On Thursday, Mark linked to an opinion piece by the Guardian’s Zoe Williams about Kemi Badenoch’s “Net Zero by 2050 is impossible” speech. Mark didn’t like Williams’ piece, and when I read it, I didn’t like it, either. I’ve been thinking about it off and on since, so you could at least call it thought-provoking – although not in a good way. In what follows I will note and pass comment on some of Williams’s more outré remarks.
The title of the piece, filed under the category of “climate crisis,” is:
Badenoch’s attack on net zero is ridiculous. But so were the right’s Brexit claims, and look where they left us
Williams is going to draw a line between Brexit and opposition to Net Zero.
The subtitle:
The run-up to 2016 shows ‘common sense’ isn’t enough. Even ignorant, reactionary arguments must be properly countered
The diatribe that follows consists of 9 paragraphs.
Paragraph 1: Williams snarks about Badenoch’s lack of expertise in climate science. This invalidates Badenoch’s assessment about the viability of Net Zero. But it only takes a moment’s thought to realise that the same objection can be served up to every politician who advocates for or against Net Zero. You may retort that the same could be said about any topic, and I might agree. How many of today’s Cabinet are domain experts?
While I’m on this point, I will make the observation that climate scientists should be judge-like, disinterested. Too often they stray from reporting the facts as they believe them, to demanding preferred policies (like Net Zero). Science is an attempt to understand the Universe, and the Universe does not have morals, only Laws. There is nothing demanding Net Zero, even if there does happen to be a “Climate Crisis” (there doesn’t). It is for politicians to decide what to do with the dispassionate information that the disinterested scientists have provided to them.
Paragraph 2: Williams notes that the attack on Net Zero has been foretold. Well done, Nostradamus! No-one could have seen that coming! Strange that the sceptics’ line has long been: “As soon as the pips start squeaking, the opposition to Net Zero will begin to grow.” Maybe in Williams’s ivory tower, the pips aren’t squeaking yet. I suppose she does not worry about paying her next energy bill.
Paragraph 3: Williams cites some guy from Led by Donkeys, and his description of the evolution of climate denial, which originates elsewhere. (Maybe from Oreskes, please enlighten me if you know.) There are unpleasant overtones in the description, which goes: first they denied the science. Then they minimised the seriousness of the consequences. Then they said we couldn’t afford to do anything about it. Those are the first three ditches of climate denialism, and there is a fourth, and last, which we’ll come to in due course.
In Paragraph 4, Williams uses this extraordinary expression (as noted by potentilla here):
“Because even while outlets such as GB News have been preaching climate impossibilism for some time, it has until now been broadly disallowable in mainstream political discourse.“
Well of course the Guardian doesn’t like GB News. But can an argument that Net Zero is impossible really be disallowable? What if Net Zero really is impossible? We had better hope that it isn’t, for as a civilisation, we need to move onto other energy sources sooner or later, since hydrocarbons will eventually run out. (Note: these new energy sources will not be weather dependent, not if we want our descendants to live, not merely exist.) But can an opinion about any policy which involves the imposition of frankly draconian measures on the populace be disallowable?
Paragraph 5: Williams thinks that opposition to ULEZ, LTNs and 15-minute cities has something to do with Net Zero. Maybe people don’t want ULEZ because they can’t afford a ULEZ-compliant car? Maybe they don’t want to be locked in their neighbourhood by bus gates? Such policies are “pretty anodyne.” Yes, for you they are, but not for some of us.
Paragraph 6: Opposition to ULEZ etc “takes on the heft of an imagined constituency, people who are fed up with environmentalists.” Do not conflate advocates of Net Zero with environmentalists. True environmentalists oppose the destruction wrought in the name of Net Zero, the forests of wind turbines, the hungry maw of Mr. Drax. But Williams is unaware that there are any negatives at all about the pursuit of Net Zero. That is the only conclusion I can draw from her dismissal of opposition to it.
Paragraph 7: Sane people agree with Williams. The public are still in favour of Net Zero: a facile point, since Net Zero is more than a principle. This is where pollsters tilt the answer in the direction they want. You don’t get Net Zero for nothing. You have to exchange something for it. And it looks as if the payment will be so high that only a fool would agree to the deal. Or someone so insulated from the real world that acceding would cost them naught personally.
Then, disgracefully, we have this: “Getting into the weeds of Badenoch’s own character, a debate is playing out that is also deeply familiar – is she saying this because she’s enchanted by dark money, or is it because she’s an “irresponsible, ignorant, reactionary fool”, as one journalist put it.” So no-one sane can believe these things; anyone who claims they do, is either doing it for money, or because they are an “irresponsible, ignorant, reactionary fool.” Badenoch may be pleased to note that she has struck a nerve. There seems to be no answer other than character assassination.
