Far, far away….

One of the problems with all the claims about new “green” jobs from the shiny new “net zero” economy our politicians promise us (or threaten us with, depending on your point of view) is that the massive expansion of “renewables”, in particular wind farms, has produced so few jobs at the cost of such massive damage to our wild places. A side effect of making energy expensive and unreliable is that much of the UK’s capacity to make things has been exported to other countries with lower environmental standards than the UK now enjoys, so the claimed reduction in greenhouse gases as a result of going down this route is dubious, to say the least, since often the things we need are now produced in countries that rely on coal-fired plants to produce their electricity, and then the products have to be transported long distances back to the UK. The sense of that escapes me. It escapes others too.

Broken promises and offshored jobs

This is the title to a reporti prepared in 2019 by the Scottish TUC, on employment in the low-carbon and renewable energy (LCRE) economy. Having first made the necessary genuflection towards the supposed need for an LCRE economy (“the STUC is absolutely committed to building a low-carbon economy and meeting climate change targets”), the STUC then goes on to produce damning information regarding the difference between the Scottish Government’s repeated promises of employment in this area against the reality:

However, we are criticising the failure of industrial policy to ensure that workers, businesses and Government in Scotland benefit from Scotland’s natural resources. Without a domestic industrial base for the LCRE economy, not only will workers in Scotland miss out, but there are serious implications in terms of tax, transparency, economic democracy and meeting climate targets.

The report refers to numerous promises made by the Scottish Government over the years:

Harnessing Scotland’s Marine Energy Potential (2004) – 7,000 direct jobs in the marine industry by 2020.

Renewables Gap Chain Analysis (2004) – 17,000-35,000 jobs by 2020.

Low Carbon Economic Strategy (2010) – annual growth of 4% a year to 130,000 jobs by 2020 (and 5% of the overall workforce). Of the 60,000 new jobs to be created between 2010-2020, 26,000 in renewables; 26,000 in low-carbon tech; and 8,000 in environmental management.

2020 Routemap for Renewable Energy in Scotland (2011) – 40,000 jobs in renewables by 2020.

Scotland’s Energy Strategy (2017) – 4,000 jobs per annum in energy efficiency programmes.

The report looks at the information made available to that point by the Office for National Statistics (ONS). The extraordinary fact was that over the time-frame covered by the STUC report, employment in the LCRE economy was falling, and the numbers were nowhere near the levels suggested by the various plans, reports and promises over the years:

While there are issues with the quality of the estimates, the latest figures released in January 2019 estimate 21,400 direct full-time equivalent (FTE) jobs in the LCRE economy in 2017. This is a fall from 23,900 the previous year. The ONS estimate a further 25,000 indirect jobs in 2017, taking the total number of direct and indirect jobs in Scotland to 46,400. This was a fall from 50,500 in 2016, but slightly higher than 45,800 in 2015.

The reasons for this were obvious. The lack of a domestic supply chain and manufacturing base means that imports exceed exports in these areas, and what is needed is being made abroad rather than in the UK, at the expense of British jobs. And the trade balance in this regard was widening. Lots of examples were given in the STUC report, such as:

Moray East Windfarm

100 turbines off the coast of Caithness are being built by a consortium involving Portugal’s main energy firm EDPR, French utility Engie and Diamond Generating Europe, a subsidiary of Japanese firm Mitsubishi Corporation. The blades are being built by Danish company, MHI Vestas Offshore Wind – a joint venture between Vestas Wind Systems and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries. MHI Vestas have a plant in the Isle of Wight that employs 300 people. Under the previous ownership of Vestas the Isle of Wight plant was closed in 2009, leading to the loss [of] 425 jobs (and a high profile 18 day blockade by workers and activists). The wind turbine jackets are being handled by a ‘first tier’ Belgian procurement contractor called Deme. Deme awarded the contract for 45 jackets to Lamprell – a company in the United Arab Emirates. Lamprell made a 98m dollar loss on its contract for 60 jackets for Scottish Power Renewables, developer of the East Anglia One wind array, suggesting it does not have a great track record in wind turbine jackets.

Numerous other similar examples were given:

Kinkardineshire Offshore Wind Limited – a Spanish joint venture; Beatrice Offshore Windfarm Limited – a joint venture involving Danes and the European subsidiary of a Chinese company with, allegedly, migrant workers being paid less than the minimum wage, with special concessions granted by the Home Office to allow the employment of Russian and Indonesian workers; Afton Windfarm, with health & safety issues alleged by STUC, owned (at the time of the report, after various changes of ownership) by the European subsidiary of a Chinese company, the turbines having been manufactured in Spain; issues with decommissioning of oil rigs, being transported by Chinese ships to Bangladesh for the purpose.

The STUC’s conclusion was clear:

The examples above illustrate that [there is] a clear over-reliance on overseas financial interests in the LCRE economy. They also illustrate that where low carbon jobs have been created, too often these have been poor quality and non-unionised. This chimes with academic studies showing that green jobs are particularly insecure and prone to the volatility of the market.

The whole report is worth reading for a summary of much that is wrong in this area. The conclusions are worth quoting:

Past predictions of employment in the LCRE economy have not translated into the jobs boom promised. The LCRE economy is characterised by overseas financial interests, a limited industrial base and precarious work. This is a failure of industrial policy that means workers, businesses and Government in Scotland do not benefit from Scotland’s natural resources. It has serious implications not only in in terms of jobs but also in terms of tax revenues, transparency, and economic democracy.

On 17th April 2019, the GMB Union responded to the STUC report, with comments that are still available on that union’s websiteii:

The report reinforces what we have consistently argued about the reality of renewables employment and the challenges posed by the transition to a low carbon economy. Ultimately, it shows what happens when politicians preach and don’t plan.

BiFab is the case in point. Despite all the talk of a green jobs revolution, the fabrication yards in Burntisland and Methil remain empty

The manufacture of 100 turbine jackets and five floating platforms for the Moray East and Kincardine projects will not take place in Fife but in Belgium, the North East of England [hoorah!], Spain and the United Arab Emirates; the result of our industry being controlled by European state subsided energy firms, Far East finance and Middle East sovereign wealth, and their supply chain partners of preference.

This is what long-term political failure looks like and the price is paid in the loss of thousands of jobs and billions of pounds of prosperity to the Scottish economy, starving hope from working class communities in regions of economic deprivation like Fife.

Scotland’s EV charging structure

More than two years later, and one might have expected UK politicians (and especially those in Scotland who seem to be leading the charge to export jobs) to have learned some lessons from all this. Surely, when it comes to the massive task of installing the charging structure for electric vehicles, the Scottish government would have granted the contract to a Scottish company, or at least to one based in the UK? Not a bit of it. On 4th March 2021 the Scottish Government’s websiteiii proudly announced that SWARCO eVolt was taking over the contract “as the back office operator which enables people to access over 1600 publicly available charge points across Scotland.” Amidst the PR hype, they overlooked to mention that this is an Austrian company. And hype it certainly was:

Following a smooth transition, the priority is to continue to improve ChargePlace Scotland’s reputation for reliability and accessibility for electric vehicle drivers across the country. The new contract will bring new jobs to Scotland, improved customer service and better performance information for users and owners and hosts.

It’s quite an irony, then, that the new arrangements seem to have caused chaos, with the Courier reportingiv

Massive problems at a Dundee service centre have wreaked havoc on Scotland’s £45m electric vehicle (EV) charging network.

Oh well, never mind, the report also tells us that

The Austrian-based multinational has already supplied and installed much of Scotland’s charging point infrastructure. The move brought [drum-roll….] 18 high-value jobs into the city.

Two years later

Surely the situation must have improved by 2021? Not a bit of it, as Magnus Linklater, writing in the Timesv, makes clear.

On jobs, for instance, what is the prediction? Once we were told by the SNP there would be 130,000 green jobs by 2020. In fact, as Sir Keir Starmer inconveniently pointed out on his recent trip to Scotland, there are fewer direct jobs in the industry now than in 2014, with less than a fifth of the projected total delivered. Once a wind farm is created it is not a big employer. Even the construction period has limited potential. There is no major UK-based manufacturer of wind turbines, and much of the work is farmed out to cheaper plants in southeast Asia. Most of the big offshore projects are foreign-owned, such as the giant Neart na Gaoithe site off the Fife coast, owned and run by EDF Renewables, a wholly owned subsidiary of a Paris-based group.

It is idle to pretend that jobs lost in the North Sea oil and gas industry will soon be made up by employment in renewables.

What exactly did Sir Keir have to say on the subject during his visit to Scotland? There are numerous reports, but this one from Daily Businessvi is as good as any:

Labour leader Keir Starmer says Britain is failing to build a green economy with more than 75,000 job losses in the sector in the last five years.

Sir Keir accuses the UK government of “broken promises” and the Scottish government of “going backwards”.

During a visit to Scotland he said the Scottish National Party, has broken its pledge to create 130,000 green jobs by 2020.

Figures show progress on green jobs going backwards in Scotland, with fewer direct jobs today than in 2014, making up just a fifth of the green jobs promised by the SNP, he said.

The figures show a loss of 33,800 direct jobs and a further 41,400 jobs in the supply chain for low carbon and renewable sectors between 2014 and 2019. This includes thousands of jobs lost in solar power, onshore wind, renewable electricity and bioenergy, and a huge fall in the number of jobs in the energy efficiency sector.

Slowly the Penny Begins to Drop

On 4th September 2021, an article appeared in the Guardian’s sister paper, the Observer, with the title “Gone with the wind: why UK firms could miss out on the offshore boom”vii

I was unaware of the industry pledge, apparently given in return for taxpayer funding, which does at least help (if honoured), but patently it doesn’t go anywhere near far enough:

A crucial industry commitment, made in exchange for government subsidy, is the pledge to use UK-made components for at least 60% of every windfarm. While this would be an improvement on the existing trend, which has seen fewer than half of offshore windfarms built using UK parts, some say more needs to be done to build a homegrown supply chain and avoid being left behind in the global renewables race.”

The GMB again has its finger on the pulse, and is well aware of the realities in this area that seem to evade the politicians, green dreamers and environmental campaigners:

The industry is dominated by European energy giants. These big developers, which invest in building the windfarms and reap subsidy payments in return, include Denmark’s Ørsted, Norwegian state energy giant Equinor, and Scottish Power, which is a division of Spanish renewables giant Iberdrola. SSE is one of the few companies with turbines spinning in British waters to have a London Stock Exchange listing.

The companies that make up the supply chain – the makers of blades, foundations and high-voltage cables – are often foreign. In addition to Denmark’s Vestas, UK-based blade manufacturers include Germany’s Siemens and US conglomerate GE.

The GMB trade union has warned that the UK risks squandering a major economic benefit by allowing many of the components of its offshore wind boom to be manufactured in the factories and steel mills of Asia.

The labour required to transform steel into the 8,000 wind turbine foundations needed to meet the UK’s climate targets could create 30,000 jobs for the next 30 years, according to the trade union. It would require 20 million tonnes of steel which, if made in the UK, could itself could support another 8,000 jobs.

As things stand these steel fabrication jobs are destined to be in Asia, with the only role for UK workers being to pay for them,” says Gary Smith, the GMB’s general secretary. “This is both unnecessary and politically unacceptable.” He adds that steel supply chain companies are “acutely aware of how far the UK lags way behind” other countries in developing the technology and investment the industry needs.

And yet campaigners continue to oppose the proposed Cumbrian coking coal mine, with a concerted attempt being made at this week’s public inquiry by those self-same politicians, green dreamers and environmental campaigners to make sure that not only will 500 coal mining jobs, in an area of deprivation and high unemployment, not be permitted under any circumstances if they have their way, but the related steel-making jobs will all be exported in a lose-lose situation.

The latest debacle

And still we in the UK seem to be incapable of making “green” jobs, or even retaining those we already have, albeit they seemed to exist only with taxpayer subsidies. Today the BBC tells usviiiCampbeltown wind turbine factory closes permanently“.

So, what’s the story here? The turbine factory in Cambeltown on the Kintyre peninsula is the oldest such factory in the UK, but it has a chequered history. The BBC report tells us that it went into administration in 2011, was rescued, then sold to a South Korean company (CS Wind) in 2016. But in 2019 the majority of the staff were made redundant, and now the remainder are following, as the administrators blame “deteriorating market conditions” . As BBC journalist Douglas Fraser observes, however, “market conditions for wind power have never looked better.”

I’ll give the last words on this debacle to Pat Rafferty, Scottish Secretary of the Unite union, who said:

[T]he Scottish government sat back and watched from the sideline as the firm went bust.

“It’s high time they accept that on their watch, for over a decade now, there has been minimal green and low-carbon manufacturing jobs directly created in Scotland,” he said.

Stop press

I’ve just found some of the green jobs. They’re lurking in another BBC online reportix:

A Glasgow company has been fined £150,000 for making more than half a million nuisance marketing calls.

The Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) found that DialADeal Scotland Ltd (DDSL) had made the unsolicited calls between August 2019 and March 2020.

They were about non-existent Green Deal energy saving schemes, including boiler and window replacement, loft insulation and home improvement grants.

…”Calls about Green Deal schemes can be a real problem as people often believe they are legitimate but, thanks to the complaints made by the public, we’ve been able to take action.”

Conclusion

Once more, I’ll let Pat Rafferty of the Unite Union in Scotland tell it as it is:

“There is no jobs revolution – it’s a myth.”

i https://www.gmb.org.uk/sites/default/files/Broken%20promises%20and%20offshored%20jobs%20report.pdf

ii https://www.gmb.org.uk/news/gmb-scotland-responds-renewable-energy-jobs-report

iii https://www.transport.gov.scot/news/swarco-evolt-to-operate-chargeplace-scotland/

iv https://www.thecourier.co.uk/fp/business-environment/transport/2486779/chargeplace-scotland-why-the-worlds-largest-electric-vehicle-switchover-went-wrong-and-how-a-dundee-team-are-trying-to-fix-it/

v https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/hot-air-will-not-make-case-for-onshore-wind-q35k5vsmp

vi https://dailybusinessgroup.co.uk/2021/08/75000-green-jobs-lost-due-to-failed-policies-says-starmer/

vii https://www.theguardian.com/business/2021/sep/04/gone-with-the-wind-why-uk-firms-could-miss-out-on-the-offshore-boom

viii https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-58488135

ix https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-glasgow-west-58455022

201 Comments

  1. Together with planned stringent requirements on supporting UK manufacturers in government-backed renewables projects, these measures will mean the industry can reach its target of 60% of offshore wind farm content coming from the UK.

    https://www.gov.uk/government/news/new-plans-to-make-uk-world-leader-in-green-energy

    We’ll see how that plan turns out, but whatever happens it is likely to make projects more expensive. The National Procurement Policy now states that such things as jobs are to be considered as part of tenders, as opposed to simply taking the lowest price (subject to minimum standards etc).

    Of course, new/expanded factories appear to rely on subsidies for construction (or companies just play different jurisdictions off against one another to make the best deal, which amounts to the same thing).

    Either way, it seems to escape our leaders that energy is not an end in itself. Productivity comes from how the energy is used. The number of green jobs would rocket if we were all given exercise bikes with dynamos, and think of the co-benefits: generation close to the point of use and improving community fitness levels to name but two. We could make the bikes in the UK, and the steel, etc, etc.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. More today from the Unite union on the collapse of the Campbeltown works:

    “A leading union has taken aim at the owners of CS Wind after the company collapsed into administration on Wednesday.”

    https://www.energyvoice.com/renewables-energy-transition/348773/its-a-national-scandal-unite-slams-cs-wind-owners-as-company-enters-administration/

    There are a few choice quotes:

    “CS Wind’s demise will do nothing to quell the fears of those that feel workers in the UK are missing out on the benefits of the energy transition.

    It comes less than a year after Burntisland Fabrications (BiFab) met the same fate after a deal to manufacture jackets for a wind turbine off the coast of Scotland collapsed.

    In addition to criticising the owners, Unite has hit out at the Scottish and UK Governments over the “minimal” domestic manufacturing work that has been generated by the “billions of pounds” being invested into renewables.

    Pat Rafferty, Unite Scottish Secretary, said: “Unite has repeatedly warned of the disgraceful situation developing at the hands of the South Korean owners who have a track record for taking millions in public funds only to run a factory into the ground.

    “The Scottish Government has sat back and watched from the sideline offering absolutely nothing. It’s high time they accept that on their watch, for over a decade now, there has been minimal green and low-carbon manufacturing jobs directly created in Scotland.

    “There is no jobs revolution – it’s a myth. The Scottish Government’s projection of nearly 50,000 jobs by 2020 comes crashing against the stark reality that for both the onshore and offshore wind sectors only 3,300 jobs were estimated to have been created by 2019. It’s a pathetic return on the billions of pounds being poured into and around Scotland’s shores. It’s a national scandal.””

    Meanwhile, the SNP Government at Holyrood continues to bleat its pathetic platitudes:

    “The Scottish Government expressed its frustration that the site had lain idle for “some considerable time”, despite “commitments made” by CS Wind when it took over the facility.

    A Holyrood spokeswoman said: “To help tackle the climate crisis and support our just transition to net zero, the Scottish Government is investing in green skills and attracting new green job opportunities, including the establishment of the Green Jobs Workforce Academy.

    “In November, Glasgow will host COP26 and Scotland can be proud that our climate change ambitions, backed by investment in creating a highly skilled green workforce, will be showcased on an international stage.

    “The manufacturing facility at Machrihanish is a major asset to the Kintyre area and one that should be fully active and providing valuable local employment. Sadly it has been idle for some considerable time now, in spite of commitments made by CS Wind when they took over the lease. As owners of the site Highlands & Islands Enterprise are a listed creditor of CS Wind in the administration process and they will work closely with the administrators.””

    Like

  3. Presumably all “green” work is put out to competitive bidding and Scottish (or U.K.) contractors are then unsuccessful in the bidding process, losing out to foreign competitors. The “green” jobs may be there, but they have gone overseas. If the jobs are to be retained in the U.K. then energy costs will become even higher and numerous international laws will be broken. What are the unions plans to retain jobs in Scotland?

    Like

  4. Alan, of course there is something in what you say, but there are also problems with it. My article was about pointing out that the oft-repeated claims regarding the “green” jobs bonanza the UK is supposed to enjoy, are close to fantasy.

    Secondly, although if contracts were given to more expensive UK companies employing UK residents and citizens, than to foreigners, costs might go up, but so might wages, and unemployment would go down, while the significant drag on the economy caused by the multiplier effect of funds leaving the country, would be avoided.

    Finally, I’m not sure about the “numerous international laws” you think would be broken if contracts aren’t awarded to those offering the cheapest tender. One of the supposed benefits of leaving the EU was that the UK would then no longer have to be subject to the compulsory competitive tendering process that is enshrined in EU law. Of course the government might have compromised on that aim by giving something away when they negotiated the withdrawal and subsequent trade agreement with the EU – I confess I don’t know. I’m not sure any other international treaties or laws would be broken in that scenario: I could easily be wrong, but I don’t think the UK’s membership of the WTO precludes such behaviour.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. @Mark – from your comment above –

    “A Holyrood spokeswoman said: “To help tackle the climate crisis and support our just transition to net zero, the Scottish Government is investing in green skills and attracting new green job opportunities, including the establishment of the Green Jobs Workforce Academy.”

    wonder what she means by “our just transition to net zero” ?

    Green Jobs Workforce Academy – what is it I wonder – “However Labour MSP Monica Lennon said the Academy was merely “a website sign-posting people to job adverts and various courses”
    .

    these people just spout the party line, with no thought involved (as the green jobs figures testify) & they never seem to have to justify this BS to the taxpayers

    Liked by 1 person

  6. dfhunter – very interesting. Reference to the Green Jobs Workforce Academy can be found here:

    https://www.gov.scot/news/new-green-jobs-workforce-academy/

    It looks as though Labour MSP Monica Lennon is correct:

    “The new Green Jobs Workforce Academy, delivered by Skills Development Scotland, will help people take a greener approach to their careers, from accessing training and learning new skills, to finding a new green job.

    This 100 days commitment of the new Scottish Government has been launched as the First Minister welcomed news that ScottishPower were creating 152 new green jobs, of which 135 will be based in Scotland.

    These new roles will be listed on the academy’s website alongside information on the types of jobs emerging in sectors crucial to Scotland’s transition to a net-zero economy, such as renewable energy, construction and transport. ”

    The Great Leader is quoted as saying:

    ““To help tackle climate change Scotland is already investing in green skills and attracting new green job opportunities. It is great to see ScottishPower creating 135 new green jobs in Scotland and I would encourage other employers to follow their lead. The Academy’s career advisors stand ready to support individuals interested in these jobs access the right training to help their career progress.”

    Looks like an advertising puff piece, and not a lot else (though no doubt it will cost the taxpayer a slug of money).

    Like

  7. dfhunter, as for the “just transition to net zero” I imagine not many people are aware of the Scottish Government’s “Climate Justice Fund”:

    https://www.gov.scot/policies/international-development/climate-justice-fund/

    “Climate justice recognises that the poor and vulnerable at home and overseas are the first to be affected by climate change, and will suffer the worst, yet have done little or nothing to cause the problem.”

    It’s interesting that it refers to the vulnerable at home and overseas, and yet, despite the recent efforts of the BBC and the Guardian to persuade us that Glasgow’s poor’s big problem is climate change, they don’t seem to have spent any of the Climate Justice Fund at home (unless you count the £2M given to the University of Strathclyde, but then that was for a project in Malawi, and I don’t think the University of Strathclyde can be regarded as “vulnerable”). In fact, most of the money seems to have gone to Malawi – does someone high-up in the SNP have a holiday home there, or something? I’m sure those climate change-threatened Glasgow east enders with some of the lowest life expectancies in Europe are delighted.

    Liked by 1 person

  8. “However Labour MSP Monica Lennon said the Academy was merely ‘a website sign-posting people to job adverts and various courses'”.

    Indeed. Scotlands’s Green Jobs Workforce Academy is mostly just a way of doing a very crude search of an existing government-run job listing website. The Academy’s official URL, greenjobs.scot, diverts to a very simple page at My World of Work, which is run by Skills Development Scotland. If you click on ‘Jobs and courses’ on that page, you are taken to an equally simple page…

    URL:https://careers.myworldofwork.co.uk/green-jobs-workforce-academy/jobs-and-courses

    … that gives you the option to ‘Use our job search’.

    Click on that and you search the entire My World of Work jobs list with the following keywords: energy efficiency, sustainable, hybrid, carbon, electric, renewables, environment, climate, circular economy.

    Unsurprisingly, that search finds some jobs that aren’t at all green. For example, is driving an HGV for a poultry feed manufacturer a green job? Er, no. It’s offered as a green job solely because its description includes the word ‘environment’.

    (Other job descriptions are so impenetrable that it’s impossible to tell whether or not they are green. They are utter bafflegab. But that’s what you’ll find when your search terms play buzzword bingo, innit.)

    Liked by 2 people

  9. Incidentally, a lot of the jobs are said to be ‘full time (35 hours)’. Is Scotland part of France now?

    Liked by 1 person

  10. The TUC seems to be operating on a different planet to its more realistic Scottish counterparts:

    “TUC: Jobs at risk if UK fails to hit carbon emissions target”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-58519996

    “Up to 660,000 jobs could be at risk if the UK fails to reach its net-zero target as quickly as other nations, the Trade Union Congress (TUC) has warned.

    The government has pledged to cut carbon emissions by 78% by 2035.

    But the TUC fears many jobs could be moved offshore to countries offering superior green infrastructure and support for decarbonisation.

    The union body is calling for an £85bn green recovery package to create 1.2 million green jobs.”

    #MagicMoneyTree

    Meanwhile, in the real world:

    “Steel jobs could be at risk if industry comes under pressure this winter from soaring energy bills, sector’s trade association warns”

    https://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/markets/article-9978459/Soaring-gas-electricity-bills-putting-British-steel-jobs-risk.html?ito=amp_twitter_share-top

    “Steel jobs could be at risk if the industry comes under pressure this winter from soaring energy bills, the sector’s trade association warned.

    Gas prices in the UK and Europe have hit a series of record highs in the last few weeks and experts have said a cold winter could push them up further.

