory or not, I dont condone cronyism. It’s not a great optic to take so much money from Dale Vince and then within days of taking office change regulations which will benefit him and his company,

Fair enough, appreciate the honesty.

I am 100% with you on the cronyism thing. If Starmer is serious about cleaning up politics then everything has to be completely open and above board. I think it's fair enough to build solar etc. if that's your stated policy, but the actual tendering process has to be completely open to public scrutiny so that we can be confident that party donors do not get an advantage.

I'd rather a minor loss of amenity from wind farms and solar than the substantial loss of amenity that comes from not getting climate change under control.

The appearance of solar farms doesn't much bother me much in truth, I should add. I'm not sure it's a good enough reason to not take advantage of the technology, but again that's my personal opinion.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
Tory or not, I dont condone cronyism. It’s not a great optic to take so much money from Dale Vince and then within days of taking office change regulations which will benefit him and his company,

Fucking hell mate this is a stretch!
 

MalcSB

Well-Known Member
Fair enough, appreciate the honesty.

I am 100% with you on the cronyism thing. If Starmer is serious about cleaning up politics then everything has to be completely open and above board. I think it's fair enough to build solar etc. if that's your stated policy, but the actual tendering process has to be completely open to public scrutiny so that we can be confident that party donors do not get an advantage.

I'd rather a minor loss of amenity from wind farms and solar than the substantial loss of amenity that comes from not getting climate change under control.

The appearance of solar farms doesn't much bother me much in truth, I should add. I'm not sure it's a good enough reason to not take advantage of the technology, but again that's my personal opinion.
All fair comment.

Loads of experts on here, but people were telling me it would be roofs not fields. I was right, it’s fields not roofs.

It’s a bit like people saying EU are on target to hit net zero by 2050. When you post an Eu commission graph showing they are miles off, all of a sudden it’s radio silence from those experts.

I will leave it there. I’m not sure those local to these developments will though.
 

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
You won't be laughing when Forest Green Rovers mysteriously appear in the Premier League fixtures next year.

The leftie woke environmentalist tentacles' reach, is long. 😁
The ‘I like foot-ball’ derby is back on when Arsenal face Southampton next season anyway.
 

duffer

Well-Known Member
The ‘I like foot-ball’ derby is back on when Arsenal face Southampton next season anyway.

In fairness to Starmer, I think he probably does like the game, as opposed to it being purely a man-of-the-people electoral device.

Until we've got a PM who is not only a Cov fan, but can immediately name the unused CCFC sub from the 87 final, I won't be happy regardless. No bandwagon jumpers. 😁
 

MalcSB

Well-Known Member
Something that irritates me is the feed in tariff for domestic solar panels. If they want to encourage more people to make their roofs look shit, make the tariff closer to what the electricity companies actually charge or exempt those with panels from the standing charge.
 

MalcSB

Well-Known Member
Do you have evidence that he has lobbied or donated to Labour in order to get favourable legislation?
He has donated significant sums to the Labour Party. He has said that he wants to influence policy but not by buying access. However, donating significant sums is bound to grant access and the opportunity to influence.
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
So Dale doesn’t make money from his green company? And doesn’t stand to make more by changes in regulations?
The Tory ban only came in last year and was essentially an election gimmick as they thought the electorate was made up of nimbys. On a wider level it was part of their phoney culture bollocks , we’ve scrapped 7 bins etc because only woke believe in climate issues. It was a cynical policy in the first place and had the Tories won the GE I wouldn’t have been shocked to see the ridiculous policy scrapped. Maybe not as quickly as Labour have but it was always bollocks and any government serious about running the country would have done the same.
 

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