Paragraph 8: Williams draws an entirely specious parallel between Brexit, i.e. “what happened last time,” and the current slow wave building against the absurdity of Net Zero. No conspiracies are needed to explain either occurrence: there are valid reasons to support both. What rational country would surrender itself to the laws of an undemocratic supranational state, outside of defeat in war? And what rational country would agree to immiserate its population for a policy that will have no measurable effect on climate change?
Then Williams has the gall, or maybe blissful unawareness, to start wondering about where the money was (in Brexit) coming from and by implication where it is coming from now to gin up opposition to Net Zero. Try looking at the funding for the very many groups advocating for this policy, funding that is, in effect, aimed at crushing what is left of a once Great country into a thin paste. (Mark’s recent Avarice in Funderland might be a good place to start.)
In Paragraph 9, mercifully the last, the Donkeys guy talks about the “last trench.” This is the stage at which we sceptics admit that the science was always right, the consequences were always apocalyptic, and that we really could afford the cost of Net Zero, but that, thanks to all the spanners we managed to toss into the works, “it’s too late.”
By that time, one presumes, rats the size of cats will be taking shifts to roam the streets with packs of rabid dogs, our roofs will have been blown off by a tremendous gale, and Williams and the Donkeys guy will be fighting tooth and nail for a lick of a wind-blown piece of paper that three months ago was wrapped around a Big Mac. Then, from stage left, er, right, out will pop a climate sceptic, and he will say, “I admit it. I was lying all the time, but it’s too late now.”
And the righteous will turn on him with knives in their eyes.
Then, thanks to the collapse of civilisation, the emissions of CO2 will drop to trivial levels, and it will turn out that it wasn’t too late after all, because in due course, everything will return to normal. Except for the rats the size of cats. Our sleek brown friends are staying in my fantasy dystopian future.
Oh, a final note. As far as I heard, Badenoch did not say anything controversial in what might be termed “the real world.” In fact, on my reading, she did not repudiate Net Zero, only its timing, and the lack of a Plan for it. That her speech brought out such agitation in certain quarters only shows how weak their position is. They can’t argue the facts, so have to rely on a code of consensus from which no-one respectable must deviate. But respectable people must try to grab the wheel, for the present course is destruction.
PS. If a pollster asked me if I was in favour of Net Zero, I would not know how to answer. I would have no reason to oppose it in principle. I have reasons to oppose it in practice. A fantasy Net Zero in which there are no negative environmental consequences, no negative consequences for the UK’s wealth, and no negative consequences for the UK’s security, I could not oppose. But only a fool would believe that version of Net Zero exists. In the real world, the people of the UK are better off killing Net Zero rather than themselves.
All that is needed to demonstrate the physical impossibility of Net Zero (probably “at all”, but certainly if we wish to keep a reliable electricity supply), is an understanding of science to the level of a GCSE pass and possession of a calculator. Almost all of its requirements fall at this hurdle – there is neither the manufacturing capacity nor the manpower to install a heat pump in every home; there is no possible way of storing enough energy to maintain our electricity supply through a couple of weeks of dunkelflaute (we’ve just had close to a couple of months this winter); EVs are totally impractical for at least a substantial minority of homes; etc. etc.
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Jit,
Thanks for doing that. I am not surprised you share my quiet anger at what I regard as the banality and arrogant ignorance on display in that dreadful Guardian article. I still believe that the Guardian has some decent journalists, and when it gets away from its hobby horses (Brexit, net zero et al) it’s capable of some seriously good journalism. But that article was a long way from good journalism, IMO.
It appears that Ms Badenoch’s comments might well represent a serious crack in the “cross-party consensus” (aka lack of democracy) around net zero, and my word, do the Guardian climate doomsters not like that! Hence such absurd flailing around in response. If that’s the best they can do, then it appears that net zero doesn’t have much to commend it (but then we already knew that).
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Not only did I not like this piece, I thought it ignorant and disgraceful.
I was however interested to read the comments. Most were as bad as the article but a few were reasonably sensible. A few bits and pieces:
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“PS. If a pollster asked me if I was in favour of Net Zero” …. 3 days ago for the first time in my almost 69 years on the planet I was actually stopped by a pollster (Well I dropped my aggressive stare against strangers bearing clipboards for the first time ever). They started a questionaire about Net Zero. When I pointed out I thought the whole idea was a load of “round objects” they simply walked away completely uninterested in asking me any more questions. Odd isn’t it how these “surveys” always get the answers they want to hear!