    UK Steel has warned this would be ‘extremely damaging’ to companies of all sizes in the beleaguered sector, which has faced a series of crises over the last few years.

    Gas prices have surged because of lower supplies from Russia, which has affected the amount being stored in Europe, and tough competition for liquefied natural gas imports.

    Gareth Stace, director general of UK Steel, said: ‘Continued energy price spikes would be extremely damaging for the sector. Already we are facing electricity prices almost double those of our European competitors and these price increases only widen that chasm.’

    Steel companies have for years asked the Government to cut energy bills for heavy industry, which they say is holding back investment.

    UK producers pay 86 per cent more for power than their counterparts in Germany and 62 per cent more than France. “

    Like

  11. “UK producers pay 86 per cent more for power than their counterparts in Germany and 62 per cent more than France“

    this is madness !!!

    Like

  12. dfhunter, yes it is madness, and it’s Government policy. Worse still, all the opposition parties say it doesn’t go far enough!

    Like

  13. ahh – see you commented on above link, so not new to you.

    found this comment at the link interesting/worthy to repost here –

    “CheshireRed September 10, 2021 9:04 am

    Wouldn’t it be reasonable to assume that the UK government has secretly decided to shut down UK steel manufacturing?

    Here’s their rationale: global steel prices are on the floor. UK production prices are uncompetitive with China, with no prospect of ever being more competitive, either.

    UK can thus source globally at lowest cost with no supply issues.

    Steel is high emissions but relatively low numbers of employees. By offshoring energy-intensive steel UK makes large reductions in carbon emissions at a very low per-job cost.

    They know their green transition will come with job losses in some areas, offset by gains in others. Just as they’ve sacked off thousands of coal mining jobs as a result of ditching coal, so too they’ve chosen to wave goodbye to steel industry jobs.

    The Cumbria coal mine fiasco is another example. UK can’t miss 500 jobs we never had, so government have no problem blocking those jobs to prevent emissions from being allocated to UK total. Supply remains unaffected as can come from Australia, US or even Russia!

    They can’t publicly admit these policies and may even have entered into a political code of Omerta with the Opposition, who’re all onside for the green thing. Hence Labour et al seldom question these matters at PMQ’s and so on.

    This follows a similar pathway regarding high-emitting UK aluminum and cement manufacturing. That’s how I see it.”

    Like

  14. just reread your BBC TUC link and noted this bit –

    “TUC research from June shows the UK is currently ranked second last among G7 economies for its investment in green infrastructure and jobs.

    However, the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS) says the TUC’s claims are untrue and that it does not recognise their methodology.”

    can’t see any links to data or the “BBC fact check team” at work to enlighten readers (BEEB seem to take any Union’s word for thing’s lately)

    Like

  15. dfhunter, as regards the TUC, it gets worse:

    “UK must prepare for more economic shocks, says TUC”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-58538887

    “The UK needs to be better prepared for future economic shocks, says the TUC.

    “Covid is not going to be a one-off,” the union federation’s general secretary, Frances O’Grady, will tell its annual congress later on Monday.

    “Climate chaos is here already and the longer we put off getting to net zero, the more disruptive it will be,” she will add.”

    It doesn’t seem to occur to her that the climate has no impact on UK jobs; the UK’s drive to net zero, without the rest of the world joining in (and possibly not even then) will make absolutely no difference whatsoever to her imaginary “climate chaos”; but that it is destroying UK jobs (the jobs of her members) at a rate of knots, and the “green” replacements aren’t forthcoming, in the UK economy at least.

    As an erstwhile leftie and ex-Labour Party member (resigned in disgust years ago), I struggle to understand what on earth is going on among those who claim to be on the left of UK politics, who seem to be brainwashed into seeing the world through a looking glass, and in many ways doing the work of politicians on the right for them.

    Liked by 1 person

  16. “Climate change: Hydrogen to create jobs – but is it green enough?”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-58545650

    The heading might well have been “will there really be any jobs?” as the last paragraph makes clear:

    “…Wales should learn lessons from the development of wind energy and try to “keep as many of the long-term jobs as possible in Wales and keep wealth and tax in the country too”.”

    Which sounds like implicit acceptance of the fact that the development of wind energy has not created long-term jobs and hasn’t kept wealth and tax in the country.

    Like

  17. “Green jobs: The new generation of workers making it work for them”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-58549135

    “From running huge wind farms out at sea to making new devices to heat our homes, the UK is seeing a rise in interest in so-called green jobs.

    What counts as a green job? The simplest answer is that it directly contributes to tackling climate change, although many think it should also cover roles that indirectly support that ambition.

    Either way, the UK government wants to create more of them, going from 410,000 now to two million of these jobs by 2030, as part of its plans for an economy with zero fossil fuel emissions.

    It’s not a plan without risks, but some areas will provide opportunities to many. Here are three jobs in sectors that are growing – and what it’s like to do them.

    Heating without emissions

    …In Livingston, near Edinburgh, the Mitsubishi Electric factory is making one alternative: air-source heat pumps, which draw warmth from the air to heat your home and water, without releasing any carbon in the process….

    …And it’s also sustainable for people installing heat pumps: in 2019 there were 900 – by 2028 there are expected to be 15,000.

    …Low-carbon farming

    …Visiting 21-year-old Beth Campbell at work in Scunthorpe is like stepping into a world from science fiction.

    She works as a research assistant for Jones Food Company, which is the largest vertical farm in Europe. There she checks thousands of basil plants growing on huge trays stacked above each other, all bathed in a gentle purple light and fed a carefully controlled supply of nutrients….

    …Fixing wind turbines at sea
    Forests of wind turbines are springing up in the waters around the UK and that’s led to a boom in offshore building and maintenance….”

    And that’s it. “Green” jobs in making the heating of our homes more expensive and less efficient; “green” jobs growing basil plants; “green” jobs” in connection with an environmentally unfriendly industry making our energy more expensive, more unreliable and less predictable, while de-stabilising the National Grid. Forgive me for remaining unimpressed.

    Like

  18. When one version of a story just isn’t enough:

    “Green jobs: The UK’s future zero carbon industries”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/science-environment-58549519

    “The UK’s transition to zero carbon will be a key issue in the upcoming COP26 climate talks in Glasgow.

    It will mean the formation of new industries and jobs which didn’t exist a generation ago.

    Beth Campbell, 21, is a research assistant at a vertical farm in Scunthorpe which uses renewable energy to grow crops which are then sold locally.

    Bridie Salmon, 23, used to work in hospitality but is now retraining as an apprentice offshore wind turbine technician.

    The BBC’s Science Editor David Shukman went to meet them.”

    Like

  19. “Plans to allow oil and gas workers to transfer to renewable energy jobs”

    https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/19590564.plans-allow-oil-gas-workers-transfer-renewable-energy-jobs/

    “GOVERNMENT officials are drawing up plans to allow oil and gas workers to transfer to renewable energy jobs without having to fork out costly retraining costs – currently acting as a barrier to Scotland’s renewables revolution.

    The SNP-Greens government has pledged to set out plans for a ‘just transition’ for oil and gas workers into renewables – but has faced criticism for a failure to bring forward 130,000 green jobs as promised….

    …Currently, workers wishing to transfer from fossil fuel jobs into renewables are having to pay thousands of pounds to obtain qualifications no different to training they have already undertaken….”.

    Like

  20. “We tried to transition to green jobs, but the bosses are closing our car factory down
    Frank Duffy
    Though we don’t want to go on strike, we can’t stand by and watch the British car industry fall victim to offshoring”

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/sep/20/green-jobs-car-factory-strike-industry-offshoring

    “More than 500 workers, myself included, at the GKN Automotive factory in Birmingham have voted for strike action to save both our plant and British manufacturing. It’s the last thing we ever wanted to do, but we feel we have been left with no choice.

    Currently, we manufacture and assemble components for drivelines, the all-important section underneath your car for transferring power from the engine and transmission to the wheels. In 2019, 90% of GKN’s components went into traditional combustion engines, but that may halve by 2025, with electric vehicles (EVs) taking 15% of components, and hybrids about 40%. The move to electric will only continue, as UK factories unveil their new vehicle plans before purely internal combustion engines are banned in 2030.

    In order to future-proof our jobs and the British automotive industry, we need to transition to producing components for EVs, including new propulsion systems and e-drives. GKN has developed a new e-drive with UK government funding at its Oxfordshire research facility, but sadly we won’t see this innovation creating new green jobs for British workers. Melrose, the owners of GKN, have decided to close our plant in 2022 and move jobs overseas….

    …Every automotive company in the world is gearing up for the transition. The future can’t be built on outsourced or offshored jobs, where workers in different countries are pitted against each other in a race to the bottom.

    If we all want to see British manufacturing transition to new environmentally friendly technologies so that there are employment opportunities in the future, we need to retain jobs and skills like ours to make that happen. Support us. We’re fighting for your future too.”

    Like

  21. I’m prepared to concede the reality of “green” jobs if they actually exist. This is one to watch – is it just so much hot air or might some permanent jobs be created?

    “Plan to revive Ardersier port for offshore turbine work”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-highlands-islands-58663614

    “A French renewable energy developer has proposed building parts for floating wind turbines at a former oil and gas fabrication yard in the Highlands.

    BW Ideol plans to manufacture platforms called concrete floaters at Ardersier port on the Moray Firth coast.

    Ardersier is largest brownfield port in the UK, with 400 acres (162ha) of formerly developed and now disused land and a quay more than a mile long.

    Rigs and other offshore structures were built at the former McDermott Yard.

    At its height, the yard employed about 4,500 people – but it closed in 2001 as demand dropped.

    BW Ideol has signed an agreement with Ardersier Port Authority giving it long-term access to the port for the manufacture of the offshore turbine platforms.

    Dredging work in the sea at the site is expected to start next month….”.

    The BBC also reported on these plans in January 2019, so they seem to be taking a long time to become a reality. My guess is that government money will be required to make it happen.

    Like

  22. quote: “It would require 20 million tonnes of steel which, if made in the UK, could itself could support another 8,000 jobs.”

    It was pointed out to me recently by a friend (*) (and to my surprise, and shame that I did not know), that steel production still depends on coal. There are other ways of doing it, and of course research is always ongoing, but apparently, they don’t scale up very well.

    (*) who is as sceptical as I am about EVs, wind-farms & solar farms, but in other respects is on board with the CO2/AGW story )

    e.g. https://www.straterra.co.nz/lets-talk-about-coal-2/future-of-coal/making-steel-without-coal/

    Quote” Can the world produce steel without using coal? The short answer to this question is no, not at scale, at the present time. ”

    Quote: “Now, nearly all new steel globally is produced using iron oxide and coking coal. Coking coal is usually bituminous-rank coal with special qualities that are needed in the blast furnace.

    While an increasing amount of steel is being recycled, there is currently no technology to make steel at scale without using coal.”

    Well, apparently it won’t always be like this:

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/scottcarpenter/2020/08/31/swedish-steelmaker-uses-hydrogen-instead-of-coal-to-make-fossil-free-steel/?sh=1b6675db2c8b

    Quote: “By substituting hydrogen and zero-carbon electricity for coking coal and other fossil fuels traditionally used to make steel, the firm says it could have the first fossil-free steel on the market by 2026, even if commercial production wouldn’t come until later. …”

    So, hydrogen and zero-carbon electricity needed. What could possibly go wrong? Well, we have until 2026 to find out. Or “until later”.

    Do Johnson & Keir Starmer et al know about this? Do the IPCC?

    Liked by 1 person

  23. “Bristol’s climate debates lack diverse voices, study finds”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-bristol-58848938

    “A study has said there is a “worrying lack of diversity” in city-wide debates and decisions made over climate change.

    The University of Bristol spent one year focussing on the work of six climate change bodies, both public and private sector, in the city.

    Researcher Dr Alix Dietzel said: “From what we know from global negotiations, which is what I studied prior to this research, this is quite common.”

    The mayor of Bristol, Labour’s Marvin Rees, has welcomed the report findings.

    “Certain voices dominate the discussion and it tends to be the most privileged in society and obviously in our case that would be white men,” Dr Dietzel added.

    The six bodies reviewed were:

    Bristol One City Board (public sector)
    Bristol Advisory Committee on Climate Change (public sector)
    Sustrans (private sector)
    Bristol Energy (private sector)
    Black and Green Ambassadors (civil society)
    Fossil Free Bristol (civil society)”

    Perhaps being a white man I don’t worry about the findings as much as I should. I recognise that there may be issues around diversity, but to me the big story here is that there are six bodies – SIX! – in Bristol alone! – focussed on climate change. What on earth do they all do? What – if anything – do they achieve? What do they all cost? Are these the “green jobs” we’re always being told about?

    Liked by 1 person

  24. “Climate change: Welsh industry’s 23 million tonne carbon problem”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-58817328

    “”Genuine courage” is needed to tackle climate change in Wales, which produces a fifth of the UK’s industrial emissions, an economist has said.

    Thousands of Welsh jobs rely on Tata’s steelworks in Port Talbot and RWE’s gas power station in Pembrokeshire, the UK’s top two emitters.

    Prof Calvin Jones said it was “good news” that a big difference can be made from a small number of industries.

    But he said people should accept not every industry will survive.”

    Well, that’s good news! I think, rather than genuine courage, he means genuine stupidity. This plan will destroy much of what’s left of UK industry, forcing us to import stuff from the other side of the world, and will not make a jot of difference to global CO2 emissions, as a consequence. In the meantime, people will be put out of work.

    Liked by 1 person

  25. “Foreign investment deals to create 30,000 UK jobs, says government”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-58959061

    “Foreign investment deals in low-carbon sectors in the UK to be announced on Tuesday will create about 30,000 jobs, the government has said.

    Prime Minister Boris Johnson is set to announce 18 new deals worth £9.7bn as he opens a global investment summit.

    They include investments in sectors such as wind and hydrogen energy, sustainable homes and carbon capture.

    The prime minister said investors had recognised “the massive potential in the UK for growth and innovation”.

    Investments from companies such as Spanish energy firm Iberdrola, logistics firm Prologis and grocery service Getir would power the UK’s economic recovery and help to achieve the government’s levelling up agenda, he added.”

    More like investors have recognised the massive taxpayer-funded subsidies on offer in the UK. BY the way, those numbers work out at £323,333.33 per job.

    Like

  26. “Want to know what a just transition to a green economy looks like? Ask the workers
    Anna Markova
    People don’t need catchprases: they need resources and empowerment so they can secure good green jobs

    Anna Markova is the Trades Union Congress’s co-lead on climate and industrial policy”

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/oct/18/just-transition-green-economy-workers-resources-empowerment

    “If you really want to know what a just transition looks like, don’t start with the official speeches of Cop26. Ideally, don’t even ask me. Ask those who need it most.

    Ask a teenager in south Wales, where coal mining jobs have not been replaced by alternatives and unemployment levels are among the highest in the UK. Ask the oil rig worker who has been travelling to work by helicopter for 15 years but is having to pay £2,000 for yet another helicopter safety training course to be able to work on a wind turbine. Ask the Eurostar driver who does not know if the train she drives will still be running in two months’ time. Ask, if you can, one of the Uyghur people forced by Chinese authorities to work in a labour camp to make polysilicone for solar panels.

    They can tell you about an unjust transition – the opposite of how we want to change our lifestyles and economies to meet net zero. Just transition mustn’t become a global policy-speak catchphrase, reduced to the intersection between environmental and social concerns, or vague promises of skills training. A real just transition makes sure people don’t lose out as their lives and livelihoods are transformed by climate action. Like the up to 600,000 workers in UK manufacturing and supply chains, whose future employment relies on government and industry investing to retool and decarbonise.”

    Wow, I thought. Some honesty around this debate at last, and from someone whose members are at the sharp end of the “transition” too. But read on:

    “So what do they need from the rest of us? First: resources. To give the at-risk jobs of today a future, governments must invest to build the pioneering zero-carbon steel plants, the fabrication yards and ports, and the domestic supply chains that the industries of tomorrow need. The TUC has called for £85bn of green infrastructure investment over the next two years. And where public funding takes the first step, private capital will follow.

    Governments must invest, too, in the public sector. They must give more resources to local councils to insulate homes in their area and support the NHS’s net zero plan. And they need to invest worldwide: industrialised countries are well behind on their $100bn climate finance pledge to the global south.

    Second: a say over how the transition happens. The postie knows what they need from the delivery rotas of the future. The oil worker knows what training he requires. The coalminer knows what she wants to do when the mine closes. This knowledge should shape the transition. Each workplace needs a formal agreement negotiated between unions and employers about the nature and pace of change – and a plan for how good jobs will be protected. This needs to be supported with commissions both locally and nationally, where unions, employers and governments listen to each other and devise a common plan for their industries and areas. The lack of planning and coordination in the UK is a key reason why we’re lurching from one crisis to the next today.

    Third: the removal of barriers. No worker should see their income plummet or have to pay to retrain if their workplace shuts down. And no worker should be barred from the jobs of the future, whether by biased recruitment practices, lack of support for parents or for disabled people, or by institutional racism.

    Fourth and finally: job quality. Green jobs must be great jobs. If a job involves back-breaking work and pays badly, if the work is unreliable or on a precarious contract, if the employer doesn’t recognise unions and if employees have to pay for their own training, then no wonder workers aren’t lining up to switch careers.

    Any job can be a good job. If we want workers to move from high carbon jobs to net zero jobs, climate movements must help unions fight for decent pay, terms and conditions. When these four challenges are met – enough resources, workers’ voices listened to, barriers brought down, every green job a good job – climate action will be made with people, not done to them.”

    And so we’re back to the usual point where all this breaks down. #MagicMoneyTree.

    Like

  27. “Steel will be vital to the green revolution, but our industry needs help to change”

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/oct/20/steel-green-revolution-industry-government-investment-technology-jobs-turbines-electric-cars

    “…Today, high energy costs are making it hard for the industry and are counterproductive as all of the viable low carbon solutions to steelmaking require more electricity than we use today. Therefore, the government also needs to do something about electricity prices, to ensure that in circumstances where it’s the right move to use electric arc technology or any other technology, it is a sustainable business model.

    Looking ahead, a lot of people think that hydrogen steelmaking will be the future. But for that to become a reality requires government investment to ensure that the infrastructure is there. It seems to be a question of who will make the first move. Will companies commit to a hydrogen transition, or will the government commit to delivering the infrastructure that they can plug into?…

    …On a more personal level, we saw what happened to the steelworkers in Redcar when industrial change is not managed properly. Thousands of jobs gone, entire communities without work, knock-on effects felt by generations.

    I’ve seen first-hand the impact of industries lost. Communities like Aberfan, Merthyr Vale or Ebbw Vale, just three miles from where I lived, were destroyed by crude industrial policies, and left ill-equipped to handle the transition away from coal. As a child I remember going with my mother to collect food for the striking miners. I did it once, I don’t want to do it again. We need a greener steel industry, a just transition, and we’ve no time to waste.

    Jacqueline Thomas has been a full-time member of the steel industry since 2005. She lives just outside Ebbw Vale, whose steelworks closed in 2002.”

    Like

  28. “COP26: South Africa hails deal to end reliance on coal”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-59135169

    “South Africa is set to receive $8.5bn (£6.2bn) to help end its reliance on coal in a deal announced at the COP26 climate summit.

    President Cyril Ramaphosa has called it a “watershed moment”.

    The country is currently a major emitter of greenhouse gases as a result of its addiction to coal, which it uses to generate electricity.

    This deal, funded by wealthier nations, could have both global and local implications.

    The vast scale of the coal operation run by the country’s state power company Eskom makes South Africa the 12th biggest carbon dioxide emitter in the world, according to the Global Carbon Atlas.

    Some of those at the heart of South Africa’s coal country hope that the latest deal could ease the environmental and health impacts of the power sector.”

    Sounds great, but read on:

    “The mines in Mpumalanga may cause environmental problems but they provide vital jobs.

    ‘What about our jobs?’
    The metal workers’ union cites research saying that 100,000 jobs in mining and the associated industries could be at stake.

    “No social plans, as far as we know, have been developed to assist all those communities who are going to be affected by that,” National Union of Metal Workers spokesman Phakamile Hlubi told the BBC.

    “If you’re not going to replace those jobs with something, you’re going to turn that entire province into a ghost town.”

    This sentiment may have been at the heart of what was before COP26 seen as a slow approach taken by some in government.

    Mining Minister Gwede Mantashe favoured a gradual change, urging people not to be “emotional” about demanding transition.

    But now the 2050 deadline to close most of the country’s coal plants can be brought forward.”

    They’d better hope some of that money is spent on green jobs, whatever they might be.

    Like

  29. If these people get their way, they’re going to need an awful lot of “green” jobs to replace the ones they’re determined to phase out:

    “Climate change: Welsh ministers demand scrapping of mining licence”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-politics-59164533

    “The Welsh government has called for the mining licence for Aberpergwm colliery, near Glynneath, to be cancelled.

    Deputy Climate Change Minister Lee Waters said he had urged the UK government to stop “40 million tonnes of coal” being extracted “from Welsh soil” over the next 18 years.

    Welsh ministers have a “clear policy of stopping using fossil fuels”, he said.

    But the mine operator says it supplies niche industries like water filtration and steel production.

    It says it provides 160 well paid jobs in the Vale of Neath area, plus 16 apprenticeships.”

    It’s quite something, isn’t it, when a government demands action to render some of its own people unemployed.

    Then there’s this:

    “Scrap Scottish salmon farms – Chris Packham” – at 17.53 today on the BBC at:

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science_and_environment

    “Chris Packham, the environmental campaigner and presenter of the BBC’s Springwatch series, has visited COP26 and says the host country should “get rid of highly polluting, nasty salmon farms”.

    The industry is said to be worth more than £1bn a year to the economy, with hundreds of thousands of fish raised in pens suspended in the open sea lochs around Scotland’s west coast and the Northern Isles.”

    What with all the workers to be thrown on the scrap heap, and the all the damage to be done to the economy, and all the costs of net zero, boy do we need a lot of well-paid and useful green jobs.

    Liked by 1 person

  30. “Scotland’s papers: What next for Scotland’s oil and care crisis fears”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-59258357

    “As COP26 comes towards an end in Glasgow, some of Scotland’s newspapers look at the future of Scotland’s oil and gas industry. The Scottish Daily Express reports that First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has been holding talks with groups dedicated to phasing out fossil fuels. It says confusion over government policy has “left thousands of jobs in the balance”.”

    Like

  31. “Blow to UK battery industry hopes as Johnson Matthey halts research
    British chemical giant to exit sector saying it is lagging too far behind rivals already making batteries at scale”

    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/nov/11/blow-to-uk-battery-industry-hopes-as-johnson-matthey-halts-research

    “Britain’s hopes to grab a slice of the fast-growing market for electric vehicle batteries have been dealt a blow after one of the UK’s biggest chemicals companies said it would give up on developing the technology.

    Johnson Matthey, a member of the FTSE 100, announced plans on Thursday to exit the battery materials business because it is too far behind rivals who are already making batteries at gigantic scale.

    The shares plunged 17% on Thursday to their lowest level since December, wiping more than £900m off the company’s market value as it also announced that the chief executive would step aside.

    To add to its difficulties, supply chain shortages hitting the automotive industry mean that profits will be at the lower end of expectations.

    Johnson Matthey makes most of its money from producing catalytic converters to clean exhaust emissions from petrol and diesel cars. However, impending bans on internal combustion engines in the UK and around the world have forced the company and many other suppliers to find new ways of making money.

    Developing lithium-ion batteries with carefully fine-tuned chemistries seemed an obvious choice, and the company had been on track to start building a new factory in Finland to build as many as 300,000 automotive batteries a year.

    It could now be forced to write down £340m in assets in that business, which employs 430 people. It will attempt to sell all or parts of the unit, although it noted it had found the required investments too expensive to compete with rivals.”

    Like

  32. “Johnson Matthey makes most of its money from producing catalytic converters to clean exhaust emissions from petrol and diesel cars”

    sorry “Johnson Matthey” you & your workforce just have to go. save the planet comes first.

    Like

  33. “More work needed to create green jobs, report says”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-59430224

    “Efforts to create so-called green jobs need to intensify if the UK government is to achieve its target of two million roles by 2030, according to a report.