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It’s nice to know that many Guardian readers are more thoughtful than some of their journalists.
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Jit: ‘…as a civilisation, we need to move onto other energy sources sooner or later, since hydrocarbons will eventually run out. (Note: these new energy sources will not be weather dependent, not if we want our descendants to live, not merely exist.)’
Rosy May had the answer back in 1991: burn old women’s pants.
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Yes, they’re definitely rattled. The campaign is cranking up:
“Badenoch and family spent week as guests of climate sceptic Tory donor
Neil Record, chair of Net Zero Watch, hosted the Conservative leader and others shortly before her policy U-turn”
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2025/mar/25/badenoch-and-family-spend-week-as-guests-of-climate-sceptic-tory-donor
Kemi Badenoch enjoyed a £14,000 week-long “residential” with her family along with a small group of the shadow cabinet courtesy of the Tory donor Neil Record, who chairs a climate sceptic lobby group.
The Conservative leader was joined by other members of the party team at a location in Gloucestershire during the February half-term; most of the shadow cabinet were not invited.
The trip took place about a month before Badenoch U-turned on the party’s commitment to achieving net zero by 2050, saying it was “impossible” for the UK to meet – one of her first major policy pivots since taking over in the autumn.
Costs for the week were met by Record, chair of Net Zero Watch, who owns an estate in Gloucestershire with a swimming pool, donkeys and 180 acres of sheep-grazed grass.…
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This story was recommended to me today by Firefox Pocket (it has a noticeable leftwards slant, that despite corresponding with them, I have not been able to get to the bottom of):
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There is an article on The Conversation that is desperate to convince you of the irrationality of opposing net zero:
Anti-environmentalism is on the rise but it’s full of contradictions
https://theconversation.com/anti-environmentalism-is-on-the-rise-but-its-full-of-contradictions-256911
There are two major problems with the article. The first is that an article that complains about the other guy’s contradictions contains its own howler:
I’m thinking it’s a strange popularity that can be washed away by a populist tide.
The second major problem is everything else the article says. It is such a waste of neuronal activity from start to finish.
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Interesting John. I’ve posted a comment – no reply.
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John, there is a delicious irony in this article. As is so often the case, the author fails to realise that he could be talking about himself:
“…I argue that a distinction can be made between what I call “cold” and “hot” forms of environmentalism. The former values and mourns the loss of nature, but as a spectacle to be observed – a set of appealing images of flora and fauna – while the latter feels implicated and anxious.
The former position allows people to claim they love nature yet be indifferent or even hostile to initiatives to save it. However, the line between cold and hot, or between anti- and pro-environmentalist, is neither fixed nor hard.Another quality of anti-environmentalism is that its beliefs are changeable, even quixotic.
Climate change is an example...
I am tired of people conflating the “climate crisis” [sic] with the nature crisis, and insisting that they are linked, such that the nature crisis can be solved only by imposing hundreds of thousands of acres of nature-destroying renewables both on- and off-shore. Climate zealots are far more casual about harming nature than are those of us who spend much of our leisure time communing with nature and objecting to its destruction by people who confuse CO2 with real pollution.
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Mark: I’ve just added four more comments to that TC article. And the author, Professor Bonnett, has already responded to one of them – interestingly the one that was inspired by something you said above.
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Robin,
It’s interesting that he chose to pick up on people’s concerns about the visual aspects of renewables, but ignored the point about the damage they cause to nature. I think he’s on the back foot, as he should be, given how poor the article is.
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Robin,
I’m surprised the author responded to you at all, given the extent to which his article fair drips with contempt for those opposing net zero. You’re supposed to be the type who indulges in self-contradiction, so I would expect him to see little point in engaging with you. Backing up your points with relevant facts won’t be impressing him much either. Even so, keep up the good work. His silence is doing him no favours.
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Thank you John. I have also offered a comment, pointing out that Net Zero and “real” environmentalism are often in opposition.
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When I first visited the Conversation essay, this message popped up:
Why would a billionaire want to buy you? You’re already working for them for free.
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Comments at TC are still open. But, having poked his nose briefly over the parapet, Bonnett hasn’t done so again. Pathetic.
However I have had an amusing exchange with the lady whose avatar is the Palestinian flag.