    Jobs linked to the green economy accounted for 1.2% of all advertised roles in the year to July 2021, consultancy PwC said.

    That equates to just 124,600 new jobs.

    Boosting green job creation is part of the government’s “green industrial revolution” plans.

    In November 2020, the government announced £4bn would be spent on creating up to 250,000 new green jobs as part of its plan to hit net zero emissions by 2050.

    The COP 26 summit held in Glasgow a year later has put the issue into sharp focus again.

    But there are concerns that the green jobs transition could pose some risks, as it will impact on traditional jobs, especially in polluting industries.

    In September, the Trade Union Congress (TUC) warned up to 660,000 jobs could be at risk if the UK fails to reach its net-zero target as quickly as other nations.

    PwC’s report said work was needed to ensure the move to a net-zero economy does not add to regional inequalities.”

    Just 124,600 new jobs so far, while 660,000 are at risk (and Cumbria can’t have a coal mine). I loved the phrase “linked to the green economy” too. I wonder how hard they had to work to massage the figure up to 124,600 new green jobs? And I’d love to know what those jobs are and how much they’ve cost the taxpayer to date.

    “In its research, PwC said jobs that support the green economy indirectly should also be considered green.

    Such roles might include environmental advisors or experts in environmental or sustainability research and education.”

    Yeah, right.

    Like

  34. “Cambo: Jobs warning as Shell pulls out of oil field development”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-north-east-orkney-shetland-59517776

    “Business leaders have warned that thousands of oil and gas jobs could be at risk in the UK after Shell pulled out of the Cambo oil field development.

    Aberdeen’s Chamber of Commerce said a “premature” end to domestic production could see some areas suffer the fate of mining communities in the 1980s.

    Environmentalists say new fossil fuel projects like Cambo are incompatible with action on climate change….

    …Siccar Point Energy is currently awaiting approval from the UK government to develop the field.

    Chief executive Jonathan Roger said other countries including Norway were investing in new oil and gas alongside renewables as part of a transition to sustainable energy.

    He added: “The UK is at risk of damaging its economy and increasing imports with a higher carbon impact if new developments are not brought forward during this time.”

    Shell, which has faced widespread criticism over its 30% stake in Cambo, said it now believed the economic case for investment was “not strong enough”.

    Greenpeace welcomed the announcement, describing it as the “death blow” for the plans.

    But industry body Oil and Gas UK insisted developments such as Cambo were still needed.”

    Like

  35. Bill, an interesting blog – thanks for providing the link.

    I have no idea whether or not it’s correct, but having re-visited the BBC report, I note that one thing it doesn’t address is the economic viability (or otherwise) of the Cambo oil field, which is a rather large lacuna in an article which purports to be all about it.

    Like

  36. “Teesworks wind turbine plant deal delayed, company says”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-tees-59700321

    “A deal to make wind turbine blades on Teesside has been delayed but the area’s mayor says talks are now “progressing at pace”.

    US company GE Renewable Energy announced it would build 350ft (107m)-long turbine blades at the Teesworks site in March.

    The turbine factory was touted to supply the enormous Dogger Bank wind farm, off Teesside’s coast.

    Tees Mayor Ben Houchen said political opponents were “spreading rumours”.

    He said: “I can confirm that GE are completely committed to coming to Teesside and we continue to work with them to finalise legal agreements and factory building specifications.

    “Preparation of the site is almost ready and construction of the factory will start early next year,” he added.

    But a spokesperson for GE told the Local Democracy Reporting Service: “GE Renewable Energy’s LM Wind Power business is currently facing delays in the finalisation of the leasing agreement and design to open its new blade manufacturing plant in Teesside, England….

    …In March the company said it hoped to start production making wind turbine blades for the UK offshore wind market at the Teesworks site in 2023.

    It said the plant could create 750 direct renewable energy jobs and about 1,500 indirect jobs.

    Reports of snags first emerged in Renewable Energy News over claims GE was putting plans on ice due to concerns about Siemens winning key wind farm contracts….”

    No jobs yet, then.

    Like

  37. “Electric buses should be made in Wales not imported, says minister”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-59880876

    “Electric buses should be made in Wales instead of being imported from China, Wales’ deputy minister for climate change has said.

    Lee Waters wants to see an electric bus factory opened in Wales to create green jobs.

    But one UK manufacturer said it had approached the Welsh government to build a factory and had received “no traction”.

    Recently Newport and Cardiff bus companies have bought Chinese vehicles.”

    Like

  38. Er, why not build the factory, make the product, and try to sell it? What has the government to do with things?

    Like

  39. “Ovo expected to make a quarter of staff redundant due to energy crisis
    UK energy supplier trying to control costs by cutting 1,700 jobs as gas market price soars to all-time high”

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2022/jan/12/ovo-expected-to-make-a-quarter-of-staff-redundant-due-to-energy-crisis

    “Ovo Energy is moving to cut a quarter of its entire workforce in an attempt to cut costs amid the growing industry crisis.

    The UK’s third-biggest supplier of gas and electricity is expected to announce the loss of 1,700 roles out of 6,200 as part of a voluntary redundancy scheme as soon as Thursday.”

    Net zero Britain – destroying jobs.

    Like

  40. “Ovo Energy set to close Perth office in UK job cuts plan”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-tayside-central-59941735

    “Ovo Energy’s Perth office is set to close after the gas and electricity provider told UK staff it planned to cut a quarter of its workforce.

    Staff have been told that 1,700 employees across the UK will lose their jobs through voluntary redundancy.

    It is understood that about 700 people work in the Perth office.

    Two bases in Edinburgh and one in Cumbernauld will also close as it reduces its UK offices from 10 to three.”

    Where have all the green jobs gone?

    Oh, is this them?

    “The job cuts are understood to be linked to the company’s acquisition of SSE three years ago and the integration of the firm into Ovo.

    Ovo said it would also create a new “Ovo Academy” in Glasgow which would create “new opportunities in the city that hosted COP26 for those who want to be at the forefront of the UK’s green revolution.”

    About 1,000 call centre staff will be trained to become zero-carbon living advisers, with specialist knowledge of green home products and technologies from tariffs, to making homes more energy efficient.”

    Hmmm.

    Like

  41. “Brussels sets its sights on British wind power
    EU demands access to UK wind farm contracts as figures show that wind energy has fallen to four-year low”

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2022/01/28/brussels-sets-sights-british-wind-power/

    “…Fife-based Burntisland Fabrications, collapsed a few years later in December 2020. Work it was hoping to get for offshore wind farms was awarded to firms abroad.

    Its demise fuelled mounting anger that the economic rewards from the UK’s rapid growth in offshore wind farms were not being felt domestically, as jobs and cash instead went abroad, including to China and the UAE.

    Efforts since made to try and reverse that situation and protect UK jobs now face a challenge from abroad. The European Commission is examining whether Britain is unfairly prioritising local firms and, reported the Sun, is on the brink of filing a challenge with the World Trade Organisation.

    That could test the balance ministers appear to be trying to strike: pushing wind farm developers towards hiring local companies and talking up their prospects, yet not putting legal requirements in place that would risk falling foul of fair trade rules.

    It comes amid mounting concern about how certain workers will fare in the shift towards greener energy. In particular, whether thousands of workers in the oil and gas industry will find a new home in the growing offshore wind, hydrogen and carbon capture sectors as the UK shifts away from fossil fuels.

    Unions are watching closely. “If the UK doesn’t secure the tens of thousands of green manufacturing jobs needed to develop the next generation of offshore wind, then it won’t be the fault of the EU, it will be the fault of the UK Government,” says Gary Smith, general secretary of the GMB Union.

    “Ministers know this, so rather than bleating about what competitors may or may not do, they need to get our own house in order so we can start onshoring the jobs from our renewables sector that have been offshored to the rest of the world over the last decade.

    “Bluntly, the credibility of the government’s ‘levelling-up’ and ‘green industrial revolution’ agendas depend on this.”….”.

    Like

  42. Apart from the lack of green jobs, there’s also the damage to energy-intensive jobs to think about:

    “Thousands of Liberty Steel jobs at risk in England as HMRC files winding-up order
    Unions condemn move as ‘devastating blow’ saying plants must remain open”

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2022/feb/10/thousands-of-liberty-steel-jobs-at-risk-england-hmrc-winding-up-order

    “As many as 3,000 workers in five of Sanjeev Gupta’s Liberty Steel plants across England face losing their jobs after HM Revenue and Customs filed petitions to wind up their operating companies over unpaid taxes.

    Gupta’s GFG Alliance metals empire could be at risk if four Liberty companies fail to reach an agreement with HMRC and other creditors, after a year of struggles after the collapse of Greensill Capital, its main lender.

    Unions condemned the move as a devastating blow, saying the plants must be kept open because of Liberty’s strategic importance to the UK economy.

    The four companies under threat are:

    Speciality Steel UK, which employs close to 2,000 people at Rotherham and Stocksbridge in South Yorkshire.
    Liberty Merchant Bar at Scunthorpe in North Lincolnshire.
    Liberty Performance Steels Ltd at West Bromwich in the West Midlands.
    Liberty Pipes at Hartlepool in County Durham….

    …Nevertheless, the pressures on Gupta’s companies have been compounded by energy prices, which have surged at an unprecedented rate in recent months. Energy costs have meant the plants are operating at less-than-full capacity despite global high prices for steel, according to a source briefed on the operations.

    A Liberty Steel spokesperson highlighted “a very challenging backdrop in the UK with record high energy prices”….”.

    Like

  43. I try to be fair and balanced, more so than the BBC or the Guardian, I like to think. In fairness, therefore, these do look like a disappointingly small number of the much-vaunted green jobs, but anything is better than nothing, and in an area that really needs them too. It’s a shame that it’s not a UK company, but a South Korean one, that’s doing the business. Let’s hope that Teesside isn’t left high and dry as others have been by Korean companies in Scotland, once the grants ran out. Anyway, here’s the story:

    “Teesside wind power investment deal creates 750 jobs”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-tees-60376188

    “A factory to make the foundations for off-shore wind turbines will be built on Teesside creating 750 jobs.

    SeAH Wind will produce 150 steel monopiles a year when it fully opens in 2026, the South Korean company said.

    It had announced it would open on the banks of the Humber but instead will work from the former steelworks site at South Bank near Middlesbrough.

    They will be used to build the world’s largest offshore wind farm at Dogger Bank.

    Work on the site could start in July.”

    The bit the BBC doesn’t mention is this:

    “It will be built on the 4.5m sq ft offshore wind and industrial space being created on 450 acres of land next to the wharf and heavy-lift South Bank Quay.

    The first phase of the quay was recently awarded £107m of funding in the UK Infrastructure Bank’s first ever investment.”

    https://www.constructionenquirer.com/2022/02/14/s-koreans-to-build-300m-monopile-factory-on-teesside/

    Does “awarded funding” mean that a grant was given or a loan made, and in either case, on what terms? If it’s a grant, it looks as though each job is costing the taxpayer close on £1.5M. Why is the BBC reporting so gushingly favourable and lacking in critical detail?

    Like

  44. Well, quite a day in terms of establishing that the “green jobs” publicity is a myth. I give credit to the Guardian for publicising this, but not for drawing the conclusion that we “need to do more” (to paraphrase roughly). First up:

    “UK green economy has failed to grow since 2014, according to official data
    Office for National Statistics finds ‘no significant change’ in turnover and jobs in low-carbon and renewable energy sector”

    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/feb/17/uk-green-economy-has-failed-to-grow-since-2014-official-figures-show

    “The UK’s low-carbon and renewable energy economy has failed to grow since 2014, according to official data showing a fall in the number of green jobs.

    In a blow to the government’s pledge to boost net-zero employment opportunities, the Office for National Statistics said its latest figures, covering 2020, showed “no significant change” in turnover and job numbers in the sector compared with six years earlier.

    Employment in the low-carbon and renewable energy economy – which includes manufacturing, energy supply and construction – fell by about 28,000 across the UK over the period, to just 207,800. Among the steepest declines were in factories producing energy-efficient products, onshore wind, and solar energy….

    …Although the latest snapshot includes the first year of the coronavirus pandemic – when the British economy plunged into the deepest recession for 100 years – the figures show that in 2019, before the health emergency struck, green business turnover also fell compared with a year earlier.

    According to the latest data, the sector with the largest growth in jobs was in low-emission vehicles and infrastructure, where employment more than doubled to 19,100. However, this was not enough to offset bigger falls elsewhere, including a decline of more than a quarter, or 32,000, in the number of jobs in energy-efficient product manufacturing.

    The number of green businesses operating in the UK fell by 13% over the six-year period, while the combined turnover for the low-carbon economy fell by almost 6% to £41.2bn….

    …While green sectors including offshore wind have recorded substantial growth in recent years, with a sharp rise in renewable energy production, critics argue that much of the activity has been driven by foreign companies, with a reliance on the UK importing turbine blades and components manufactured abroad….”

    Then there’s Larry Elliott in the Guardian (thank goodness for the voice of sanity there):

    “Hard data blows apart UK rhetoric on leading the way to a green economy”

    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/feb/17/hard-data-blows-apart-uk-rhetoric-on-leading-the-way-to-a-green-economy

    “…The problem is the claims of global leadership don’t tally with the hard data. Turnover in the low-carbon and renewable energy sector was the same in 2020 as in 2014. The number of people employed has actually fallen by 28,000 to just over 200,000.

    To take a specific example, at the last count there were only 2,300 people working in the booming offshore wind sector – down by a third since the middle of the last decade. The reason is simple. Unlike oil and gas rigs, nobody works full-time on the turbines and their manufacture has been outsourced to other countries. It is the same story in solar, where employment has dropped by 40% to 4,300.

    To be clear, the lack of tangible progress is not due to the pandemic, because jobs and turnover – according to the latest data from the Office for National Statistics – were both flatlining even before the arrival of Covid-19….”

    And here’s the link to the ONS data:

    https://www.ons.gov.uk/economy/environmentalaccounts/bulletins/finalestimates/2020

    Like

  45. but wait, i’ve seen the ads on TV – “WE ARE GOING GREEN” !!!!

    must be some mistake in your or ONS numbers?

    Like

  46. This story is from the other side of the planet to those of us who are in the UK, and it isn’t about the lack of green jobs; rather it’s about the destruction of real jobs and the imposition of poverty on those who earn a living from supplying reliable energy when they are told that it’s dirty and has to stop. Nevertheless, I think it’s worth mentioning here, because in many ways it’s simply the other side of the coin. I am impressed that the Guardian has reported in this way, but am less impressed by what look to me like crocodile tears:

    “‘A train wreck’: what happens to workers and towns when the lights go out on coal power?
    Eraring, the country’s largest coal-fired power station, will shut in three years, but transition plans for employees, communities – and the grid – are lacking”

    https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2022/feb/19/a-train-wreck-what-happens-to-workers-and-towns-when-the-lights-go-out-on-coal-power

    “…“But it’s the workers I worry about. They’ve got families as well. Who is going to support them?”

    Origin Energy said its decision reflected a rapidly changing energy market in which traditional power stations could not compete with cheaper, renewable options.

    The Nature Conservation Council of NSW estimated the exit of Eraring would avoid up to 87m tonnes of climate pollution, describing it as a “ray of hope for leaving a safe climate for our children”.

    But the council said the NSW and federal governments also had a task ahead of them to ensure a seamless transition for both the energy grid and communities affected by station closures.

    In the NSW Hunter region, four power stations are set to close – on current schedules – by 2033.

    AGL’s Liddell power station is first in 2023, followed by Eraring in 2025, Vales Point in 2029 and Bayswater no later than 2033.

    Governments have had years to prepare communities and workers for the transition to a green economy.

    And yet calls for action from the Lake Macquarie region have gone unanswered.

    Kay Fraser is the mayor of Lake Macquarie city council, which serves a population of 209,000 in centres including Belmont, Charlestown, Swansea, Toronto, Morriset and Warners Bay.

    She said the community was “devastated” by Thursday’s announcement, which would affect not only the 400 workers at the plant but thousands more in the supply chain, and the areas they live.

    “We’ve known this was coming but it’s like a train wreck,” she said….”.

    Like

  47. Mark – posted this earlier but seems to be blocked (so i stripped out links)

    “had a look at the Guardian link & links it supplied to find if the quote –

    “Origin Energy said its decision reflected a rapidly changing energy market in which traditional power stations could not compete with cheaper, renewable options.” was accurate.

    seems the CEO did say –
    “Origin’s chief executive, Frank Calabria, said the energy market was now “very different” from when Eraring began fully operating in 1984. The plant provides about a fifth of NSW’s electricity generation. “The reality is the economics of coal-fired power stations are being put under increasing, unsustainable pressure by cleaner and lower cost generation, including solar, wind and batteries,” he said in a statement.”

    out of curiosity I went to Origin’s website & found they have a sustainability tab.

    it makes sense now, when read with the Guardian quote –

    “Matt Kean, the NSW treasurer and energy minister, said he was disappointed by Origin’s decision and acknowledged the closure would cause problems for the grid if not replaced. He promised the state would build what he described as the “biggest battery in the southern hemisphere” in response.
    Called the “Waratah super battery”, it would have a 700MW/1400 megawatt hour capacity, and would be initially funded through a new Transmission Acceleration Facility promised to “fast-track the delivery of critical transmission infrastructure”. He said the state’s electricity infrastructure roadmap, supporting a number of new renewable energy zones, would receive an additional $84m funding and another $47.5m would be spent on pumped hydro storage.”

    ps – ties in with your latest comment on “Saving the Planet by Trashing it”

    Liked by 1 person

  48. “FMQs: Bi-Fab yard forced to hire overseas staff to make windfarm parts”

    https://www.heraldscotland.com/politics/19950402.fmqs-bi-fab-yard-forced-hire-overseas-staff-make-windfarm-parts/

    “A SCOTTISH based company was forced to recruit “dozens” of workers from overseas to build windfarm equipment despite Nicola Sturgeon promising the renewable sector would provide “truly historic” job opportunities for local people.

    The issue was raised at First Minister’s Questions today in Holyrood by the Scottish Lib Dem leader Alex Cole Hamilton in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and fears over energy supplies….

    …the Lib Dem MSP said while the Bi-Fab plant, in Methil, Fife, recently been taken over by a new owner InfraStrata plc, had won contracts, but could not find qualified staff.

    “The aggression that has been demonstrated by the Russian regime in recent days asks us, once again, searching questions about our energy security.

    “Fifteen years ago, Alex Salmond thundered that Scotland would become the ‘Saudi Arabia of renewables’. A few weeks ago, the First Minister boasted of a ‘truly historic’ opportunity for renewables jobs,” he told the chamber.

    “Now the new owner of the Burntisland Fabrications site, InfraStrata plc, has secured work, but cannot find Scottish workers. There are not enough trained workers among the colossal wind farms of the Forth estuary to build even eight turbine jackets.
    “Instead, the new owner has had to recruit dozens of workers from abroad, because the Scottish National Party has failed to train enough skilled workers here. Not only are most of the wind farms being built in the far east, but the work that we have won is not being built by workers from Scotland.

    “Does that not show that the SNP’s renewables policy is all wind and no jobs?”…”.

    Like

  49. “Seagreen: Firm behind Angus offshore wind farm pipeline in receivership”

    https://www.thecourier.co.uk/fp/business-environment/business/3102515/seagreen-firm-behind-angus-offshore-wind-farm-pipeline-in-receivership/

    “The firm installing a pipeline to a major offshore wind farm off the Angus coast has been placed in receivership.

    Roadbridge was responsible for the installation of more than 11 miles (19km) of cable for the Seagreen windfarm pipeline.

    It runs from Carnoustie to the proposed substation at Tealing.

    It is central to the £3 billion joint venture between TotalEnergies and SSE Renewables, which is scheduled to enter commercial operation in 2023.

    Roadbridge UK is a subsidiary of Roadbridge Ltd, based in the Republic of Ireland.

    The company cited financial difficulties as it entered receivership.”

    Like

  50. Mark – can’t read your link (blocked) but it’s another worrying sign.
    googled it & found this –

    https://www.scottishconstructionnow.com/articles/offshore-windfarm-pipeline-to-be-brought-onshore-under-carnoustie-golf-course
    “A deal has been concluded to allow the developer behind what will become Scotland’s largest offshore windfarm to use Carnoustie’s world-famous golf links for its cabling.” – how dare they dig up Carnoustie !!! are the greens to green enough ?

    comment will get blocked again I expect – I may give up

    Like

  51. Curious that the link didn’t work. I just checked it in case I made a mistake when posting it, and it worked OK for me.

    Like

  52. “Teesside’s Lighthouse Green Fuels Project gets Saudi £1bn”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-tees-60761832

    “…Alfanar said 700 jobs would be created in the construction of the Lighthouse Green Fuels Project at Billingham and 240 jobs when it is operational….”.

    Read on to the very end:

    “Alfanar was previously awarded £2.4m by the UK government as part of its Green Fuels, Green Skies competition to take the project forward.”

    A mere £10,000 of taxpayers’ money per permanent job – a bargain! Of course, what we aren’t told, is what sort of jobs they are, how many are part-time and how many are full-time etc.

    Like

  53. The sad, and probably inevitable, next step from the news of receivership:

    “Jobs lost after civil engineer Roadbridge UK collapses”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-scotland-business-60793817

    “Dozens of workers across Scotland have been made redundant following the collapse of the UK subsidiary of Irish civil engineering firm Roadbridge.

    Roadbridge UK went into receivership last week after administrators from Grant Thornton were called in.

    The “vast majority” of the firm’s 215 employees have now been made redundant, the administrators confirmed…

    …Roadbridge UK was involved in a number of high-profile civil engineering projects in Scotland, including the Whitelee wind farm extension and the A737 Dalry Bypass in Ayrshire….”.

    Like

  54. “Anglesey: Orthios eco park placed into administration”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-60914824

    “The company behind a £1bn eco park on Anglesey has been placed into administration, sparking fears over job losses.

    Orthios, based at the former Anglesey Aluminium site, confirmed their main private investor has decided to put the business into administration.

    Local MP Virginia Crosbie said she feared 120 staff may have lost their jobs.

    Plans for the large biomass plant and eco park were revealed in 2016.

    Member of the Senedd for Ynys Mon, Rhun ap Iorwerth has written to the company and the Welsh government to seek reassurances and help for workers.

    An Orthios employee contacted BBC Wales, claiming they had received a message from their supervisor, telling them the company had gone into administration and all staff had been made redundant.”

    It wasn’t supposed to end like this:

    “FIRST SPADE IN THE GROUND FOR MULTI-MILLION POUND ECO PARKS”

    https://slrwealth.com/first-spade-in-the-ground-for-multi-million-pound-eco-parks/

    “Best International secured the final funding to start work on the land

    Best International successfully acquired all funding needed to commence works on Anglesey’s power station project.

    Cheshire based wealth asset management specialists, Best International are delighted to confirm they have secured the £22 million funding required to launch the project.

    It means work will begin later in the year creating thousands of jobs in both the construction stages and beyond – with the second phase of funding already secured via the £2 billion investment into the project….

    …Best International are the Knutsford based wealth asset management specialists who have been assisting on the funding strategy to rejuvenate the Orthios Eco Parks for the past 18 months.

    It was announced in October that Best International had secured a £2 billion investment into the projects. They will develop energy and food stations within the Eco Parks – but their investment would only be made once the initial funding had been secured.

    Best International have now secured the £22 million required to begin Phase 1. The funds were raised via Best Corporate Bonds in just 18 months.

    The project, to transform the disused industrial sites at Anglesey into a 299-megawatt combined heat and power station will create thousands of jobs between the two projects.

    With the additional funding now secured, an announcement on when work will begin is expected over the coming months.

    The funding is a huge boost for Best International, further enhancing their status as UK leaders in capital raising, funding and asset management strategies for SMEs….”.

    Hmm.

    Like

  55. “Ministers urged to intervene to keep renewable energy jobs in UK after big contract for floating wind farms given to Middle East-based group
    Dubai’s Lamprell has signed a deal to fabricate 200 turbines for the farms
    GMB union has criticised the Government’s Energy Security Strategy”

    https://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/markets/article-10746729/Ministers-urged-intervene-Shetland-windfarm-jobs-UK.html

    “Ministers have been urged to intervene to keep renewable energy jobs in the UK after a big contract for floating wind farms was given to a Middle East-based group.

    Dubai-based Lamprell signed an early stage deal this month to fabricate 200 turbines for the farms, to be installed west of Shetland.

    But the GMB union said the deal meant the Government’s Energy Security Strategy had ‘fallen at the first hurdle’ as UK workers missed out on jobs on the multi-billion pound project.

    Gary Smith, GMB general secretary, said: ‘It’s a national scandal that UK workers and communities are being forced to watch as multi-billion pound contracts for offshore wind farms are sent overseas to companies in authoritarian regimes.’

    The union has written to politicians in Westminster and Holyrood calling for a joint review.

    It wants emergency legislation to stop work going abroad.

    Lamprell is listed in London but much of its work is focused in the Middle East.”

    Like

  56. Mark – how do find all these uplifting news stories ?

    just when you thought things can’t get any worse/screwed up, along comes another.

    Like

  57. dfhunter – it isn’t difficult; they’re everywhere! We’re going to hell in a handcart, and not for the reasons that the Guardian and the BBC would have us believe.

    Like

  58. “Boris Johnson could cut up to 91,000 civil service jobs”
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-61432498

    Today’s top news. In the small print:

    Examples include the passport office and 70 staff said to be still working on climate change conference COP26.

    A source said the cuts were “not ideological” but about “good housekeeping”.

    There’s 70 of them thar green jobs for you. Obvious to me that we still need 70 staff working on something that finished half a year ago. Somewhere in a bunker under Whitehall, someone is still working on Operation “Tube Alloys.”

    Liked by 2 people

  59. Jit – you got me with the – Operation “Tube Alloys.” bit. thought you had lost the plot.

    should have known better –
    “The Tube Alloys programme in Britain and Canada was the first nuclear weapons project. Due to the high costs, and the fact that Britain was fighting a war within bombing range of its enemies, Tube Alloys was ultimately subsumed into the Manhattan Project by the Quebec Agreement with the United States, under which the two nations agreed to share nuclear weapons technology, and to refrain from using it against each other, or against other countries without mutual consent; but the United States did not provide complete details of the results of the Manhattan Project to the United Kingdom. The Soviet Union gained valuable information through its atomic spies, who had infiltrated both the British and American projects”

    Like

  60. An interesting headline and development:

    “German chancellor accused of comparing climate activists to Nazis
    Olaf Scholz didn’t elaborate on what he meant when saying ‘black-clad enactments’ reminded him of a bygone era.”

    https://www.politico.eu/article/german-chancellor-scholz-accused-compare-climate-activist-nazis/

    “Climate activists are accusing German Chancellor Olaf Scholz of comparing them to Nazis, something his spokesperson called “absurd.”
    Scholz was interrupted by campaigners during a panel discussion at the German Catholic Convention on Friday as he mentioned the mining jobs lost in the country’s coal phaseout plans. Germany’s ruling coalition aims to end coal-fired power by 2030.

    “I’ll be honest,” the chancellor responded, “these black-clad enactments at various events by always the same people remind me of a time that is, thank God, long gone.” Scholz then accused the activists of not wanting to engage in discussion but rather “manipulate” the event “for their own purposes.”

    As he didn’t elaborate, many activists and other commentators interpreted Scholz’s words as a reference to the Nazi era and black SS uniforms when a clip of the interaction went viral over the weekend.”

    Curious though that is, it’s not actually the reason I post it here. This is:

    “More than 100,000 renewables jobs were lost since 2011 as Germany’s domestic solar industry declined, according to official data.”

    It looks as though it isn’t just in the UK that all the promised green jobs have either failed to materialise or have disappeared.

    Liked by 1 person

  61. Whatever Olaf Scholz meant (and I tend to agree with the revolting activists on the meaning) it is striking that his Vice Chancellor, leader of the Greens, would never use the same terms. And Scholz is the one who has just talked to Putin, with Macron, and the three men agreed to continue contacts by phone – well, according to the Kremlin! As junior Tory MPs are reportedly near to the numbers needed for an attempted coup over here the German ruling coalition is hardly singing from the same hymn sheet from the very top.

    Whatever way that goes, good on Scholz for saying it how it is on green jobs.

    Like

  62. So, the Germans have ruled out nuclear energy, are phasing out coal, and want to stick it to Vlad by not buying his oil and gas (so they claim).

    Never mind: There will be plenty of energy available from all the unicorn droppings scattered among the windmills and solar panels.

    German industry leaders are ecstatic about all this.

    Like

  63. Unfortunately, behind a paywall, but you can see enough to get the gist:

    “Green jobs revolution concern as Scotland loses more than 27,000 manufacturing jobs during pandemic”

    https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/homenews/20207342.green-jobs-revolution-concern-scotland-loses-27-000-manufacturing-jobs-pandemic/

    “SCOTLAND has lost more than 27,000 manufacturing jobs during the pandemic, leading to fresh concerns about the green jobs revolution in Scotland.

    New official estimates show that the manufacturing workforce has dropped from 210,200 in 2019 to 182,600 in 2021 – a fall of 13%.

    Concerns have been raised by the GMB union which says that while the race to net zero is supposed to revolutionise manufacturing, ministers have “let the jobs disappear overseas”.

    The Scottish government had promised to create 130,000 green jobs by 2020 and has come under fire by critics after only s fraction of the roles expected have materialised.

    According to the latest estimates from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) from February, the number of full-time equivalent jobs in Scotland’s “low-carbon and renewable economy” fell from 21,700 in 2019 to 20,500 in 2020, a drop from 23,200 in 2014…

    …According to the same estimates there are just 4,800 full-time workers in offshore and onshore wind in Scotland out of 14,800 across the UK in 2020.

    The GMB said there are now 200 more people serving rollercoasters and ghost trains in theme parks than wind turbines and said that shows how “badly managed our green revolution is.”

    Last year it emerged that 35,000 UK jobs supported by the oil and gas industry have been lost in 2020 as Covid and volatile prices struck…

    …Earlier there were concerns as a contract to manufacture and supply monopiles for the huge Moray West offshore wind farm went to China’s Dajin Heavy Industry…

    …In March, Ocean Winds signed a capacity agreement with United Arab Emirates based Lamprell worth in excess of £150M, covering the supply of 62 transition pieces , including 60 wind turbine jackets and kit for the scheme’s two offshore substations…”

    And much more in similar vein.

    Like

  64. For the sake of balance:

    “Eco-airship contract to launch 1,800 jobs in South Yorkshire
    Spanish carrier orders 10 helium-filled Airlander 10 aircraft in boost for UK green tech and maker HAV”

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2022/jun/15/eco-airship-contract-to-launch-1800-jobs-in-south-yorkshire

    “About 1,800 jobs are to be created in South Yorkshire building 10 new environmentally friendly airships.

    Hybrid Air Vehicles (HAV), a small Bedford-based company, announced on Wednesday it had signed a deal to provide a Spanish airline with 10 of its 100-passenger Airlander 10 helium-filled airships.

    The aircraft, which the company says will have under a tenth of the CO2 footprint per passenger of jet planes, will be built at a new green aerospace manufacturing cluster in South Yorkshire.

    Kwasi Kwarteng, the business secretary, said the commissioning of the Airlander showed that the UK was at the forefront of “revolutionary” greener aviation technology.”

    We’ll see. I’m sceptical, but will be very happy to be proved wrong. Goodness knows, we could do with some good news regarding jobs and manufacturing.

    Like

  65. Well, it’s green until we stop extracting gas. Says wiki:

    For large-scale use, helium is extracted by fractional distillation from natural gas, which can contain as much as 7% helium.

    Airships are great I’m sure, as long as you plan to write a novel between taking off and landing.

    Like

  66. Jit,

    That’s what happens when I try to be fair and balanced – I lean too far away from common sense. OK, they’re not “green” jobs, they aren’t even useful jobs, but at least they’re jobs, and for once the Spanish are paying, rather than it being a case of a Spanish wind farm company with a Scottish name taking UK subsidies. So it’s a start, I suppose…

    Like

  67. Will they report back on this a little way down the line to see the extent (if at all) to which the claims of green jobs turn out to be substantiated? Or will it be like all the other fanfares where, down the line, nothing happens?

    “Floating wind farms at sea to create 29,000 jobs – Crown Estate”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-62037754

    “Plans to generate electricity through floating wind farms off the south Wales coast could create thousands of new jobs, according to the Crown Estate.

    The property business owned by the monarch but run independently said the new industry could create about 29,000 jobs, including 10,000 in Wales.

    It is leasing the space to generate enough power for four million homes.”

    Lots of problems in the first three paragraphs. “Could” isn’t the same as “will”. “About 29,000” isn’t the same as “29,000”. “…enough power for four million homes” isn’t the same as powering 4 million homes reliably and non-intermittently. It’s another puff piece, in other words.

    Like

  68. “Teesworks wind turbine blade plant shelved”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-tees-62101858

    “Plans for a wind turbine blade plant on Teesside have been shelved after months of uncertainty.

    General Electric Renewable Energy (GE) had aimed to open on the former steelworks site at Redcar to supply the Dogger Bank wind farm off the Yorkshire coast.

    It was hoped it would create 750 jobs and another 1,500 in the supply chain.

    Tees Valley mayor Ben Houchen said the site could still accommodate the firm if it changed its mind.

    The news was reported by the Renewable Energy News website, which said GE was “not moving forward with plans for a Teesside facility”.

    Uncertainty over the plant emerged late in 2021 when the firm confirmed there were delays to the sign-off of a deal.

    It had lined up Teesside to make 350ft (107m) long blades.

    Responding to the news, the Conservative mayor said it seemed GE “haven’t been successful enough to secure orders with potential clients, but we continue to stand ready to welcome them on site in the future”.

    He added “2,250 well-paid, good quality jobs” were envisaged from a Teesside plant being run by South Korean firm SeAH, which would make monopiles, the steel tubes that are driven into the sea bed.

    A Dogger Bank spokesman said it was disappointed GE was “not progressing” with its plans for the blade facility.”

    Liked by 1 person

  69. Talk about spin (pardon the pun). That BBC story about GE shelving plans for a wind turbine plant on Teesside has now miraculously turned into this:

    “Teesworks £400m wind turbine factory work begins”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-tees-62112667

    It’s basically the same story, but with a positive spin on it. It still contains the hard facts, which are an uncomfortable truth (but this time buried deep in the article):

    “But General Electric has said it will “not be moving forward” with its plans to make turbine blades there.”

    Liked by 1 person

  70. “Port Talbot: Tata steelworks could close without subsidy deal”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-62262290

    The green jobs don’t seem to have materialised, but net zero is threatening existing jobs:

    “The owner of Port Talbot steelworks warned sites could be shut without subsidies for reducing carbon emissions, reports claim.

    Tata Group wants to reach a deal for the UK government to provide £1.5bn towards this, the Financial Times says.

    The UK’s biggest steelworks, in Port Talbot, employs 4,000 people.

    The UK government said steel “plays a critical role” in the UK economy and Tata was “a valued steel producer and significant employer”.

    Speaking to the FT, Tata Group chairman Natarajan Chandrasekaran said: “A transition to a greener steel plant is the intention that we have . . . But this is only possible with financial help from the government.

    We have been in discussions over the last two years and we should come to an agreement within 12 months. Without this, we will have to look at closures of sites.”

    The report says Tata wants to close two blast furnaces at Port Talbot and build two electric arc furnaces, that will be less carbon intensive.

    However, the FT adds this process will cost about £3bn, with Tata seeking £1.5bn from the UK government.

    Responding to the news, Aberavon MP Stephen Kinnock said the steelworks in Port Talbot made the “best steel money can buy”….”.

    Might not it be better to allow the coal mine in Cumbria to open and supply coking coal to British steelworks? Jobs all round, and a contribution to the nation’s finances instead of draining them.

    Like

  71. Andrew Montford makes a sobering point during an interesting thread kicked off by Ben Pile

    Liked by 1 person

  72. And here’s an update on the Tata Steel story:

    “Talks continuing with Tata steel, Welsh secretary says”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-politics-62306997

    “The Welsh secretary says talks over a subsidy to help Tata Steel reduce its carbon emissions are continuing.

    Sir Robert Buckland said people should be “a little cautious” about media reports that the company wants £1.5bn.

    He added a decision on the matter should be made by the next prime minister.

    On Friday the Financial Times reported that Tata would consider closing its sites if a deal is not done in the next 12 months.

    Tata Group owns the UK’s biggest steelworks, in Port Talbot, which employs 4,000 people.

    Its chairman Natarajan Chandrasekaran told the FT a transition to a “greener steel plant” is “only possible with financial help from the government”.

    “We have been in discussions over the last two years and we should come to an agreement within 12 months.

    “Without this, we will have to look at closures of sites.”…”.

    Like

  73. “Port Talbot: Tata Steel faces crunch-time, professor warns”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-62422873

    “The UK’s largest steelworks is facing “crunch time” over reducing carbon emissions, a professor has warned.

    There have been warnings the Port Talbot plant could be closed if a deal isn’t reached for subsidies to reduce carbon emissions.

    Tata Steel said it was committed to cutting its impact on the environment and climate change.

    Prof John Gibbins said the technology could cost up to £1bn and take years to implement, but would save jobs.

    He told BBC Wales carbon capture and storage was the answer. But an economist said the technology would not be viable….”.

    Like

  74. “Climate change: Wales’ ports need upgrade for bigger wind farms”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-62492734

    “There are fears Wales could lose out on jobs and investment from offshore wind because ports are not well equipped enough.

    Wind farms being developed now have much bigger and heavier turbines, needing quays that can carry ten times the weight they do now.

    Hundreds of jobs could be created by expansion, one port manager said.

    The Welsh government said it was working with four operators to understand the specific requirements….

    …Jim O’Toole, managing director of Port of Mostyn, in Flintshire, said these opportunities could be threatened because no port in north Wales was well enough equipped to handle the larger turbines being planned now.

    His port has already built seven wind farms, the last being Gwynt y Môr, run by RWE, which has 160 turbines that are 150m (492ft) tall to the blade tip.

    The company’s next project off north Wales, Awel y Môr, involves turbines that are 332m (1,090ft) high, and much heavier.

    The massive turbines will be taken out to sea by boat and the quay, which the boats tie up to, will need to be able to cope with weights of 3,000 tonnes, compared with 300 tonnes now.

    “The existing quays are no longer capable of doing those lifts, so we need to build a whole new quay capable of lifting 3,000 tonnes,” he said….”.

    Not very green, is it? Poor Wales. Steel jobs destroyed. New jobs not replacing them. Land- and seascapes vandalised.

    Like

  75. This is becoming ridiculous:

    “Final decision on west Cumbria coal mine delayed again”

    https://www.newsandstar.co.uk/news/20619167.decision-west-cumbria-coal-mine-delayed/

    “A decision on West Cumbria’s proposed new coal mine has been delayed again.

    The Government has now set a deadline of November 8 to make a final decision on the controversial scheme, which would see coking coal extracted from beneath the Irish Sea off the coast of Whitehaven.

    Greg Clark, who last month replaced Michael Gove as Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities, was due to make a decision next week….

    …t is the third deadline that has been set for the decision to be made after a planning inquiry was held in September last year and a report was prepared by the planning inspector for the secretary of state to consider.

    The original deadline of July 7 was pushed back to August 17 when Michael Gove was sensationally sacked by Boris Johnson on July 6 – before he had issued a decision. The Prime Minister then resigned the following day.

    Mike Starkie, elected mayor of Copeland, said he was furious that there would be a further delay.

    He said: “It’s outrageous. I’m absolutely furious.

    “The civil servants have had nearly a year to complete the work. I find it difficult to believe that anyone could be that inept that they couldn’t get this resolved in the time….

    …“This is a planning decision we shouldn’t have to wait for a Prime Minister to be elected. The planning inspector has made his recommendation and I’m going to write to the Government and say the very least they can do is make the planning report public.”…”.

    But key stakeholders have received a letter from the Government this evening confirming a further delay.

    Liked by 1 person

  76. “NI offshore wind farms would boost jobs and cut emissions – report”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-62809978

    A report on the environmental and economic benefits of offshore wind has concluded it could create hundreds of jobs and cut emissions.

    The report, titled the Clean Revolution, looked at how 1.5 GW of power could be generated from offshore wind projects, installed by 2032.

    That would be enough to power 1.6 million homes in Northern Ireland.

    A Dutch company hopes to install up to 25 floating turbines off the coasts of counties Down and Antrim.

    And how disinterested is the report?

    The report, commissioned by RenewableNI, found installing floating offshore windfarms would also offset nearly 50 million tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions, equivalent to taking 1.2 million fossil fuel-powered cars off the road….

    …Alun Roberts from BVG Associates, which carried out the report, said government support was key.

    “One of the real challenges of the industry is that it’s an industry that responds well to strong political signals, and if that message is a little bit diluted or fractured, then I guess that’s something that creates uncertainty on the part of the industry.

    It responds well to strong political signals? As do fossil fuel companies. That might explain, in part at least, why gas supply is so constrained at a time of high demand. Never mind, one rule for unreliable renewables, and another for reliable fossil fuels.

    And the report was commissioned by RenewableNI (“As a collaboration between Wind Energy Ireland (WEI) and RenewableUK (RUK), we also work closely with both trade bodies on issues impacting the renewable electricity industry across the UK and Ireland.”). And it was carried out by BVG Associates (“We’re dedicated to helping our clients succeed in a sustainable global electricity generation mix founded on renewables. We combine deep wind industry knowledge with skills gained in the world of business consulting.”).

    Without dismissing the report entirely simply because of the nature of the people commissioning and carrying it out, is it not incumbent on the BBC to point out a little more clearly that this is not remotely a disinterested report? Instead the article is a puff piece in support of renewables in Northern Ireland.

    Like

  77. “The Great European Energy Disaster”

    https://www.briefingsforbritain.co.uk/the-great-european-energy-disaster/

    …Despite vast investment of consumer funds, employment in the European wind and solar industries, which is invariably held out as a future bonanza of the ‘Green industrial revolution’, has in fact contracted sharply since 2008, with the Spanish industry falling from over 200,000 jobs in 2008 to under 50,000 in 2021, and the German industry halving from over 60,000 to under 30,000 full-time equivalent jobs. The EU’s share of global renewables industry employment has fallen from 20% in 2012 to 13% in 2021, and the bloc has substantial presence only in those areas of low-carbon technology, such as biomass, where there is little international competition. Subsidised deployment in Europe has failed to give European industries a secure position in the world markets for renewable energy equipment. The field is now dominated by China, which has greatly expanded its industrial base thanks to European subsidies, while using cheap fossil fuels to power the manufacture of ‘Green’ equipment for Europe….

    Like

  78. “The UK’s energy system is fattening state coffers – just not Britain’s
    Frances O’Grady
    The British public should enjoy the full benefit of the energy that is generated here, and help plan its future”

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/sep/24/uk-energy-system-state-coffers-britain-british-public

    What do they [free social benefits in Europe] have in common? And how does that relate to your rising energy bills? All of the above have been funded with the proceeds of energy companies – including profits made from offshore windfarms in Britain. While the UK sold off its energy industry to private companies, the governments of France, Denmark, Norway, and several German provinces and cities chose a different path. They developed publicly owned energy companies, alongside private sector competition.

    Without shareholders extracting value, these companies generated billions to reinvest in services, infrastructure and lowering bills. The Norwegian people now own one of the world’s largest investment funds – so big that it provides a fifth of the nation’s budget year on year. This is in large part because it directed profits from its North Sea oil and gas fields into a sovereign wealth fund. The UK could have done the same. But we allowed private companies to take all the profit.

    Oil and gas are not the only riches off our shores. Powerful winds course across the North Sea like rich seams of gold. But unlike gold – or fossil fuels – no matter how much you take, it never runs out. Over the past two decades, Britain has had the second largest expansion of offshore wind power in the world. This time, much of the profit flowed into the public purses of other countries: to Sweden, via the company Vattenfall; to the United Arab Emirates, via Masdar; to Canada, via a Quebec public pensions investment fund.

    Meanwhile, fabrication yards and ports stood empty in Scotland and north-east England as wind turbine contracts went elsewhere in the world. And crews servicing turbine construction sites were found to be working for less than the national minimum wage….

    Like

  79. Mark O’Grady’s line there
    “But unlike gold – or fossil fuels – no matter how much you take, it never runs out”
    that doesn’t sound true to me.
    Mostly wind will move around
    sometimes it loses energy to noise. to friction
    Likewise the sun creating heat gradients will put energy in.
    However if mankind is taking energy out of that stock it is diminishing
    It’s just the stock is absolutely mega
    mankind is probably impacting the stock by a millionth of a percent or something.

    but the normal argument is that mankind has changes the air by a 50 millionth re carbon dioxide
    ie rise from 350ppm to 400ppm

    Like

  80. I have been considering this comment for some time in relevance to ”renewables jobs”. My family has been extremely lucky to have been in the right place at the right time, they are all working or worked for SSE . My wife worked in procurement and took on the Clyde and Greater Gabbard wind farm projects. My daughter started with working on radar interference from turbines and now works on a combined gas power station specifically carbon capture. My son works on environmental projects linked to off shore turbines and is now utilising some of the tech for Health and Safety control of lone working in remote sites like wind farms.The other side of the coin shows my brother’s family working again for SSE but in the non renewables side, civil works, corporate relations and transmission. Out of 6 only 2 actually started in new jobs created by renewables. I have seen a few reports on STV news interviewing students working for renewables projects, they seem to have a certain desperate hope they will get a full-time job out of it.

    Like

  81. JamesS,

    Thank you for the interesting insight.

    Whatever you do, don’t mention SSE (who are behind the Viking Energy wind farm) in Shetland – it probably won’t go down very well!

    Like

  82. “Shock therapy: turmoil engulfs Britishvolt’s £3.8bn battery factory
    Future of company hailed by Boris Johnson as key to green industrial revolution hangs in the balance, as the first in our Electric Dreams series on Britain’s fledgling battery industry reveals”

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2022/sep/29/britishvolt-38bn-battery-factory-green-industry

    …Britishvolt has never been short on ambition. The enormous £3.8bn “gigafactory”would produce batteries for 300,000 cars and vans a year and employ 3,000 people in a relatively deprived part of the UK.

    Built on a vast site near Blyth in Northumberland, it would become the fourth-biggest building in the UK and the sixteenth-biggest in the world. Britishvolt now has 300 staff.

    Crucially, it would help the UK wean itself off petrol and diesel cars, giving hope to the hundreds of thousands of workers whose jobs are tied to the internal combustion engine.

    Those plans have started to fray. Britishvolt has publicly acknowledged “challenging” conditions and admitted that it will not be able to start production until at least 2025 – two years later than it initially promised. It blames increased costs caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, but insists that it is still on track to build a full-scale gigafactory.

    However, people familiar with the situation say the company is facing further problems that are making fundraising difficult. It has called in consultancy EY to look at options on how to get through the funding squeeze. Several sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, have raised concerns over the startup’s management and warn of its increasingly urgent attempts to secure financial support from investors and local and national government.

    Britishvolt’s main asset is its 93-hectare site at the former Blyth power station. It paid £4.8m for the land from Northumberland county council, which had just bought the site from RWE, an energy company, according to Land Registry documents.

    The sale came with strings attached from the council, which was wary after Britishvolt backed out of a similar deal with the Welsh government for a site in the Vale of Glamorgan. The council retains a covenant which means it can demand the site back after Britishvolt failed to meet some of those conditions, according to several people with knowledge of the deal.

    Britishvolt is lobbying the council to release it from the covenant. That could allow it to raise money backed by the site, a source said. However, it is understood that local politicians have opposed removing the covenants.

    Another financing problem relates to Britishvolt’s other key asset: a promise of £100m in government funding. The then business secretary Kwasi Kwarteng revealed in July that the government had made a “final grant offer” – albeit one much lower than the £200m Britishvolt hoped for at the beginning of the talks.