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“Cleverly has offered the Tories a new strategy to beat Reform”
Cleverly – the man who might have been Tory leader but for some excitable mathematics in his supporters’ camp – is giving a speech, in effect, suggesting that the problem of Net Zero will go away if the Tories just align their policies with the other parties; the uniparty re-established and the doom of the UK assured, they can concentrate on other issues of importance, whatever they might be.
He seems to think this approach will outflank Reform, because of all those pro-Net Zero voters who are currently putting a cross in Reform’s box at elections.
Delusional, of course, but it will appeal to a lot of the rump of the parliamentary party.
Telegraph link.
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Jit,
Thanks for the link – very interesting. It seems that net zero Tories are as out of touch with the electorate as Remain Tories are/were – by and large they tend to be the same people, of course. They are entitled to their views, and who am I to say they are wrong? I would venture to suggest, however, that they are in the wrong party, and that their continued presence in the Tory Party is a huge gift to Reform.
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I could have put this in a few places, but it’s a natural corollary to the last two comments on this thread, so I’m putting it here:
“Net zero is a gift to Nigel Farage in Scotland”
https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/net-zero-is-a-gift-to-nigel-farage-in-scotland/
It wasn’t long ago that Nigel Farage seemed a hopeless sell in Scotland. In 2013, on his way to campaign in a by-election in Aberdeen, he didn’t get further than Edinburgh’s Royal Mile before he had to be escorted from a pub by police for his own safety. Ukip, which he then led, had a derisory presence north of the border – even when it was making in-roads into working class areas in the North of England.
What has changed to make Reform UK, Farage’s current party, serious contenders for the Hamilton by-election this week? There is a big clue to be found in a report by Robert Gordon University this morning which points out that the much-vaunted ‘green jobs’ in the wind industry are being created at only half the rate that jobs are being lost in oil and gas. By 2030, it predicts, 29,000 jobs could be created in offshore wind while 58,000 may be lost in North Sea oil and gas – many of them as a direct result of the government’s refusal to issue new licences for oil and gas. Also because of the ‘windfall’ tax on the sector (bringing total tax on oil and gas companies, including corporation tax, to 78 per cent) even when oil and gas prices have fallen back and there are no longer any windfalls to be had.
The destruction of North Sea oil and gas is very big deal for Scotland, especially in Aberdeen where Farage was campaigning yesterday….
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Naturally the Guardian is celebrating this:
“James Cleverly takes on Kemi Badenoch over decision to ditch net zero targets
Senior Tory to give speech in which he will criticise ‘neo-luddites’ on right for failing to embrace green technology”
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2025/jun/04/james-cleverly-kemi-badenoch-net-zero-targets
I am so tired of the intellectual confusion displayed by these people:
…The senior Conservative MP, who lost to Badenoch in last year’s Tory leadership race, said it was a false choice to believe the UK had to choose between economic growth and protecting the environment.….
By protecting the environment, he obviously means embracing net zero, to reduce emissions, to avert climate change. But reducing the UK’s emissions will make no difference to the climate. Meanwhile it’s damaging the environment within the UK. We must keep banging away at some basic truths:
CO2 is not pollution.
Wind and solar farms, backed up by BESS and necessitating hundreds/thousands of miles of pylons, are neither clean nor green.
Net zero is not environmentalism – it is its antithesis.
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There seems to be a concerted push on to “prove” to Badenoch that she abandons Net Zero to the Tories’ peril. This piece appeared in UnHerd today as a case in point. Delusional? I should say so. It’s basically 7-8 paragraphs of “Tories need to get back on board with Net Zero ASAP.”
The author seems to have bashed it out without thinking anything other than that he needed to beat this particular drum today: he says there has always been a strain of conservationism in the Tories (then names Cameron as among them), without noting that “real” conservation and Net Zero are often acting in opposition. He then talks about “air pumps”, whatever they are, and that the Tories stand to lose votes if it doesn’t toe the Net Zero line, seemingly unaware that no-one ever voted Tory because of the party’s green hue.
What we do know is that there are lots of Tory MPs who are not Tories. They will be enjoying what Cleverly is giving them. But despite UnHerd’s opinion, the beneficiary of another U-turn back to the uniparty will benefit Reform. I would suggest to Badenoch that some of them need to be deselected if they do not have a rational position on this issue.
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Tory politicians might be well-advised to read the comments below that article. They certainly aren’t supportive.
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Jit/Mark – from the comments we get some quoting “combating climate change”. With some stating the obvious.
Made me think, when did “Global Warming” morph into “climate change” & extreme weather?
Whoever 1st coined it was 1 smart media savvy person, as it confuses the audience/reader as to what the real life difference NZ will make, even if all countries hold hands.
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