    That support will only arrive once Britishvolt has secured battery manufacturing equipment supplied from Korea and Germany, Britishvolt’s executive chair, Peter Rolton, said in an interview last month. Britishvolt has pushed for the government to provide the money sooner to see it through its funding shortfall.

    One person with knowledge of the talks said the government had insisted on the conditions because of concerns about reputational risk if the project failed….

    And much more in similar vein.

    Like

  83. “Another financing problem relates to Britishvolt’s other key asset: a promise of £100m in government funding. The then business secretary Kwasi Kwarteng revealed in July that the government had made a “final grant offer” – albeit one much lower than the £200m Britishvolt hoped for at the beginning of the talks.”

    this is not funny anymore – we the taxpayer are paying for this scam.

    Liked by 1 person

  84. “India’s solar powered future clashes with local life”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-62848096

    …Thanks to the abundant sunshine, Bhadla is home to the world’s biggest solar power farm, in part built and operated by Mr Prasad’s IF&FS.

    Soaking up the sunshine are 10 million solar panels with the capacity to generate 2245MW, enough to power four and a half million households.

    While keeping the solar panels clean in such a sandy and dusty environment is a challenge, Mr Prasad says running such a vast solar plant is still much simpler than operating almost any other kind of power station….

    …But not everyone is thrilled about the giant solar park that has been built on their doorstep.

    Most of the 14,000 acres used for the park were owned by the state, but it was also where local farmers grazed their cattle.

    “Most of our livelihood was cattle rearing,” says Sadar Khan, the head of Bhadla village.

    “Because all the government lands have been taken back, we don’t have enough land for cattle grazing. We are left with few animals,” he says.

    He accepts that jobs have been created by the park, but says many of those jobs do not pay enough to survive on.

    “There are not many solar jobs for locals except labourers, as most of us are uneducated.”

    Mr Khan also complains that many locals still have no electricity connection….

    Like

  85. Like

  86. “Rees-Mogg in talks with UK steelmakers as fears grow for thousands of jobs
    Business secretary liaises with Tata Steel and Jingye Group over Port Talbot and Scunthorpe sites”

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2022/oct/17/rees-mogg-talks-uk-steelmakers-fears-grow-thousands-jobs-tata-jingye

    The business secretary, Jacob Rees-Mogg, has opened talks with Britain’s steelmakers amid concerns that thousands of jobs could be lost from the struggling industry.

    The government confirmed on Monday it had entered discussions with Tata Steel, owner of the UK’s largest steelworks in Port Talbot, south Wales, and Jingye Group, which bought British Steel out of insolvency in 2020.

    The Chinese company has agreed to maintain its current operations and job numbers as talks get under way, the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS) said.

    The company previously warned ministers that two blast furnaces at its facility in Scunthorpe, Lincolnshire, were not financially viable without support from the government.

    About 4,000 people are employed at the site but thousands more depend on the company in its extensive supply chain. More than 3,500 are employed at the Port Talbot facility, owned by Tata Steel….

    …The government has provided more than £780m to the steel industry to help with electricity costs since 2013.

    A BEIS spokesperson said: “We are working across the steel sector on achieving their sustainable and competitive long-term future.

    “We recognise that businesses are feeling the impact of high global energy prices, particularly steel producers, which is why we announced the energy bill relief scheme to bring down costs.”

    Like

  87. “UK battery firm staff agree to November pay cut”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-63483666

    Staff at the UK battery firm Britishvolt have agreed to take a “significant” pay cut as the company battles to stay afloat.

    The future of the start-up was thrown into doubt over fears it could run out of money after the government rejected a £30m advance in funding on Monday.

    But the firm has raised enough money from an unnamed investor to keep going until early December.

    To make the money go further around 300 staff will take a pay cut for November.

    Executives at the firm will not take any pay at all for the month.

    Britishvolt, which has been championed by the government, wants to build a factory in Blyth in Northumberland, which would build batteries for electric vehicles but has struggled to find investors.

    The £3.8bn plant had been expected to create 3,000 jobs but has already been delayed several times, which has led to doubts over whether it will become a reality.

    Like

  88. “Solar farm owner Toucan Energy enters administration amid Thurrock scandal
    Authority lent total of £655m over four years to owner of 53 solar parks across Britain”

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2022/nov/11/solar-farm-owner-toucan-energy-enters-administration-amid-thurrock-scandal

    One of the country’s largest solar farm owners has entered administration amid the fallout from a scandal that forced an Essex council leader to resign.

    Administrators at Interpath Advisory have been appointed to Toucan Energy Holdings, which owns a portfolio of 53 solar parks with a combined capacity of 513 megawatts across England, Wales and Northern Ireland.

    Thurrock council in Essex, Toucan’s main creditor, borrowed hundreds of millions of pounds to invest in the solar farm scheme run by globetrotting financier Liam Kavanagh.

    Rob Gledhill, who was leader of Thurrock council, resigned in September, with the government appointing a commissioner to manage the Conservative-run authority.

    Gledhill stepped down after the council made investments that could cost taxpayers £200m. An assessment by Camdor Global Advisors, which was appointed by the council to review the portfolio, concluded the solar farms were valued at less than was needed for the authority to recoup its money.

    Kavanagh’s firms received a reported £655m from Thurrock over four years to buy up the 53 sites.

    Like

  89. “UK wind farm staff swapped for foreign crew in Scots green revolution”

    https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/homenews/23130545.uk-wind-farm-staff-swapped-foreign-crew-scots-green-revolution/

    BRITISH workers are being replaced by cheap foreign labour to serve Scotland’s green revolution after the Home Office agreed to extend a migrant worker extension.

    The Herald understands that at least one predominantly British-based crew has been let go on the day they were due to start work on one of Scotland’s largest offshore wind farms – with recruiters citing the extension of the Offshore Workers Concession rules which allows the employment of cheaper foreign nationals on offshore wind projects.

    Unions have been fighting the OWWC which allows companies to skip the usual post-Brexit immigration restrictions and employ foreign nationals to join vessels engaged in the construction and maintenance of offshore wind farms.

    Originally introduced in 2017, the government has repeatedly renewed the ‘temporary’ concession. In 2021 this was done with no warning, on the day after it expired.

    Now it has emerged it has happened again, and as of October 31, when the concession was due to expire, it has been extended even further until April 30, 2023.

    It is feared that this has now laid the door open for the continued use of cheap foreign workers…

    …The decision by the UK government to extend the concession comes after concerns by the industry that offshore wind farm operators would struggle to maintain operational continuity due to a shortage of skilled and qualified staff.

    Now it has been confirmed that as a result of the extension, at least 36 predominantly British crew recruited in anticipation of the concession ending have been given their marching orders in the wake of the extension.

    The workers are employed on the Normand Navigator, a Norway-registered key supply ship working on the huge £2 billion Neart Na Gaoithe (NnG) offshore wind farm project in the Firth of Forth off Fife…

    …Papers seen by the Herald reveal how the workers on the vessel were given their marching orders by recruiters ESRG on the very day the contract was due to start and they were due to join the vessel.

    ERSG, who act for Solstad said in a notice of termination dated November 8 sent to staff on Normand Navigator that the firm informed them that they wish to terminate the employment agreement “prior to its start on November 8 because the requirement for workers has changed. This is the result of the extension by the UK government of the Offshore Wind Workers’ Concession.”

    Staff were told of the termination verbally three days earlier and that they had a seven day notice period.

    ERSG told staff that under a contract for services, there was “no obligation” to provide work and because the contract had not yet started there was also no obligation to provide any payment…

    Like

  90. Sad news, especially at this time of year:

    “Windhoist: Jobs lost as Irvine-based company enters administration”

    https://www.irvinetimes.com/news/23193285.windhoist-jobs-lost-irvine-based-company-enters-administration/

    MORE than 100 jobs have been lost after an Irvine-based wind turbine installation company entered administration just weeks before Christmas.

    Windhoist Ltd, which operates out of Meadowhead Industrial Estate, was formed in 2005 and provides heavy lift, mechanical and electrical installation services to the onshore and offshore wind industry.

    According to Companies House, administration started on November 29 with Grant Thornton appointed to oversee the insolvency process for the Scottish and Irish branches of the company.

    The administrators told the Times: “The Windhoist business provided specialist engineering and construction services in the renewable energy sector and owing to adverse trading conditions in recent years, encountered significant cash flow issues in the days prior to appointment.

    Like

  91. “Steel production halting due to rising energy costs”

    https://www.constructionnews.co.uk/supply-chain/steel-production-halting-due-to-rising-energy-costs-16-12-2022/

    UK Steel, the trade body for the sector, warned that production could decline further next year if the government does not extend and improve its support for businesses’ energy costs.

    The current Energy Bill Relief Scheme is set to expire in March and an announcement is due in the coming weeks about what will follow.

    UK Steel director general Gareth Stace said: “Electricity prices are at 30 times their historical average this week, forcing some steel companies to cease production at key times during the day. This is simply not sustainable for the steel sector. A long-term solution will be found in infrastructure investment and fundamental market reform, but in the interim we need a bridging solution that ensures UK steel producers can make steel at the same cost as their European competitors.”

    Steel prices in the UK soared during 2022, beginning at about £350 per tonne and peaking at more than £1,200 in April, prompting warnings from the likes of HS2 about the project risks brought about by material price inflation.

    The cost of energy inputs during production is one of the main factors determining its sale price.

    Stace noted that the German government’s support package for 2023 guarantees wholesale electricity prices at €130/MWh (£113), well below the UK’s current cap of £211/MWh. “The UK government should match this to ensure our industry’s ability to compete,” he said.

    “Without the continuation of the [scheme], our estimates show electricity prices being double those of the German industry’s next year, leading to reduced production, shrinking market share and increased imports. Prolonged and frequent halts to production could become the norm, negatively impacting productivity and leading to a decline in steel production in the UK.”

    Like

  92. Never mind “where did all the green jobs go?”. In Scotland, under the SNP/Green coalition, it’s more a case of where did all the jobs go?

    “New CalMac ferries for Western Isles to be built in Turkey”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-highlands-islands-64081163

    Two new ferries for the CalMac fleet are to be built in Turkey.

    The Scottish government announced in October it would spend £115m on new vessels for the Skye, Harris and North Uist service.

    Ferries agency CMAL has now named the preferred bidder as Turkish yard Cemre, which is already building two ships for CalMac’s Islay route.

    The nationalised Ferguson shipyard did not bid for the latest order and was not shortlisted for the Islay ships….

    …Scottish Conservative transport spokesman Graham Simpson said: “It is scandalous that the SNP has put Scottish shipbuilding in the position where it cannot be considered suitable for such a job.”…

    Interesting conclusion by the BBC’s Douglas Fraser:

    Again, Scottish heavy engineering is being made to look rusty. And turning again to Turkey to build its ships doesn’t say much for the Scottish government’s industrial strategy.

    Like

  93. A dose of realism from one of the BBC’s more balanced journalists:

    “Energy prospects blow hot and cold”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-scotland-business-64116488

    …Government’s expectation of lower costs for offshore wind are causing alarm in the industry, as its borrowing costs rise, and it tries to make good on big commitments to sourcing from a supply chain in Scotland…

    …Using that lead to generate jobs in manufacturing, even with a new technology, is continuing to prove difficult. To compete at scale with established fabrication yards requires big investment and, again, that is hard to justify until it’s clear that the orders will follow.

    Putting further pressure on developers and the supply chain is the expectation of cost. Securing an area of seabed to develop is only the start. The finances stack up only when companies also secure Contracts for Difference from the UK government…

    …Now, the government expects it to fall further – so much further that they think offshore windfarms can produce energy at lower prices than onshore windfarms. That may reflect the cost of trying to develop an onshore windfarm when the UK government has put so many obstacles in the way of placing them in the English countryside.

    The industry is alarmed that prices are being driven down so hard. The response to these administrative strike prices from Scottish Renewables was a warning that driving down costs is increasingly hard to achieve while also delivering on local content.

    And if there is so little headroom, added to rising interest rates on corporate debt, some of the hoped-for projects may not stack up financially. There is, says chief executive Claire Mack, a “very real risk of stalling developments”…

    Like

  94. With precious little sign of green jobs, it should be blindingly obvious by now that net zero policies are costing exiting jobs:

    “Liberty Steel plans to cut 440 jobs in UK and reduce production
    Union condemns Gupta group ‘switch from substantial investment’ to idling plant and curbing output”

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/jan/12/liberty-steel-plans-to-cut-440-jobs-in-uk-and-reduce-production

    …The company blamed the UK steel industry’s “severe competitiveness issues”, pointing to higher energy costs as well as more stringent environmental restrictions compared with other steelmaking countries.

    Politicians, unions and the steel industry all said that Liberty’s redundancies should serve as a wake-up call for the UK government. The industry has been calling for specialised help for steelmakers to cope with higher energy costs and for the costs of upgrading to lower-emissions technology….

    Like

  95. “Britishvolt: UK battery start-up collapses into administration”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-64303149

    Paul Homewood has a piece on it too:

    https://notalotofpeopleknowthat.wordpress.com/2023/01/17/british-volt-collapses-into-administration/

    And here’s Net Zero Watch’s take:

    “Britishvolt’s collapse signals economic disaster for the UK’s Net Zero plans”

    After the much lauded battery start-up Britishvolt collapsed into administration, Net Zero Watch has reiterated its warning that the Government’s policy of green interventionism and Net Zero dogmatism is a recipe for economic and political disaster.

    Described as a ‘gigafactory’, the collapsed EV battery factory was meant to be a symbol of levelling-up and would show how a green “planned economy” could herald an industrial renaissance.

    The then Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, claimed last year that “Britishvolt’s plan to build a new gigafactory in Northumberland [was] a strong testament to the UK’s place at the helm of the global green industrial revolution.” Those plans are now in utter disarray.

    UK Government ministers had committed £100 million to the battery project, apparently without a sound business plan, because it aligned with official rhetoric on Net Zero.

    The company blamed Britain’s “ballooning energy costs” for its predicament, and its ultimate collapse.

    In recent months, BMW has announced it is moving manufacturing of the electric Mini from the UK to China, where manufacturing is powered by cheap coal. Other carmakers plan to slash the number of electric vehicles they manufacture because rising prices and the spiralling cost of electricity makes them increasingly unaffordable for drivers.

    Dr Benny Peiser, Net Zero Watch’s director, said:

    “This fiasco was utterly foreseeable and was indeed foreseen by us and other analysts — but not by complacent ministers and incompetent civil servants. BMW’s China exodus and Britishvolt’s collapse won’t be the last casualties of the government’s green command and control economy.”

    Like

  96. “Government to offer £600m for green steel switch”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-64366998

    The government is expected to announce hundreds of millions of pounds of support to help Britain’s two biggest steelmakers go green.

    The funding for British Steel and Tata Steel UK is likely to be unveiled by the Chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, this week.

    Each is expected to receive around £300m of grants to help pay for a switch away from coal-fired blast furnaces and help with energy costs.

    It will also protect thousands of jobs in Britain’s industrial heartlands.

    Central to the offer of support are the companies’ blast furnaces. These use vast quantities of coking coal, a treated form of coal, to smelt iron from ore-bearing rock. As a result they produce huge amounts of carbon dioxide, which drives global warming.

    The Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy told the BBC it was working closely with the steel industry to secure what it describes as “a sustainable and competitive future”. Sources told the BBC last week that a £300m funding package was being considered for British Steel.

    This follows a request by British Steel, which is owned by Chinese company Jingye, for hundreds of millions of pounds of grants to prevent the closure of its blast furnace at Scunthorpe in Lincolnshire….

    So, no new “green” jobs. Just the forlorn hope of saving some existing jobs from being lost thanks to net zero policies, at a cost to the taxpayer of £600 million (with no doubt more costs down the line). All to make money for a Chinese company. Good job!

    Like

  97. “Electric vans startup Arrival to cut 800 jobs amid focus on US market
    British firm hopes to benefit from Joe Biden’s green energy subsidies and start production in north Carolina”

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/jan/30/electric-vans-startup-arrival-to-cut-800-jobs-amid-focus-on-us-market

    The British electric vans startup Arrival is cutting 800 jobs, about half its remaining workforce, to reduce costs as it seeks extra funding and plans US expansion to take advantage of green energy subsidies.

    The troubled electric vehicle maker said “approximately 50%” of the company’s 1,600-strong global workforce would leave the company.

    Arrival told investors that the job cuts, and other measures to trim spending, would results in a halving of its operating costs to “approximately $30m (£24m) per quarter” following a review of its operations.

    The US-listed company has switched its strategy from focusing on the UK to developing a foothold in the US van market, with plans to start production in Charlotte, north Carolina, next year “subject to raising additional capital”.

    It hopes to benefit from Joe Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act, a package of $369bn in subsidies and tax credits for companies investing in electric vehicles and renewable energy technologies, as long as the products and parts they manufacture are made in the US.

    In the UK, Arrival spent heavily on robot-heavy factories in Banbury and Bicester but cut 800 jobs last July.

    The latest job cuts are the first act of Igor Torgov, who joined the company last February and has now taken on the role of chief executive….

    Like

  98. Arrival – The company was valued at more than $15bn on the Nasdaq in New York at its height, but the shares slumped during 2022 and the firm is now worth $250m.

    Arrival had cash on hand of $205m at the end of last year, it said.

    On listing, the firm had said it planned to focus on vans and buses before potentially moving into smaller passenger vehicles, with a focus at first on taxis, but with the possibility of cars for consumers too.

    Arrival was founded in west London in 2014 by Sverdlov, who sold telecoms firm and mobile phone maker Yota in 2013.

    with link back – https://www.theguardian.com/business/2022/nov/24/founder-of-troubled-electric-van-maker-arrival-steps-aside-as-ceo

    Liked by 1 person

  99. And now this:

    “British Steel considering cutting up to 1,200 jobs in Scunthorpe
    Unions say move would be ‘betrayal’ amid talks with UK government over potential £300m in financial support”

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/feb/01/british-steel-considering-cutting-jobs-scunthorpe

    British Steel is considering cutting up to 1,200 jobs at its steelworks in Scunthorpe in a move that unions said would be a “betrayal” of workers amid talks with the UK government over a potential £300m in financial support.

    Executives at the Chinese-owned company told union leaders they were considering closing coke ovens at the plant and making hundreds more cuts across its operations at a meeting on Wednesday afternoon. The Unite union said up to 1,200 jobs were at risk.

    British Steel, which was bought in 2020 by China’s Jingye, has been in talks with the government over support for several months, together with its Indian-owned rival Tata Steel. Both companies – which each run two of the four remaining blast furnaces in the UK – are seeking support to upgrade the furnaces to electric arc furnaces with much lower carbon emissions.

    The UK government has offered both companies £300m apiece, although they say the total costs of upgrading the plants could run into the billions of pounds. The support is understood to be tied to retaining jobs at Scunthorpe and at Tata’s Port Talbot steelworks…

    Yet more evidence that net zero destroys jobs.

    Liked by 1 person

  100. Sadly, here are the first of those job cuts:

    “British Steel to cut jobs amid fears for industry”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-64725229

    British Steel is expected to announce on Wednesday the closure of its coking ovens in Scunthorpe with the loss of 300 jobs.

    The timescale for the closure is unclear, as is how many compulsory redundancies it will involve.

    Coking ovens are used to turn coal into coke which burns at the higher temperature needed for the two blast furnaces that remain in operation.

    The closure means British Steel will import coke…

    And still many middle-class people with comfortable jobs and/or decent incomes continue to campaign against a mine in Cumbria which will provide coking coal and jobs in a depressed area of high unemployment.

    Like

  101. Local expert opinion
    update Its Apple Coke Ovens that are closing
    “The Dawes Lane coke ovens is at the end of its life
    So they rebuild a plant
    or do something else like import.”
    When I worked a summer there,we had difficulty with EU laws
    so we bought nearby farmland
    cos the fines are lower for polluting your own land.
    Building a new plant with UK/EU pollution laws is difficult.

    Update we just realised Dawes Lane closed 6 years ago
    That means Appleby must have been renovated
    Battery 4 reopened in August 2016
    And it seems the other 3 were renovated before that.

    Like

  102. Your gas price might go up.
    Why ?
    Coke ovens byproduct is town gas, that is then used around the steel plant
    Port Talbot plant says it is 81% self-sufficient for gas.
    Scunthorpe will be similar.

    Like

  103. Disgracefully inaccurate headline from the BBC:

    “The students at the heart of the green jobs boom”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-64865088

    What green jobs boom? The report certainly doesn’t describe one. Lots of student courses doesn’t necessarily equate to jobs. Indeed, as the article says (if you read far enough):

    A report by Skills Development Scotland found that in 2021 there were about 100,000 “green jobs” although it said the figure could be far smaller.

    It said identifying the true number was difficult for multiple reasons, not least because there’s no formal definition of a “green job.”

    Some might be directly linked to sustainability or renewables engineering whereas others might have greener elements such as a plumber installing heat pumps.

    But it said almost 40% of all vacancies could now be described as “green jobs”.

    40% of Vacancies? But how many vacancies are there? And “could now be described as” isn’t the same as “are”. The whole thing is a puff piece.

    Liked by 1 person

  104. Maybe I should post the following story and link under Cloud Cuckoo Land…

    Then again, given the lack of “green” jobs to date, and the rapid destruction of other jobs, this seems as good a place as any/

    “Climate change: UK risks losing investment in net-zero race, MPs warn”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-65110764

    It’s as though they all live in a parallel universe, far, far away.

    Like

  105. Meanwhile, back in the real world:

    “North Sea oil and gas losing investments – report”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-scotland-business-65093274

    The energy windfall tax, political uncertainty and increased costs are pushing away investment in North Sea oil and gas, a report has warned.

    Industry body Offshore Energies UK estimates that 90% of offshore firms are cutting spending worth billions.

    It says a continued lack of investment would see production fall by 80% by 2030, increasing reliance on imports….

    …The report says inflation, material costs and a lack of access to finance are also hampering investment decisions.

    These combined factors mean the sector is likely to produce 500 million fewer barrels of oil, which is about the same as a year’s production from the North Sea.

    Ross Dornan, from OEUK, said: “By the mid-2030s, according to the Climate Change Committee, oil and gas will still provide half our energy needs.

    “We should be aiming to get as much as possible of that energy from our own resources – meaning the North Sea.

    “That makes it essential for the UK to attract investment. The alternative is to become ever more reliant on other countries.”…

    So much for energy security.

    Like

  106. “Warning UK car industry under threat without help”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-65123902

    The UK’s car sector could disappear unless the government follows the US and EU in helping with the switch to electric, an industry veteran says.

    It was “probable” car firms would leave the UK without a huge subsidy package similar to the billions in support the US is providing, Andy Palmer said.

    The sector is facing the “last throw of the dice”, Mr Palmer added, who has had senior jobs at Nissan and Aston Martin…

    Perhaps if car manufacturers weren’t being forced to manufacture cars that most people don’t want, the industry wouldn’t be in such trouble.

    Like

  107. “Ministers halt ‘scandal’ of Scots wind farm foreign labour”

    https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/homenews/23456574.ministers-halt-scandal-scots-wind-farm-foreign-labour/

    SHIP safety concerns have been raised as the concession, which allows cheap foreign labour to replace British workers in servicing Scotland’s green revolution, comes to an end.

    The Herald on Sunday can reveal that the Home Office says there will be no extension of the Offshore Wind Workers Concession (OWWC) which allows the employment of cheaper foreign nationals on wind projects after the end of this month.

    Concerns have been raised with ministers after it was revealed in November, last year, British-based crews were being let go – with recruiters citing an extension to the concession as the reason…

    …Unions have been fighting the OWWC which allows companies to skip the usual post-Brexit immigration restrictions and employ foreign nationals to join vessels engaged in the construction and maintenance of offshore wind farms.

    Originally introduced in 2017, the government has renewed the ‘temporary’ concession multiple times starting with a 12 month extension to April 21, 2020. In 2021 the extension was done with no warning, on the day after it expired.

    A deadline was put in place on July 1, 2022 only for it to be extended to October 31 before being put back even further till April 30, 2023. It was feared that this has had laid the door open for the continued use of cheaper foreign workers….

    Like

  108. “Gas output up off Aberdeen amid Dundee renewables jobs fears”

    https://www.heraldscotland.com/business_hq/23475739.gas-output-off-aberdeen-amid-dundee-renewables-jobs-fears/

    SHELL has underlined the potential to produce lots more oil and gas in the North Sea amid fresh concerns that the long-awaited boom in renewables jobs will fail to materialise….

    …Signs the North Sea has more to offer on the oil and gas front than the Scottish Government recognises have been accompanied by reminders that renewables may not represent the panacea that some think.

    While US private equity fund Quantum has just committed £300m to support plans to turn Ardersier port near Inverness into a major windfarm support hub, job creation in the renewables sector in Scotland has fallen well short of expectations in recent years.

    As a result, AMTE Power’s announcement in July that it planned to build a battery factory in Dundee that would employ 200 people was well received.

    In March the company secured £580,000 loan funding from Highlands and Islands Enterprise.

    However AMTE’s chief executive Alan Hollis told Sky News that it was very difficult to justify keeping production in the UK given the incentives being offered to companies to make green technology in the US under the Inflation reduction Act championed by President Biden. The act has caused alarm across Europe.

    Mr Hollis has said AMTE wants to remain in the UK and is committed to its existing Thurso plant. However, the stock exchange-listed firm will be obliged to consider other options.

    Mr Hollis’s comments put pressure on the Scottish and UK governments to ensure they provide the right support for renewables firms.

    In response Roz Foyer, general secretary of the Scottish Trades Union Congress, said that after years of failed promises on green jobs from UK and Scottish Governments the vital work offered by AMTE for Dundee had to be retained.

    But talk of providing increased subsidies for renewables firms may concern those who remember how much money Scotland handed to overseas corporations such as the Chunghwa television group to encourage them to launch projects that failed to deliver anything like the benefits expected.

    Like

  109. “Offshore wind delivers one tenth of jobs promised by ministers”

    https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/homenews/23489568.offshore-wind-delivers-one-tenth-jobs-promised-ministers/

    SCOTLAND has produced only around a tenth of the offshore wind jobs forecast by ministers as it aimed to make the country the green energy capital of Europe.

    The latest official estimates show that 3100 full time jobs in offshore wind in 2021.

    Ten years ago the Scottish Government were championing the desire to be the green energy capital of Europe with around 28,000 jobs in offshore wind alone.

    It comes as GMB Scotland has written to energy secretary Neil Gray asking for an urgent summit to ensure that the nation does not continue to get the green jobs revolution wrong.

    They want to ensure more turbines and other infrastructure for wind farms off the coast of Scotland are built here to create more jobs.

    It coincided with Mr Gray travelling to Japan for a trade visit to encourage further investment in renewables.

    The GMB says Mr Gray “does not need to fly around the world” to create renewables jobs in Scotland.

    Union leaders have raised concerns that the number of jobs created in offshore wind has not kept up with the amount of revenue being generated – indicating there is a 16,000 jobs gap leaving Scotland ‘shortchanged’ while ministers have been seeking to make the nation a destination of choice.

    Analysis using the latest Office of National Statistics’ low carbon and renewable energy estimates shows that while in 2014 every £1m of income made by offshore wind firms translated to seven jobs for workers – this has plummeted to just one job per £1m of turnover in 2021….

    Like

  110. 3100. Pathetic. The distillery industry employs more than twice that number.

    “Nine in ten distilling jobs in Britain are based in Scotland. Employment levels in the industry have been relatively stable, varying between 7,000 to 8,000 over the last eight years.”

    https://digitalpublications.parliament.scot/ResearchBriefings/Report/2018/10/11/Brewing-and-distilling-in-Scotland—economic-facts-and-figures

    I wonder, given the choice, what would Scots prefer: more whisky or more wind turbines?

    Like

  111. Back to magical thinking again.

    ensure that the nation does not continue to get the green jobs revolution wrong

    The more people employed in wind power… the more expensive it is. Shall we have a “farm jobs revolution” too? It’s easy to achieve. We just need to ban tractors.

    And yes, a more rational approach would be to send envoys to Japan inviting them to buy more single malt.

    Like

  112. We have Tullibardine Distillery in the village producing a single malt which is normally used for blending, not so well known for it’s own label. Until relatively recently the distillery employed probably 8 to 10 people the majority from the village including still op’s, management and customs and excise. There is now a bottling line and a more extensive visitors centre, now employing over 20 people, probably nearer 30 during busy spells. Not a lot, but for a not so well known brand compared to the Spey malts, pretty good. The comparison with green jobs, we can see 3 wind farms from the village, I don’t know of anybody in the village employed in a Green job associated with the building or running of these turbines. I have seen the odd pick up truck with trailer loaded with various engineering equipment heading into the hills but have not been able to read a company logo on the truck.

    Liked by 1 person

  113. It appears that the wind industry is trying to block the transition of oil & gas workers into the renewables game:
    https://www.energyvoice.com/renewables-energy-transition/wind/497890/skills-passport-wind-oil-energy-gwo-opito/
    Key excerpt:
    “The global offshore wind industry skills body has been accused of “putting in place roadblocks” to the creation of a jobs passport for oil workers to transfer into renewables.
    Efforts have been underway for years to develop such a document, considered vital for allowing oil and gas workers to transfer into renewables without hefty retraining fees, which pose a major barrier to the transition.
    But Global Wind Organisation (GWO) has been warned to “seriously reflect on its stance” by union bosses, lest government intervention is called for.
    The group has been accused of trying to “push its own brand” and is “resist(ing)the idea of commonality of standards”.”

    Like

  114. Oh dear – now the TUC is part of the climate-alarmed establishment:

    “UK lagging behind in global race to decarbonise, says TUC leader
    Paul Nowak says workers need a seat at the table to ensure a quick and fair transition to a net zero economy”

    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/jun/16/uk-lagging-behind-in-global-race-to-decarbonise-says-tuc-leader

    The UK is in danger of being left behind in the global race to decarbonise the economy with potentially disastrous consequences for jobs and communities, according to the TUC’s general secretary.

    In an interview, Paul Nowak said the UK was “limping towards a green future” and he called for a “national collective effort” involving employers, workers and the government to ensure a quick and fair transition to a net zero economy.

    “All of our unions are signed up to delivering net zero … from schools to hospitals to the steel industry, our members are working day in, day out to make sure this transition happens and is done in a way that is fair and just,” he said.

    Perhaps Mr Nowak should read my article above and ask himself where all the green jobs went, before condemning his members to the ranks of the unemployed. It’s one thing talking about “a just transition” to “net zero” – it’s a very different thing making it happen. And so far it isn’t happening.

    Like

  115. But Mark decarbonisation means that in theory there will be plenty of jobs in the UK. The problem is that we haven’t got nearly enough people with the skills necessary to do them. See THIS

    Like

  116. Nowak is a moron, but as usual in the case of these fanatical Green Reds, he is a dangerous moron. There is no ‘global race to decarbonise economies’: a few western countries are locked into a net zero death spiral to see who can be the first to completely destroy their economies.
    Britain is not “limping towards a green future”; it is slouching towards Net Zero Bethlehem in order to be reborn – or should I say Reset, or ‘justly transitioned’.

    Liked by 1 person

  117. Still in Spain , have been watching a ‘green job’ most mornings while having coffee . There is a small solar farm (30 cells) just next to us and the green job man comes out every morning and cleans all the cells with a giant duster on a stick. They do look quite dusty before he does his bit. Wonder if he is a swimming pool cleaner as well ?

    Liked by 1 person

  118. “Where’s the money? Questions mount over Australian company hoping to revive Britishvolt
    Missed staff payments and an Australian police investigation – Scale Facilitation’s electric vehicle battery-making ambitions face serious hurdles”

    https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2023/jul/01/wheres-the-money-questions-over-australian-company-scale-facilitation-britishvolt

    The Australian offices of Scale Facilitation, the company in charge of resurrecting the UK’s electric vehicle battery-making aspirations, were unusually quiet when the federal police used a search warrant to access its financial systems.

    On 23 June, many employees at the Geelong premises, south-west of Melbourne, had the day off. The company had fallen behind in staff payments and offered several days off as a gesture of goodwill.

    The near-vacant offices at Scale, the umbrella company for Recharge Industries, which recently took over the collapsed UK battery company Britishvolt, was not the first sign that the company was under financial stress.

    It had started to rely on one-off payments, such as a tax refund in the UK owed to Britishvolt, to catch up on payroll. Australian employees are still allegedly owed significant backpay…

    …The Scale founder and chief executive, David Collard, a New York-based Australian and former PwC partner, put together a powerful bid team in January to take over the collapsed Britishvolt and revive UK’s battery-making ambitions.

    This included plans to build a £3.8bn (A$7.3bn) “gigafactory” near Blyth in Northumberland that had been left in tatters.

    The UK government had previously pledged to support the manufacturing plans with a £100m (A$191m) investment as part of a renewal of the country’s automotive industry. Northumberland County Council has the right to take control of the site if no gigafactory is built by the end of next year. The council still hopes the factory will materialise, bringing hundreds or even thousands of jobs to an area with relatively little advanced industry, but the questions over Scale’s finances have cast a cloud over those plans…

    Like

  119. “Firm behind 200-job battery factory in Dundee ‘on brink of collapse”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-scotland-business-66226332

    The Highland company planning to build a large battery factory in Dundee has warned it is on the brink of collapse.

    AMTE Power said its financial situation was “becoming ever more critical” and it only had a few business days to find new funding.

    The company told the London Stock Exchange it continued to have active discussions with existing and potential investors.

    But it said the risk of administration was becoming “ever more likely”.

    The Thurso-based company announced last month it was urgently seeking to raise new funds after running short of cash.

    It said then that it needed “to conclude some form of fundraising within no less than the next four weeks”.

    AMTE has developed specialist batteries, including power cells for high-performance cars.

    It revealed plans last year to build a “gigafactory” at the former Michelin tyre plant in Dundee, creating more than 200 jobs within the next few years….

    Like

  120. “Britishvolt buyer yet to make final payment in deal to rescue battery firm
    Administrators say Recharge Industries is in default of sale agreement, which parent firm denies”

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/aug/08/britishvolt-buyer-yet-to-make-final-payment-in-deal-to-rescue-battery-firm

    The Australian company that rode to the rescue of the failed car battery firm Britishvolt earlier this year has failed to make the final payment in its purchase of the company, throwing the future of the deal into doubt.

    Britishvolt’s administrators, EY, said the buyer, Recharge Industries, bought the business and assets for £8.57m in a deal finalised in February but had yet to make the final payment, due on 5 April.

    “The final instalment remains unpaid and overdue. As a result, the buyer is in default of the business sale agreement,” EY said in a progress report.

    However, Scale Facilitation, the Manhattan-based parent company of Recharge, denied that it had defaulted on the deal. The company, which is run by the Australian entrepreneur David Collard, told ITV, which first reported the story: “We dispute we are in default.”

    Scale said: “The timing of the final instalment to the administrator is linked to a funding facility, which when closed will also cover the cost of the land acquisition and provide additional working capital for the project. The financier is in direct contact with the counterparties, and we anticipate closing in August following a period of significant due diligence.”

    EY said the joint administrators were using “the protections and guarantees afforded in connection with the business sale agreement to pursue the outstanding amounts due” from Scale, raising hopes the deal could still go through.

    Britishvolt had planned to build a £3.8bn gigafactory in northern England to supply the next generation of UK-built electric vehicles, backed by £100m in conditional funding from the UK government. However, it collapsed into administration in late January after running out of cash.

    Recharge’s rescue deal revived hopes that the factory, key to Britain’s ambition to become a major player in electric vehicles, could still be built.

    Like Britishvolt, Recharge is a startup with little experience of battery manufacturing….

    Like

  121. While Net Zero may not be creating many jobs, it is destroying both jobs and wealth:

    “Employment and earnings hit by North Sea decline – report”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-scotland-business-66444574

    Employment and earnings levels in the Highlands, islands and north east of Scotland have deteriorated over the last decade, according to a new report.

    Experts warned the deterioration in labour market performance was likely to have been driven, at least in part, by the decline of the oil and gas sector.

    The employment rate for the regions fell by about three percentage points between 2013-15 and 2020-22….

    …Offshore Energy UK, which represents the sector, recently said the industry faced accelerated decline due to factors such as licence constraints and higher taxes.

    And it warned without investment, UK oil and gas output would fall around 80% by 2033.

    The industry currently supports 200,000 UK jobs, including 90,000 in Scotland….

    Like

  122. “Shortage of experts and low pay ‘major barriers to UK’s net zero future’
    Lack of funding and staff limit climate sector’s impact on conservation and net zero efforts, say workers”

    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/aug/15/shortage-of-experts-and-low-pay-major-barriers-to-uks-net-zero-future

    Staff shortages, a lack of specialist personnel and low pay are major barriers to achieving net zero, according to workers in the UK environment sector.

    The trade union Prospect, many members of which work in the climate and environment sector, received more than 500 responses to a survey on workplace trends.

    Widespread shortages of expert staff and reductions in specialist personnel in recent years had seriously affected workload levels, the study found. Four in 10 workers said they had seen a reduction in the numbers of expert staff in the past year, and 35% said they had experienced a significant increase in workload…

    …Sue Ferns, the senior deputy general secretary of Prospect, said the survey was “invaluable to understanding what is happening at the frontline of the fight to tackle the climate crisis. They are telling us that the paring back of expert roles in their teams is leaving them increasingly burnt out.

    “Despite the government talking up the potential of green jobs, it is failing to put in place the funding needed to make working in the natural environment the aspirational career that it should be.”

    Even by the Guardian’s ever-diminishing standards, this strikes me as a poor effort. I am left with no understanding of the work these people do, who employs them, nor the scale of the supposed problem. It’s a small survey that seems to have generated limited responses. All it does is confirm that the promised new world of glorious green jobs doesn’t exist.

    Like

  123. “Biden’s climate bill leaves workers behind in shift to electric cars, union says
    Legislation gives incentives to companies to manufacture EVs without protections for workers, says head of autoworkers union”

    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/aug/15/biden-climate-bill-car-workers-union

    Joe Biden’s landmark climate legislation has been “disappointing” and failed to deliver protections to car industry workers confronted by the transition to electric vehicles, according to the head of the US’s leading autoworkers union, which has pointedly withheld is endorsement of the president for next year’s election.

    The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), signed by Biden a year ago this week, has bestowed huge incentives to car companies to manufacture electric vehicles without any accompanying guarantees over worker pay and conditions, Shawn Fain, president of the United Auto Workers (UAW), told the Guardian.

    “So far it’s been disappointing. If the IRA continues to bring sweatshops and a continued race to the bottom it will be a tragedy,” Fain said.

    “This is our generation’s defining moment with electric vehicles. The government should invest in US manufacturing but money can’t go to companies with no strings attached. Labor needs a seat at the table. There should be labor standards built in, this is the future of the car industry at stake.”

    Like

  124. A letter in the Scottish Daily Herald:

    Missing out on renewables jobs

    YOUR recent article “Renewables industry warns that new ‘super pylons’ are crucial” (The Herald, August 24) contains the statement from Scottish Renewables that “we must build more power lines, pylons and substations”. By use of the word “we” it is reasonable to presume that it is Scottish-based manufacturers that the trade body expects to provide the required grid infrastructure.

    Given that expectation, can Scottish Renewables inform us of the contribution of Scottish industry to the existing renewables manufacturing industry? Can it tell us, for example, how many of Scotland’s many thousands of onshore wind turbines have been manufactured in Scotland to date? And how many of the hundreds of offshore wind turbines operating or planned to operate in Scotland’s seas have been or will be built in Scotland?

    Then there are the sophisticated ships used to install the offshore turbines. How many of these have been constructed in Scottish shipyards? And the highly specialist vessels that lay the undersea cables? And the many thousands of kilometres of these cables needed to bring electricity ashore?

    As I suspect that the answer to all of these questions is either “hardly any” or “none'” can Scottish Renewables tell us what hope it has that any of the much-needed grid infrastructure will be manufactured in Scotland?

    The repeated assertion of the Scottish Government that Scotland is the UK’s renewable energy powerhouse may be relevant to the wind, rain, sun, land and sea our country provides, but its failure to develop and sustain the essential infrastructure manufacturing base might suggest that in reality our powerhouse is more akin to a dud battery.

    John Riddell, Fairlie.

    Like

  125. Mark – good on John Riddell for asking the obvious questions, wonder if he will get any response!!!
    how do you find these gem letters/comments?

    Like

  126. “Tata Steel reportedly close to securing £500m funding from UK government
    Package would required firm to commit to building electric arc furnaces to reduce carbon emissions”

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/sep/02/tata-steel-reportedly-close-to-securing-500m-aid-deal-from-uk-government

    The government is in advanced talks with the country’s largest steel producer, Tata Steel, over a £500m package to secure its long-term future in the UK, according to reports.

    Funding would be pumped into the Port Talbot steelworks in south Wales alongside £700m from the firm’s Indian parent company, Tata Group, Sky News said.

    Under the deal, Tata Steel would also be required to commit to building electric arc furnaces to reduce carbon emissions. The production process, which is less labour-intensive than current blast furnaces, could result in the loss of thousands of jobs.

    Whitehall officials have been in talks with Tata and British Steel for months about state support to help fund the transition to the more environmentally friendly production method….

    Brilliant! Spend £500M to destroy jobs.

    Like

  127. “UK solar could be ‘dumping ground’ for products of Chinese forced labour, ministers warned
    Energy bill amendment requires large solar energy projects to prove supply chain free of slave labour”

    https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2023/sep/03/uk-solar-could-be-dumping-ground-for-products-of-chinese-forced-labour-ministers-warned

    The UK risks becoming a dumping ground for the products of forced labour from Xinjiang province in China if it rejects reforms proposed by members of the foreign affairs select committee with cross-party support, ministers have been warned.

    An amendment to the energy bill, due to be debated on Tuesday, would require solar energy companies to prove that their supply chains are free of slave labour. The Xinjiang region is the source of 35%-40% of the world’s solar-grade polysilicon, the key raw material in the solar photovoltaic supply chain….

    …The Coalition to End Forced Labour accepts that there has been some movement by solar companies to exit the Uyghur region in recent years, but says many firms are still operating there, especially with a view to supplying the UK market – where regulations are looser than in the US and EU.

    The amendment requires companies to submit a report to the Planning Inspectorate “to demonstrate clear and convincing evidence that the good, or the materials in the good, were not mined, produced or manufactured wholly or in part by forced labour”.

    Critics will argue that the amendment sets such a high bar in requiring the proof of no forced labour that it would in effect amount to a ban on British trade with Xinjiang province. They claim parallel legislation passed in the US has led to delays in the installation of solar equipment.

    The US Bureau of Labor estimates that “100,000 Uyghurs and other ethnic minority ex-detainees in China may be working in conditions of forced labour following detention in re-education camps. Many more rural poor workers also may experience coercion without detention.”

    In 2021 the US bureau added polysilicon to the list of items “produced by forced labour by Muslim minorities in China”. It argues that Uyghurs are now forced to work not just in Xinjiang but elsewhere in China….

    Like

  128. “China’s share of Europe’s electric car market accelerates as UK leads sales
    Chinese-owned MG’s MG4 is Britain’s bestselling EV after Tesla’s Model Y in first seven months of year”

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/sep/04/china-europe-electric-car-market-uk-sales-mg-tesla

    China’s share of the European electric car market has more than doubled in less than two years as the world’s second largest economy tries to take the lead in the transition away from petrol and diesel cars.

    The UK is the largest market in Europe for Chinese electric car brands, accounting for almost a third of sales in 2023 so far, according to data from Schmidt Automotive Research on the 18 largest European car markets. About 5% of all new car sales in the UK were from Chinese brands in the first seven months of 2023, a market share second only to Sweden….

    …The share of Chinese cars in the total European car market has risen from 0.1% in 2019 to 2.8% in the first seven months of 2023, Schmidt said. But it is clear that Chinese companies are targeting electric vehicles in particular: the share of the market for pure battery electric cars rose from 0.5% in 2019 to 3.9% in 2021. So far this year, Chinese manufacturers have won 8.2% of the European electric car market, selling 86,000 battery electric cars.

    The rapid rise of Chinese carmakers has set off alarm bells in Europe, where millions of people work in car manufacturing. China also has a significant advantage because it has the lead in production of batteries, leaving European industry reliant on a geopolitical rival until it builds its own “gigafactories”.

    The BMW chief executive, Oliver Zipse, on Sunday said Chinese carmakers posed an “imminent risk” to the European industry, particularly for the makers of cheaper models.

    “The base car market segment will either vanish or will not be done by European manufacturers,” he told the Financial Times, as carmakers gathered in Munich, Germany, for an automotive conference that is also being attended by several Chinese brands….

    Like

  129. “Offshore wind delivers one tenth of jobs promised by ministers”

    https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/homenews/23489568.offshore-wind-delivers-one-tenth-jobs-promised-ministers/

    SCOTLAND has produced only around a tenth of the offshore wind jobs forecast by ministers as it aimed to make the country the green energy capital of Europe.

    The latest official estimates show that 3100 full time jobs in offshore wind in 2021.

    Ten years ago the Scottish Government were championing the desire to be the green energy capital of Europe with around 28,000 jobs in offshore wind alone.

    It comes as GMB Scotland has written to energy secretary Neil Gray asking for an urgent summit to ensure that the nation does not continue to get the green jobs revolution wrong.

    They want to ensure more turbines and other infrastructure for wind farms off the coast of Scotland are built here to create more jobs.

    It coincided with Mr Gray travelling to Japan for a trade visit to encourage further investment in renewables.

    The GMB says Mr Gray “does not need to fly around the world” to create renewables jobs in Scotland….

    Like

  130. “‘Half a billion pounds to make 3,000 unemployed’: Job cut fears from Port Talbot state aid deal – business live”

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/live/2023/sep/15/job-cut-fears-from-port-talbot-state-aid-deal-business-live

    Introduction: Job loss fears at Port Talbot
    Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.

    The spectre of possible job losses is stalking Britain’s biggest steelworkers today, as the UK government and Tata Steel close in on an agreement to secure the future of the site.

    The Port Talbot steelworks in south Wales is home to two of Britain’s four remaining blast furnaces, employing around 4,000 workers.

    After months of talks, the government and the Indian-owned company are thought to be close to announcing an aid package to help Port Talbot transition to produce “greener” steel, possibly as soon as today.

    That could include a £500m aid package from the UK, with Tata providing around £700m, to switch the plant’s two coal-fired blast furnaces to electric arc versions. They would be less polluting and run on zero-carbon electricity.

    But the shift could still lead to hefty job losses, with unions angry that they have been locked out of the talks.

    Like

  131. Mark, if TATA switches to electric arc furnaces, it will be the final death knell of the British steel industry. The process uses absolutely huge amounts of electricity – which the Guardian describes as ‘carbon free’. We know that’s a lie for a start. Electricity in the UK is very expensive, due in no small measure to the proliferation of ‘sustainable’ wind and solar. It’s not going to be cheap any time soon, despite the promises of Green zealots. TATA steel is already a loss-making enterprise. They will not be able to profitably produce ‘zero carbon’ Green steel without incurring huge additional costs which will not be offset by the inevitable reduction in the workforce. They will have to greatly increase the price of their product or suck up more taxpayer funded subsidies. Then who is going to pay for this ‘climate friendly’ steel when much cheaper Asian imports are on the market? More Net Zero madness leading to the decimation of British jobs and industry.

    Liked by 2 people

  132. Is it what they call a “just transition”?

    “Tata Steel: Thousands of job losses must be managed – Drakeford”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-66807327

    First Minister Mark Drakeford said it will be a “very anxious morning” for thousands of people waiting to hear if their jobs are safe.

    Tata Steel in Port Talbot is seeking UK government funding to switch their coal furnaces to zero-carbon electric ones.

    While the deal would secure £1bn for the site, it could mean up to 3,000 UK job losses.

    Mr Drakeford said there should be “a transition plan” to make job losses “manageable”.

    He told BBC Breakfast: “This will be a very anxious morning for many, many families in Port Talbot waiting to see the detail of whatever has been agreed between the UK government and the company.

    “On the one hand, it does seem that there is to be investment at the plant that will secure the long-term future of jobs in that town,” he said. “But if the price is thousands of jobs to be lost, then that is a very high price.”…

    A Labour First Minister said that. He doesn’t condemn it. The world is going mad.

    Like

  133. “How China schooled the West on climate change
    Brussels is launching a trade probe into Beijing’s EV subsidies. But China still leads the race to go green.”

    https://www.politico.eu/article/china-west-climate-change-electric-car-battery/

    A very dubious and inaccurate headline, IMO. China is capitalising on the west’s stupidity, but its reliance on coal and other fossil fuels hardly justifies the headline (assuming one equates landscape-trashing renewables with “going green”). Still, the article does contain quite a few home truths:

    …Europe and the U.S. — which has also begun erecting trade barriers and a clean tech subsidy regime to box out China — are tasting the bitter fruit of decades wasted when they could have been building the industries of the future.

    Without a developed battery supply chain of its own to replace gas-guzzling combustion engines, the EU’s climate policy will play to China’s competitive advantage. Under the policy, the sale of new polluting cars will be banned from 2035.

    Chinese companies hold a 60 percent share of the global market for battery cell production, including massive plants on the Continent to serve European carmakers, an embarrassment for Brussels.

    “Von der Leyen is realizing only now that the entire CO2 [cutting] regime is a big China support program,” said one former automotive executive, who was granted anonymity in order to speak candidly.

    Von der Leyen said Wednesday that Europe must avoid a repeat of the loss of its solar industry to China. But Chinese dominance in electric vehicles has been more than a decade in the making.

    In addition to boosting development of electric vehicle tech well before Europe went there, China has also practically cornered the supply chains of many of the minerals used in batteries for these cars. …

    It’s odd than an article that recognises the damage caused to European industrial competitiveness by climate change policies urges Europe to go faster.

    Like

  134. “Germany mulls new energy price subsidy for industries
    German leaders want to prevent an industrial exodus. But the idea is likely to spark controversy within the EU.”

    https://www.politico.eu/article/germany-energy-price-subsidy-industry-competition/

    The German government appears to be moving closer to adopting a new multibillion-euro subsidy scheme to compensate industries for high energy costs, although specifics on how such a plan would work and be financed remain murky.

    Berlin is “working intensively” on a potential solution to conceive such an energy subsidy, Steffen Hebestreit, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s spokesman, told reporters on Friday. On Monday, a government spokesperson said that “different proposals” are “being examined and carefully weighed” as part of ongoing discussions between the chancellery and the economy and finance ministries.

    Previously, the chancellery had ruled out such a subsidy scheme, partly because such a measure could well clash with EU rules that limit state aid for industry. But give Germany’s recent economic stagnation, the government has come under increasing pressure to fortify the county’s industrial backbone.

    Economy Minister Robert Habeck has for months pushed for such an energy subsidy scheme, arguing that German industry faces five tough years before the transition to renewable energies bears fruit. The top Green politician has warned that, without state support, “we will no longer have industry,” as companies would shift operations to countries like France or the U.S., where energy prices are much lower….

    …One German proposal is to cut taxes for energy-intensive industries, while another possibility would be to use an existing price subsidy introduced a decade ago. That subsidy covers some of the costs industries face under the EU’s emission-trading system, but it could potentially be expanded.

    The German plans are controversial as Berlin already introduced a massive €200 billion package last year to bring down energy prices for consumers and companies — although the extent to which big, energy-intensive industries can use that money is limited. Only about one-fourth of that money has been paid out.

    Nevertheless, Germany accounted for a massive 53 percent of the EU’s overall €672 billion outlay on state subsidies last year. A new energy subsidy would likely spark criticism that Germany is undermining fair competition in the EU’s single market.

    Like

  135. “Tata Steel to begin Port Talbot job cuts within months, say unions
    Timeframe of large-scale redundancies discussed at meeting with bosses days after firm secured £500m state support package”

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/sep/20/tata-steel-to-begin-port-talbot-job-cuts-within-months-say-unions

    Workers at the vast Port Talbot steelworks in south Wales will be made redundant within months as part of a plan to secure its future while cutting thousands of jobs, unions have warned.

    At a meeting between bosses at Indian conglomerate Tata, which owns Britain’s biggest steelworks, and union representatives in London, plans to make large-scale redundancies in “months rather than years” were discussed, sources said.

    Last week, the UK government agreed to a £500m support package for Tata Steel, with the company also expected to inject about £725m to help the transition to greener production methods.

    About 3,000 jobs are expected to be lost across Tata’s 8,000-strong UK workforce as a result of the deal, which involves shifting from coal-powered blastfurnaces to less labour-intensive electric arc furnaces. Unions are attempting to avoid compulsory redundancies.

    On Wednesday, a trio of Tata executives –Koushik Chatterjee, the chief financial officer; Rajesh Nair, the chief executive of UK operations, and Raghav Sud, the chief of financial strategy and governance – met representatives from the Unite, GMB and Community unions at the five-star St James’s Court hotel, which is owned by the conglomerate.

    Sources said Tata had agreed to allow the unions to analyse its plans for the steelworks, and that the coke ovens at Port Talbot could close as soon as January….

    Like

  136. Where did all the green jobs go? To foreign nationals, apparently:

    “UK visa rules ‘pose significant risk to offshore wind industry'”

    https://www.thenational.scot/news/23846334.uk-visa-rules-pose-significant-risk-offshore-wind-industry/

    OFFSHORE renewables projects in the UK are facing barriers due to the strict new immigration rules from the Home Office, a lawyer at a top international legal firm has warned.

    The Tory government’s “extremely complex” visa rules risk putting further strain on the offshore wind sector, increasing project budgets and even delaying deadlines, according to Maria Gravelle, an immigration specialist at Pinsent Masons.

    Gravelle said that the end to the Offshore Wind Worker Concession (OWWC) – which was brought in by the UK Government in 2017 but ended earlier in 2023 – was set to cause problems for the sector.

    “Without an appropriate fix, the UK will become increasingly undesirable for skilled offshore workers and their employers,” she said.

    The time-limited OWWC previously allowed “the employment of foreign nationals who are joining vessels engaged in the construction and maintenance of offshore wind projects in UK territorial waters”.

    The concession ended in April, and Gravelle has wanted that major disruption for the industry could follow, given that the majority of offshore crews are made up of non-British and Irish nationals.

    Gravelle said: “The knock-on effects are significant and were predictable. Visas themselves can be extremely costly and the extra red tape and administrative burden on employers is impacting on project budgets, skewing tenders for new developments and in some cases could even delay work scopes.

    “Offshore workers coming into UK waters have an extensive range of certifiable skills and there is a shortage of the required certifications in the UK job market. These workers pose a low risk to UK immigration control as, for tax purposes, they do not want to be based in the UK long-term.”…

    Like

  137. The huge Dogger Bank wind farm has just had the first of its 277 turbines connected to the grid. Out of curiosity i took a look at the website and found the following list of “Tier 1” suppliers:

    GE Renewable Energy – Design, supply, installation and commissioning of wind turbines including load out at Able Seaton (Dogger Bank A, B & C).
    Jan De Nul – Transportation of wind turbines from Able Seaton and installation of turbines (Dogger Bank A, B & C).
    Sif and Smulders – Fabrication and supply of monopile foundations and transition pieces (Dogger Bank A, B & C).
    Seaway7 – Installation of monopile foundations (Dogger Bank A, B & C).
    Saipem – Transport and installation of the offshore platforms and jacket foundations for Dogger Bank A & B.
    Heerema – Transport and installation of the offshore platform and the jacket foundation for Dogger Bank C.
    DEME (Belgium) – Design, supply and installation of inter-array cables (Dogger Bank A, B & C).
    NKT (Sweden)– Supply and installation of HVDC and HVAC export cables (Dogger Bank A, B & C).
    Aibel (Norway)– Design and supply of offshore platforms and jacket foundations (Dogger Bank A, B & C).
    Hitachi Energy – Design and supply of electrical HVDC system equipment within the offshore platforms and the equipment to be installed at onshore convertor stations and commissioning of electrical transmission systems (Dogger Bank A, B & C).
    North Star Renewables – Design and delivery of service vessel fleet.

    Looks like almost all of the quality jobs went overseas.

    Liked by 1 person

  138. “Scottish Water admits solar farms could use parts linked to China’s forced labour camps
    Company has installed tens of thousands of solar panels – at 66 sites – which it now suspects are linked to slave labour”

    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/oct/18/scottish-water-admits-solar-farms-could-use-parts-linked-to-chinas-forced-labour-camps

    Scottish Water has admitted that its solar farms could use components linked to forced labour camps in China, “in clear conflict” with its anti-slavery policies.

    Scottish Water, a state-owned monopoly, has installed tens of thousands of solar panels it suspects are linked to Chinese slave labour at 66 sites around the country, bought for tens of millions of pounds.

    They include a “super solar” scheme at its large water treatment works that supplies 565,000 people in the Glasgow area with drinking water. It said the 8,448 panels at Balmore in East Dunbartonshire, which treats water taken from Loch Katrine and Loch Lomond, cost £5m.

    The company, which supplies nearly all Scotland’s drinking water, said it will ban Chinese-made solar panels from its future projects, and strengthen its modern slavery rules, but it admitted that additional projects using them which are already under way will go ahead.

    China has become the world’s largest supplier of photovoltaic solar panels, with about 40% of the global market, and its production has helped to dramatically drive down their cost….

    Of course China is able to make solar panels cheaply because, as well as using Uighur slave labour, it also uses cheap electricity generated by coal-powered energy stations.

    Like

  139. It’s strange; I can’t find this story anywhere on the BBC website…:

    “Shell cuts 200 jobs, contracting the hydrogen division
    The hydrogen wing of the oil and gas giant is to shrink as the company moves away from work on powering hydrogen cars.”

    https://news.sky.com/story/shell-cuts-200-jobs-contracting-the-hydrogen-division-12992387

    Oil and gas giant Shell has continued its retreat from renewables as it is set to cut 200 low-carbon jobs and review another 130.

    Next year 200 roles are to be slashed in the low carbon solution and hydrogen divisions, while a further 130 positions are under review in an effort to reduce headcount and to grow profits, Shell said.

    Cuts to the low carbon solution division equate to 15% of the roughly 1,300 staff in the department….

    Like

  140. Mark – love some quotes from that article.

    “Carbon capture storage and nature-based solutions also form the department but will be unaffected, and renewable power will also not be hit.”

    “Also shelved were any renewable-electricity capacity targets. Instead, it aims to invest more than six times as much on fossil fuels as it will on clean power.”

    Like

  141. “British Steel set to cut up to 2,000 jobs in furnace closure plan”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-67332093

    British Steel has confirmed it plans to close down its blast furnaces in Scunthorpe, putting up to 2,000 jobs at risk.

    They will be replaced with two electric arc furnaces – one at Scunthorpe and one at Teesside.

    The company said its £1.25bn proposal would make British Steel “a clean, green and sustainable business”.

    But it said the plans were still “subject to appropriate support” from the UK government.

    The business, which is owned by China’s Jingye Group, said the new furnaces could be in operation by late 2025.

    Chief executive Xijun Cao said the firm was not able to keep the blast furnaces and meet environmental commitments….

    …The Department for Business and Trade said the proposals were part of a plan to put the UK steel industry on a greener, more sustainable footing for the future.

    A spokesperson said the government had offered “a generous support package including more than £300m of investment”.

    Earlier this year, British Steel’s larger rival, Tata, announced it would close its two blast furnaces in Port Talbot and replace them with electric arc furnaces, with an expected loss of up to 3,000 jobs. It will receive £500m of government support.

    British Steel said it remained in talks with the government over what backing it could expect for its strategy.

    “We need the UK to adopt the correct policies and frameworks now to back our decarbonisation drive,” said Mr Cao….

    …The government concedes the plan to close the blast furnaces at Scunthorpe and Port Talbot will leave the UK without the ability to make “virgin steel”….

    …Blast furnaces use coke in the process of creating “virgin” steel, but the process generates carbon dioxide.

    Electric arc furnaces are mostly used to melt down and repurpose scrap steel. The end product is not the same grade of steel that is produced in blast furnaces, and is not suitable for all industrial uses in, for example, motor manufacturing and construction….

    ..Roy Rickhuss, general secretary of Community, the specialist trade union representing UK steelworkers, said he was “deeply concerned” by the plans, which he described as “dangerous and foolhardy”.

    “The plans that British Steel has announced, combined with Tata Steel’s plans, would leave the UK unable to make steel from raw materials and dangerously exposed to international markets,” he said….

    We are being played for fools.

    Like

  142. Crocodile tears from the Guardian, given that this is what it has campaigned – and continues to campaign – for. However, it’s interesting to see it laying out the very many down-sides (albeit without apparently being very bothered by them):

    “Iron resolve: steel town unites to fight for its furnaces
    As Scunthorpe faces 2,000 job losses in a move to greener tech, MPs and unions fear for workers and a strategic UK industry”

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/nov/12/iron-resolve-steel-town-unites-to-fight-for-its-furnaces

    …the latest blow to the town: British Steel’s plans to axe more than 2,000 jobs in Scunthorpe, out of a workforce of about 3,800, in a shift to greener technology.

    The steel industry must decarbonise if the UK is to hit its target of net zero additions of carbon to the atmosphere by 2050. Scunthorpe’s sister plant, the Port Talbot steelworks in south Wales, is the UK’s biggest single emitter, producing 5.7m tonnes of carbon last year, while the north Lincolnshire site is the third biggest, producing 4m tonnes, or about 1% of the UK’s annual total, according to government data.

    The outlines of the UK industry’s future have become clearer over the past month. Last week, Chinese-owned British Steel announced it planned to close Scunthorpe’s blast furnaces in favour of electric arc furnaces, which it hopes to build by late 2025 (although unions suggest that could be too ambitious, given that the company is yet to start ordering the components)….

    …Tata Steel, Port Talbot’s Indian owner, is considering a similar plan to close its two furnaces as soon as March, with 3,000 job losses. Union leaders fear as many as 2,500 redundancies at Scunthorpe, although there are a few years left before British Steel plans to let its two operating blast furnaces cool….

    …The switch to lower-maintenance electric arc furnaces will cost jobs, the latest chapter in decades of decline for the UK steel industry. It could prove to be a historic turning point for the British economy, potentially taking away the ability to mass-produce steel from iron ore and coal for the first time since the Industrial Revolution….

    …The switch to electric arc furnaces will need investment on another level: British Steel said on Monday it would cost £1.25bn in Scunthorpe and Teesside. The company is thought to be negotiating for £500m in government support to match that promised to Tata….

    …Unlike blast furnaces, electric arc furnaces are not capable of making iron from iron ore. Chris McDonald, chief executive of the Materials Processing Institute, which runs its own experimental electric arc furnace, said the British Steel and Tata Steel announcements were “necessary but not sufficient”.

    “Whatever technology we end up with, the electric arc furnace will be at the heart of it,” he said. “What’s missing is any iron ore steelmaking.”…

    …There could be other gaps in the plans. At Port Talbot, electric arc furnaces will be unable to make steel for cars such as Nissan’s Leaf, built in Sunderland with Welsh steel, because nitrogen from the air gets in, creating blemishes. Arc furnaces were capable of making all the products currently made at Scunthorpe, including the rails on which the UK’s trains run, British Steel said.

    Both companies need to be able to source scrap metal at the correct grade. Some steel executives argue electric arc furnaces make sense because the UK exports 10m tonnes of scrap steel a year, more than the 7m tonnes it makes. McDonald said this argument ignored the quality of the steel; he suggests only 1m tonnes would be the highest-quality, most-sought-after grades.

    In a tired office block that still has traces of the works’ past under public ownership, Paul McBean of the Community union agreed, saying only about 13% of the UK’s scrap would be of the right grade. “The whole of Europe is going to be chasing that 13%,” he said, arguing that the previous approach of keeping a blast furnace open would avoid possible reliance on imports of higher-quality scrap….

    …Despite political differences, Dakin, Mumby-Croft and the unions all agree they do not want the UK to lose the ability to produce its own liquid steel from iron ore. The global chaos in supply chains from the pandemic and the Ukraine war have made some governments think more about resilience of key materials and parts, and Russia is the dominant global supplier of iron.

    Charlotte Brumpton-Childs, national officer for steel at the GMB union and a descendant of several generations of Scunthorpe steelworkers, said: “If we go to war with Russia, they’re not going to send us their pig iron, are they?”

    The government “fundamentally don’t understand the industry and the need for the ability to make primary steel”, she added.

    That idea makes some in defence circles nervous: a Royal United Services Institute report this year worried that becoming “the biggest economy by far worldwide to have no significant domestic steelmaking capacity” could harm security and economic resilience….

    Like

  143. The depressingly bad and very stupid developments about UK steelmaking just keep coming:

    “Large parts of Port Talbot steelworks could be shut under Tata Steel cuts plan
    Unions say move could force Tata’s automative steel factory at Llanwern to close, costing 600 jobs”

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/nov/16/port-talbot-steelworks-tata-steel-cuts-llanwern

    Large parts of the Port Talbot steelworks will be closed or mothballed for years, and would leave the plant and its few remaining workers reliant on imported steel, according to proposals under consideration by the owner, Tata Steel….

    …The Port Talbot closures could have a knock-on effect, unions fear, forcing Tata’s automotive steel factory at Llanwern, near Newport, to shut, with the loss of another 600 jobs, and would leave a factory making food tins at Trostre, near Llanelli, reliant on imports.

    Stephen Kinnock, the Labour MP whose Aberavon constituency contains the steelworks, said the proposals would be “nothing short of an act of industrial vandalism”, adding that the route to decarbonisation must be a “bridge” and not a “cliff edge”….

    Funny how events close to home can focus the mind. I’ll bet he’s still in favour of net zero as a concept, though.

    …Community, GMB and Unite, the three main unions representing steelworkers, are on Friday expected to present an alternative plan drawn up by the consultancy Syndex to try to avert the closures, which would probably result in 3,000 job losses, with many posts gone as soon as March 2024.

    The steel industry needs to cut its net carbon emissions to zero if the UK is to meet its pollution reduction targets. However, the plans under consideration by Tata would represent a near-immediate halt to most of the work that goes on at Port Talbot while Tata builds zero-emission-capable electric arc furnaces that will replace its two blast furnaces, with £500m in UK government support.

    A rival plant at Scunthorpe, run by Chinese-owned British Steel, last week said it was considering similar plans to replace its two blast furnaces with electric arc technology. Those would eventually cost as many as 2,500 jobs, although British Steel is not contemplating an immediate stop to production.

    At Port Talbot the proposals could leave as few as 400 people out of about 3,500 working on steelmaking within months, one person with knowledge of the plant estimated. It is unclear what would happen to workers on mothballed areas – or whether they could wait for work to restart in several years’ time.

    The change would significantly reduce Britain’s ability to make steel from scratch. Port Talbot is now capable of producing 5m tonnes a year from iron ore, in a process that transforms the raw material into steel slabs. Electric arc furnaces cannot on their own produce virgin steel, instead mostly relying on recycling scrap steel…..

    So now, no doubt, the emissions associated with steel-making will (like so many other GHG emissions) be exported to China, from whom we’ll probably end up buying steel when we need it. Meanwhile, our unemployment rate in depressed areas goes up again. Brilliant strategy, politicians.

    Like

  144. It’s staring us in the face: China is colonising Western nations and our treacherous politicians are actively engaged in enabling this process of building dependence on China, India and other countries by expanding their economies at the expense of decimating our own.

    Liked by 1 person

  145. A fundamental stumbling block on the road to electrify everything is that we do not have any zero-carbon electricity to spare. All such power is always fully-allocated as it has priority onto the grid, second only to nuclear.
    So any measures which add to electricity demand will simply increase the gas burn and, possibly, imports over the interconnectors.
    This situation is not going to improve any time soon as all but one of our nukes will be shut down over the next 5 years. Further, the hiatus in offshore wind, combined with the transmission capacity issues means there is little prospect of getting anywhere near the projected expansion, leaving aside the intermittency issues.
    This is preaching to the choir here but how can we get this brought to the prominence it deserves?

    Liked by 1 person

  146. If anyone has access to the FT, this article could be interesting:
    “‘We need tangible benefit’: Does investment in UK renewables create jobs?
    Locals in north-east Scotland say the billions poured into wind power have bypassed the community.”

    Like

  147. By the excellent Douglas Fraser, a BBC journalist for whom I have considerable respect:

    “Cracking crude: blame game over Grangemouth’s symbolic loss”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-scotland-business-67500411

    Plans to close down Grangemouth refinery go much further than the threat of job losses – it has been a pivotal part of the Scottish economy since before North Sea oil.

    Dependence on imported refined oil for transport, heating and industry raises questions about strategy and energy security, when that is being contested politically.

    Sir Jim Ratcliffe, the man whose company has controlled the complex for 18 years, is scathing about political management of North Sea assets. So are his environmental critics.

    The loss of 400 jobs is a severe blow if you have one of them. The long-told story of industrial decline in Scotland has us conditioned to seeing major plant closures as human stories about the scrapheap and stricken family budgets….

    …There are parallels with the collapsing steel plant at Ravenscraig 31 years ago.

    It also raises questions about Britain’s energy strategy and about security of supply. That has become part of the dispute and debate in politics over the pace at which the UK’s oil and gas industry should be allowed or required to wind down.

    Maintaining a flow of oil and gas from UK fields is seen as protection against unfriendly powers who wield so much of the clout in global energy trading. But there’s not much you can do with crude oil if you don’t have the capacity to refine it.

    And if Grangemouth closes, there will be only five refineries left in Britain: two in the North East, one near Southampton, one in West Wales and one on Merseyside. For heavy oil from Scottish waters, refineries in the European Union are more suitable. Without Grangemouth’s cracking tower, Scotland and much of the north of England would rely on refined product being shipped in…

    …Sir Jim Ratcliffe believes the decline in feedstock for his Scottish refinery and chemicals plant has been caused by “a combination of punitive windfall taxes and negative signals from politicians on the future of the North Sea”.

    The Ineos boss commented: “The UK’s total lack of an energy policy is completely irresponsible.

    “The rest of the world is encouraging local oil and gas production, incentivising production through sensible taxation.”

    He went on: “The UK is doing the opposite. It seems intent on rapidly destroying North Sea production through punitive windfall taxes, disincentives and negative comments, making us totally reliant on overseas supplies and losing billions in potential revenue.”

    Ineos, don’t forget, is also a major producer of oil and gas in the North Sea, and is paying a whack of that 75% marginal rate of tax on profits from its UK output….

    …Friends of the Earth responded to the closure with no regret, except that the people affected have not had adequate preparation for the “just transition” from fossil fuels to green energy….

    …The SNP, while lacking power over the industry from its Holyrood administration, is in an awkward place in favour of just transition, on condition of more mitigation of the impact of drilling, and preferably not just yet. It is receiving withering “asleep at the wheel” criticism for its approach to the sector from its former leader, Alex Salmond.

    The former oil economist says: “Instead of refining our own hydrocarbon product range with all the environmental benefits of proximity, Scotland will soon import them from around the planet, with a far greater carbon impact. In addition, the plans for a carbon capture and hydrogen hub at Grangemouth must now be at serious risk.”

    It seems unlikely the Grangemouth refinery will be the last oil and gas asset to close amid job losses and recrimination. But there can be few as prominent and pivotal to the Scottish economy, and as symbolic of the transition now under way.

    Like

  148. Aspects of the Guardian report on the Grangemouth story are almost surreal:

    “Grangemouth oil refinery to shut down, raising concern for 500 jobs
    Plans by Petroineos to convert facility to an import terminal spark questions for Scottish economy and UK refining capacity”

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/nov/22/grangemouth-oil-refinery-to-shut-down-raising-concern-for-500-jobs

    …Amid warnings that the plan “blows a hole” in Scotland’s industrial base, trade unions and politicians raised concerns about the job security of the more than 500 people directly employed at the site near Falkirk and the impact of closing one of the UK’s six remaining large oil refineries on fuel supplies….

    …The company said it hoped to transform Grangemouth, which already imports liquefied natural gas (LNG) from the US, into a pure fuel import and export terminal within 18 months. It will also explore “low-carbon” options including refining biofuels at the 99-year-old refinery.

    Labour’s energy and net zero secretary, Ed Miliband, said the plan was “deeply worrying” for Grangemouth staff and their families.

    “The UK and Scotland desperately need governments with industrial policies that protect our workers,” he said. “Labour is calling on both governments to get round the table urgently with business, workers, and unions to understand how jobs can be safeguarded for the future.”…

    …Several members of the Scottish parliament called for an urgent ministerial statement from Westminster about the refinery, which supplies the majority of aviation fuel to Scotland’s airports, as well as a significant proportion of petrol and diesel in the nation’s central belt….

    …Stephen Kerr, MSP for Central Scotland, said the Grangemouth site accounted for 4% of Scottish gross domestic product and that thousands of jobs relied on the plant. He called for an urgent ministerial statement to address the “very bad news”….

    …The Department for Energy Security and Net Zero said: “We understand that these reports will be concerning for the refinery’s workers, and are seeking assurances from Grangemouth on how they are supporting employees and the long-term future of the site.

    “We remain confident in our fuel supply and the government will continue to back the North Sea oil and gas sector and green industries, such as offshore wind and carbon capture and storage, to protect our energy security, attract investment and create opportunities for communities in Scotland and across the UK.”…

    I’m not sure my opinion of politicians can fall any lower.

    Like

  149. As always, the news reports are superficial.
    If memory serves, Grangmouth is the terminus for oil and gas pipelines from the North Sea. What will happen to that production? Can it be shipped elsewhere or will this lead to the premature closure of production facilities, further weakening energy security?
    Then there’s the products that will no longer be made there. Presumably they will have to be imported. While fuels are the obvious concern, the refinery also produces a range of materials which are part of other companies’ supply chains (from memory again).
    No doubt we will learn more in due course from specialist websites and journals but some competent, diligent journalism upfront would have covered these issues.

    Liked by 1 person

  150. Mark – this partial comment from Fraser made me think he’s not got a clue what’s being lost – “But at the risk of sounding unsympathetic, the people who run the refinery at Grangemouth are skilled, and those skills are transferable.
    There is keen competition for similar industrial skills in other parts of the energy sector, and a lot more demand for skills can be expected. A “green freeport” is being created around the Firth of Forth.”

    ps – Mikehig comment above nails it.

    Like

  151. Yes, Douglas Fraser isn’t perfect, and he probably has to toe the party (BBC) line. Still, he’s one of the best they’ve got, IMO.

    Like

  152. “Tata Steel to close furnaces, with 3,000 jobs expected to go this year
    Play video 3,000 Jobs At Risk From Tata Steel Closure Plans”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/uk-wales-68023528

    Some of the political argument has centred around not the what, but the how.

    How should the steel industry move away from its coal-burning carbon-emitting present to a greener future?

    The UK Government agreed to give Tata £500m to help build a new electric-arc furnace in Port Talbot – so although 3,000 jobs will, go 5,000 will be saved.

    Labour has complained the money came too late, was less than other European governments had given, that the transition to electric will happen too quickly and the plans aren’t ambitious enough.

    But if unions go on strike what does Labour do?

    Do they back it, knowing their own plans for steel if they come to power at Westminster would also involve de-carbonising and accompanying job losses?

    How would Tata react to a strike at a plant losing more than a million pounds a day?

    The Welsh Secretary said that after meeting Tata he’s worried that a high-profile campaign might lead to them walking away completely.

    And for workers – how much planning has been done by both UK and Welsh Governments to make sure the transition to new jobs is as quick and painless as possible?

    This appalling damage isn’t just occurring in the UK. From Germany comes the ultimate irony:

    “Germany’s last solar panel producer prepares to close shop”

    https://www.euractiv.com/section/energy-environment/news/germanys-last-solar-panel-producer-prepares-to-close-shop/

    Meyer Burger, the last producer of solar modules in Germany, has announced plans to close down and relocate to the US, fuelling political debates on whether the industry deserves long-term state support to ensure its survival.

    Vice-Chancellor Robert Habeck’s plan to entice solar module manufacturers back onto German soil by offering generous state subsidies is faced with a dead-end.

    Within the fractuous government coalition, the liberal FDP party is blocking plans to grant a “resilience bonus” to would-be manufacturers, amid a continued budget crisis caused by a ruling from Germany’s top court last month which blew a €60 billion hole in the country’s finances.

    Now, the Swiss module producer Meyer Burger is threatening to relocate to the US entirely, putting 500 jobs at risk.

    Following losses of about €133 million in 2023, “the company is preparing to close down module production in Germany”, Meyer Burger said in a statement on Wednesday (17 January).

    Solar panels are mostly manufactured in China these days…

    Like

  153. The sad thing is, the steel will be made elsewhere, using coal. No net savings of CO2. And there is an irony in that the problems of integrating solar power have led to electricity in Germany being too expensive to compete with Chinese manufacturers (not the only reason, as we know).

    Liked by 1 person

  154. No Jobs lost, no CO2 emissions saved – all that happens is they will be outsourced to China. Net result – the British economy suffers at the expense of China and the UK loses its ability to manufacture its own steel, which is a serious national security risk.

    Like

  155. “Tata steel: What do plans mean for UK’s carbon footprint”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-68017180

    The BBC zeroes in on the most important question. However, the attached article is not as terrible as you might guess. In fact they cite someone from FoE who wants to keep one of the blast furnaces open longer…

    And there are these sentences:

    The Institute of Welsh Affairs said both the Welsh and UK governments should have done more to help prepare workers and ensure there were green jobs to go to in the area.

    “The transition to net zero is going to start feeling like a cost and a burden and something that’s putting their jobs at risk – rather than a positive vision of a green future,” warned policy and external affairs manager Joe Rossiter.

    Like

  156. “The transition to net zero is going to start feeling like a cost and a burden and something that’s putting their jobs at risk – rather than a positive vision of a green future”.

    Well, I suppose it’s something that the BBC printed that. On the other hand, it’s not simply that “[t]he transition to net zero is going to start feeling like a cost and a burden and something that’s putting their jobs at risk – rather than a positive vision of a green future” – it is a cost and a burden and something that’s putting jobs at risk – and most definitely not a positive vision of a green future. I deeply regret that, but I hope that reality is beginning to dawn everywhere, and that the penny drops in time to put a stop to the madness before it causes irreparable harm.

    Liked by 1 person

  157. Jit,

    If you burrow down towards the end of the article, regarding the impact of the steel works closure on the UK’s CO2 emissions, after claims of a reduction of up to 20% of Wales’ total, you eventually get to this:

    …the UK’s emissions could fall by approximately 1.5%. [My emphasis].

    But when official UK emissions stats are worked out they don’t take into account the carbon impact of goods we import from overseas.

    And steel unions say what’s happening at Port Talbot will leave the UK reliant on buying in steel from countries which aren’t moving as quickly to greener production methods – at least in the short term.

    It will be four or five years before the new electric arc furnace is built.

    You’ve then also got the carbon dioxide emissions associated with transporting that steel by ship to the UK….

    The whole thing is expensive and damaging nonsense on stilts.

    Like

  158. Finally (I think – for now, anyway), on the steel job losses:

    “Port Talbot and the human cost of Net Zero”

    https://www.spiked-online.com/2024/01/19/port-talbot-and-the-human-cost-of-net-zero/

    The misery of Net Zero is now impossible to ignore. The Port Talbot steelworks in Wales is only its latest casualty. As we learned earlier today, its last two blast furnaces will be removed and over 2,000 jobs will be lost, under plans to ‘decarbonise’ the plant. The transition to new, eco-friendly ‘electric arc furnaces’ will come with other costs, too. It will mean that Britain, once a pioneer in steelmaking, will lose its capacity to produce virgin steel from scratch – the kind of steel we need most for other manufacturing. Port Talbot, then, is just the beginning. It’s the canary in the coal mine for a wave of job losses. Cutting CO2 emissions will mean huge cuts to living standards. Unless ordinary people rise up against these insane green diktats, Net Zero will impoverish us all.

    Liked by 1 person

  159. Mark, as is so often the case with commentators these days, Pratley aborts his thoughts one conclusion short. That is because the need for decarbonisation is paramount; he cannot question the underlying dogma. The existence of a blast furnace is not compatible with the Net Zero project. Pointing to the need for virgin steel does not alter the fact that the drips running this country have made it impossible for us to produce it here.

    Liked by 1 person

  160. “Net Zero is killing British industry
    Port Talbot steelworks is just the latest casualty of our elites’ climate-change crusade.”

    https://www.spiked-online.com/2024/01/23/net-zero-is-killing-british-industry/

    “…our elites’ willingness to embrace deindustrialisation, their eagerness to sacrifice jobs and vital industries, is not a fifth-column plot. It is born of their pursuit of the chimerical goal of Net Zero. That’s why our politicians and industry leaders are shutting down our virgin-steel making capacity, and crippling our oil and gas industry. It’s because they genuinely believe that they are leading Britain in an existential battle against a climate apocalypse.

    After all, if one believes that the world is about to end unless CO2 emissions are slashed, then one need not be too concerned about putting jobs, or the security of the British nation, at risk. It doesn’t seem to matter that more than 40 per cent of the electricity on which electric-arc furnaces in Britain will rely is today still generated by gas-fired power stations. It doesn’t seem to matter that the steel imported from China or India will still be made by coal-fired power stations. What is important for our elites is to do something, and to be seen to be doing something about the climate.

    For our corporate executives, parliamentarians and civil servants, Net Zero is the goal that trumps all else. It’s time we fought back against their dangerous, irrational designs.”

    Like

  161. I just wonder if the demise of Tata Steel’s blast furnaces is really anything to do with reducing CO2 emissions. More likely is the company’s latching onto this excuse to support their wish to reduce steel production in the U.K. There have been many previous suggestions that Tata Steel has wished to transfer its production elsewhere. This is only the latest version, now supported by the GW (= Green Woke).

    What surprises me is the timing. Currently there are numerous stories that the Navy is under-shipped. Any new warships will require masses of new steel and recycled steel from fewer electric blast furnaces won’t cut it. What is Tata’s game plan?

    Like

  162. Alan,

    I wouldn’t be at all surprised if Tata can’t believe their luck regarding the gullibility and stupidity of UK politicians.

    Like

  163. “Does the renewable boom feel real to you?”

    https://robinmcalpine.org/does-the-renewable-boom-feel-real-to-you/

    …Scotland’s economic future isn’t a conceptual thing or a conglomeration of statistics but a crucial, real-world reality which cannot afford to arrive at a point 20 years from now to discover that all of the ‘supported jobs’ in renewables turn out to be newsagents and marketing men (I’ll explain in a moment) and we’ve failed again to build a new industry.

    You know, precisely like happened over the last 20 years….

    …And the key to understanding that is in the word ‘supported’ and the interpretation of ‘supply chain’. Let me be really clear about this; if the workers putting up a wind turbine buy a Daily Record to read the sport at lunchtime, the newsagent who sold the newspaper may well end up being counted in the ‘supply chain’ or will definitely be ‘a job from induced extra spending’ (supported).

    Or have you ever been phoned by a telesales marketing person telling you that there are grants for heat pumps if you buy them from them? That person will count as a directly-employed part of our renewables workforce, despite it being just a unskilled call centre job.

    Even those supplying actual components for renewables systems (a legitimate supply chain measure) could just be driving them there from the depot where a multinational not owned in Scotland bought the components from China. I suspect a large part of Scotland’s renewable supply chain is really marketing and retail….

    …Or think about this way – we don’t include the jobs from 30 years ago that were briefly created when a gas turbine generation plant was built but we are counting the jobs for the erection of wind turbines, jobs which will cease once the facility is built. In theory, if it takes 100 people to service a gas turbine but only 20 engineers to maintain wind turbines producing the same amount of electricity, you would have actually ‘destroyed’ 80 jobs….

    Like

  164. “Offshore wind jobs target missed by 90 per cent as SNP ministers urged to make green jobs overhaul
    EXCLUSIVE: Think tank Future Economy Scotland warns the country could fail to create enough green jobs to offset the decline of the North Sea industry.”

    https://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/politics/offshore-wind-jobs-target-missed-32012847

    Scotland missed a target for offshore wind farm jobs by 90 per cent – with Holyrood ministers warned radical action is needed to secure the green jobs revolution.

    Economic think tank Future Economy Scotland (FES) said the country risks failing to create enough clean energy jobs to offset the loss of work in the declining North Sea.

    In a new report, the group cautioned that without a major industrial overhaul, the shift to net zero could produce no “significant domestic job creation” at all.

    It comes after much-vaunted promises by SNP ministers to create a green jobs boom – previously failing by a huge margin to hit a target of 130,000 low-carbon posts by 2020.

    In new research, shared with the Record, FES used the example of offshore wind, where the Scottish Government had projected that 28,000 workers would be employed by 2020.

    However, figures from the Office for National Statistics show that there were only 3100 full time jobs in offshore wind in 2021 – just 11 per cent of the total forecast….

    Like

  165. “UK electric vehicle maker Arrival enters administration with 170 jobs at risk
    New York-listed company, once valued at $15bn, failed to launch its debut electric van”

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2024/feb/05/van-risk

    The British electric vehicle maker Arrival has collapsed into administration – putting 170 jobs at risk – just three years after it was valued at more than $15bn.

    The company, which had two manufacturing sites in Oxfordshire, has appointed consultancy firm EY as administrator, after failing to launch its debut electric van.

    The move comes a week after trading in the company was suspended on New York’s Nasdaq stock exchange and a notification that the firm would be removed from the exchange was filed. Nasdaq said Arrival had not complied with its listing standards after failing to file accounts for 2022.

    The EY administrators said that Arrival’s liquidity position had been “impacted by challenging market and macroeconomic conditions resulting in delays in getting the group’s products to market”…

    …Arrival’s demise adds another failure to Britain’s mixed recent history in the electric vehicle market. Britishvolt, the electric vehicle battery maker collapsed into administration last year after struggling to secure investment. However, the Jaguar Land Rover owner Tata agreed to invest £4bn in creating a battery gigafactory in Somerset.

    Like

  166. “Fall in wind sector demand hits Highland jobs”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c9786p4qd83o

    Up to 80 workers are being made redundant at a Highland carbon fibre manufacturer.

    SGL Carbon said it had shut down several production lines at its Muir of Ord site due to a decline in demand for the material for use in making wind turbines.

    The GMB union said the losses showed the Scottish government’s drive to create renewable energy employment opportunities had “stalled”.

    The Scottish government said it was disappointed jobs were going, adding that it would support the wind sector with £500m investment over the next five years….

    Like

  167. Mark – thanks for the stream of comments & links above showing the stark reality re “Green Jobs”.

    I liked the https://robinmcalpine.org/does-the-renewable-boom-feel-real-to-you/ article.

    Well worth a read, He ends with this –

    “Unfortunately the corporate renewable energy industry wants you to think all is going well so it maintains its generous treatment from government (bloody ScotWind), the Scottish Government desperately wants any evidence that its renewables strategy is working brilliantly and the Fraser of Allander want to produce a report which is 100 per cent justifiable but keeps their client happy.

    And every part of this is done at a desk in front of a spreadsheet. What no-one is doing is actually going out and mapping properly where the renewable energy jobs are and what the quality of those jobs actually is. If Scotland is ever to escape its serial failures over renewables, that’s the number we need, not an assumption built on an assumption built on an assumption built on a commercial relationship.”

    Like

  168. “What Green Jobs?”

    https://dailysceptic.org/2024/02/13/what-green-jobs/

    Most political parties in the U.K. sell the new green revolution by pointing to all the new skilled jobs that will be created. The British Government looks to produce no fewer than two million such ‘green’ jobs by 2030. But there is little sign of all these new opportunities. The Office for National Statistics (ONS) recently reported that there were 526,000 green jobs in 2020, but they include workers in the waste business, electric vehicles, education and management of Government bodies. Back in the day we would have called people working in such occupations dustmen, mechanics, teachers and bureaucrats. Most of the jobs being claimed simply stick a ’green’ label on either existing occupations, or are people switching, as in the transport business, to working on new products.

    There are also a large number of ‘make work’ jobs listed in the ONS report including environmental charities, environment-related education, in-house environmental activities and environmental consultancy. Speculative ventures that are unlikely to turn into significant future businesses such as hydrogen supply and carbon capture and storage are included.

    About 10% of the green jobs are to be found in charities, while many other occupations in waste collection, water treatment, repairs and forest management have always existed. Work on making more energy efficient products is hardly a new activity. It is probably not an exaggeration to state that the ‘great reset’ under way in the collectivist Net Zero project has barely created more than 150,000 genuine new jobs in the U.K. But the economic damage is mounting steadily. Across Europe, the high price of energy caused by a transition to unreliable wind is causing significant de-industrialisation, while the food production industry is facing potential collapse with a green war on fertiliser and meat production. Try telling 3,000 redundant steel workers in Port Talbot and the farmers who have been blocking roads across the continent that they are in the forefront of an exciting new green industrial revolution.

    People are starting to twig. Gary Smith runs the GMB union which is heavily represented in manufacturing industries, and he recently noted the small number of jobs that are being produced by green technology. In an interview in the Spectator, he said that communities along the North Sea can see wind farms, “but they can’t point to the jobs”. He added that much of the green work seemed to be either London-based lobbying or clearing away the animal casualties of wind farm blades. “It’s usually a man in a rowing boat, sweeping up the dead birds,” he observed….

    Like

  169. Mark, regarding the quote from The Spectator and Gary Smith of the GMB, “… much of the green work seemed to be either London-based lobbying or clearing away the animal casualties of wind farm blades. “It’s usually a man in a rowing boat, sweeping up the dead birds,” he observed….”

    That there are jobs in lobbying I can understand. But are there really people employed to remove the body parts of birds killed by wind turbines? If so then it ought to be more publicized; the animal loving British public would not, I suspect, be impressed by such a horrible job … nor by the even more horrible fact that the job exists in the first place! …

    So I take this opportunity to invite our readers to JIT’s wonderful article
    (https://cliscep.com/2023/02/18/the-rspb-is-betraying-its-members/) and particularly the following paragraph:-
    QUOTE
    It’s very simple for the RSPB, or it should be. If the question is “Wind farm?” the answer is “No. Nowhere, never, not while we still draw breath, not while we live to prevent harm to the beautiful and amazing feathered animals we share this planet with.” The RSPB should hate wind farms like Ahab hated the white whale. They should fight them on sea and land, everywhere. There are no excuses, no exceptions and no grey areas. There are no right places to site wind farms. The wrong place is the sky. No amount of carbon dioxide “savings” from wind power can outweigh the direct losses from the birds it kills.
    END QUOTE.

    Regards, John.

    Liked by 1 person

  170. John,

    I think the statement about men in boats clearing up dead birds is tongue in cheek, but it is a searing judgement, so I included it in the section I quoted.

    Liked by 1 person

  171. The guy in the boat, like the hombre in Spain we saw wiping down the solar panels then cleaning the pool !

    Like

  172. This prolly belongs under the year-old Jit post that John Cullen linked to above, but…

    Here’s a 2013 Graun article by someone who was then the RSPB’s Head of Climate Change Policy & Campaigns:

    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/blog/2013/jun/28/white-throated-needletail-wind-turbines

    An Asian swift whose species hardly ever visits the UK* had been killed by a wind turbine. The RSPB bloke (who is now a SpAd to Scotland’s First Minister) said that this death must not be used as an argument against wind power because other things kill far more birds. In support of this whataboutery, he cited a debunked paper** by someone who thought that bats were birds.

    ===
    *This was perhaps only its fifth recorded visit.

    **https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0301421509001074

    Liked by 1 person

  173. “Tata Steel workers protest over proposed job losses”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-68325457

    Hundreds of people have taken to the streets to protest at the proposed loss of thousands of steel jobs.

    Tata said 2,423 jobs across the UK are at risk, with 1,929 of those in Port Talbot, which employs 3,859 people.

    One of the firm’s bosses said much of its operation at the site is at “the end of life” and leading to losses of £1.7m a day.

    A protest was held in Port Talbot, while workers from the Llanwern site have marched in Newport city centre.

    Tata employs 917 there, with 113 jobs at risk, and about 500 people took part.

    Speaking at the Port Talbot rally, Unite general secretary Sharon Graham said there have been almost 6,400 jobs lost in the British steel industry since 2015.

    “Together our politicians have sat by and watched our steel industry be decimated,” she said.

    “They have let communities wither on the vine. They have failed us all.”…

    Like

  174. “‘Broken promises’: Scots green revolution jobs slump as income soars”

    https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/24173490.broken-promises-scots-green-revolution-jobs-slump-income-soars/

    Scotland has seen the number of green revolution jobs slump as energy company income rocketed by 47% in a year.

    Offshore wind jobs have dropped to produce around a tenth of what was forecast by ministers as it aimed to make the country the green energy capital of Europe.

    The latest official estimates show that jobs in the low carbon and renewable energy sector have dropped by 13% in the year from 29,700 to 25,700 – while turnover has soared by 47% from £8.853bn to £12.992bn.

    And Scottish jobs in offshore wind fell from 3200 in 2021 to 3100 in 2022 – as concerns grew about the scandal of cheap foreign labour replacing British workers to serve Scotland’s green revolution.

    The Scottish Trades Union Congress has condemned what it called the “broken promises” of the Scottish Government’s green jobs revolution.

    Over ten years ago the Scottish Government were championing the desire to be the green energy capital of Europe with around 28,000 jobs in offshore wind alone.

    The Herald on Sunday revealed how British based workers planned a mutiny as protests erupted over cheap foreign labour replacing them.

    It was made aware of UK-based staff having contracts terminated following the extension of the Offshore Wind Workers Concession (OWWC) rules which allows the employment of cheaper foreign nationals on offshore wind projects…

    …Analysis carried out by the Office for National Statistics shows that turnover, the total income generated by offshore wind companies, had risen by £1.673bn (66%) in a year to £4.206bn for offshore wind and £1.812bn (82%) to £4.009bn for onshore. But the number of jobs fell by 3% for offshore and by 400 (11%) for onshore…

    There has been concern that governments in China and the United Arab Emirates, which have presided over human rights concerns, are among the beneficiaries of Scotland’s green revolution.

    The array of state government-controlled firms that are making millions from having a key stake in Scotland’s collection of offshore wind farms also include France, Norway, Sweden and the Republic of Ireland. The Scottish Government has no stake in any company reaping the green rewards, even though it is in the nation’s waters that the farms are being constructed….”

    Like

  175. Thank you Fraser Myers – deftly done:

    “Labour: the party of deindustrialisation

    The Port Talbot job losses are just a taste of the green-fuelled misery to come.”

    https://www.spiked-online.com/2024/03/30/labour-the-party-of-deindustrialisation/

    Conclusion:

    Labour’s zealous commitment to the Net Zero agenda puts it directly at odds with the interests of the British working classes. Its rush to ‘decarbonise’ energy and industry will deal a hammer blow to heavy industries and the communities they sustain. Labour has made itself the party of deindustrialisation.

    Liked by 1 person

  176. “What happened to the green jobs revolution?”

    https://www.heraldscotland.com/politics/viewpoint/24232499.happened-green-jobs-revolution/

    “New figures published by the Office of National Statistics reveal that the estimated number of jobs created in the low carbon and renewable sectors in Scotland contracted over the last year.

    Overall, low carbon and renewable energy employment was estimated to stand at 25,700 in 2022 which is substantially down from the 29,700 estimated jobs in 2021. The jobs total in 2022 stands barely above the 2014 figure of 23,200.

    In the offshore wind sector, 3,100 jobs were estimated for Scotland in 2022, down from 3,200 jobs in 2021, while 3,100 jobs were estimated for the onshore wind sector – again down from 3,500 over the same period. The total for the onshore wind sector is shamefully only 400 more than 2014.

    The ONS figures are in stark contrast with the SNP-led Scottish Government in 2010 promising 28,000 direct jobs in the offshore wind sector alone by 2020, and a further 20,000 jobs in related industries.

    Unite would even question how many of these 6,200 jobs in the onshore and offshore wind sectors are based in construction, engineering, maintenance and manufacturing roles, rather than office based roles stemming from the headquarters of major energy firms. Indeed, the ONS confirmed to us that they don’t hold this type of information….”

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