On Monday the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ) issued a press release titled “Energy security, jobs and investment boost through climate action”. We can differ about the validity of the claims made in that short heading, but the sub-title is simply deceitful: “Families and businesses will continue to reap the benefits of the clean energy transition in the coming decades”[my emphasis].

Again, we can have different opinions about whether we will or will not see benefits down the line, but the use of the word “continue” suggests that we are already doing so. Patently we aren’t. The UK has some of the highest electricity prices in the world, and this is indisputably due to the government’s energy policies. Anyone reading Sir Dieter Helm’s latest excellent analysis, titled “The cost of energy and what to do about it”, then reading the DESNZ press release would be at a loss to understand what is going on.

Sir Dieter’s conclusion is robust:

…Now is the time to think again about British energy policy, and now is the time for realism: Britain is not going to be a clean-energy superpower; it probably won’t hit the net zero 2030 target; net zero carbon territorial production targets do not map onto climate change and do not make much difference to it –in some cases, they may make it worse; renewables + a gas reserve working say 5% of the time is not a cheap energy system; and international businesses (notably in the new technologies) are not flocking to the north of Scotland to get access to cheap offshore wind. Britain is not going to be an AI global superpower, not least because of its very high energy costs.

Realism points up the need to urgently address the two immediate crises: the crisis in British industry as a result of the highest electricity prices in the developed world; and the crisis of affordability for households. To these can be added the climate crisis: there is no significant global progress on reducing the carbon concentration in the atmosphere, fossil fuels still make up 85% of global energy supplies, and there is no transition from coal, oil and gas globally. Britain may have got out of domestic coal, achieved by the Conservative governments, but it has not got out of coal consumption embedded in imports. It is still 75% fossil-fuel-dependent. There is no transition from fossil fuels taking place globally, and nobody is looking to Britain to find out how to do it – how to have the highest costs, and be the most vulnerable to shocks like those in Ukraine and Iran, even when it does not take much gas from either Russia or Qatar. There is a deep irony that Johnson and Miliband share the enthusiasm for the go-for-broke strategy which has resulted in the current problems.

Has anyone in DESNZ read it? If they have, did they understand it? They can’t have done, for instead of taking Sir Dieter’s sage advice, they have just announced:

…the government has set out its proposed level for the seventh Carbon Budget, which sets a science-led target of ~87% emissions reduction in the period 2038 to 2042 – endorsed by the Environmental Audit Committee and the Climate Change Committee.

It claims in support a report prepared by the Confederation of British Industries Economics at the behest of the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit (ECIU). The government press release describes the report as “independent”. I have grumbled repeatedly about the misuse of this word. The ECIU very properly acknowledges some of its major funders in 2025. There’s the European Climate Foundation (working “to catalyse climate action”). Its funders include Rockefeller Brothers Fund, Grantham Foundation, Bloomberg Philanthropies, William & Flora Hewitt Foundation, Children’s Investment Fund Foundation, IKEA Foundation, Growald Family Fund, KR Foundation, Climate Imperative, McCall McBain, Stiftung Mercator, Porticus, Hightide Foundation, Laudes Foundation, AKO Foundation, Climateworks Foundation, Ballmer Group, Sequoia Climate Foundation, Robert Bosch Stiftung, Arcadia, Montpelier & Hampshire Foundations, Postcode Loterij, Oak Foundation, and Quadrature Climate Foundation. By the way ,the Quadrature Climate Foundation (“Responding to escalating threats to lives and livelihoods from climate impacts, which will intensify without a fast, fair transition”) also funds the ECIU directly. Then there’s the Meliore Foundation (the project host for “a pan-European think tank, created to promote effective climate action”). The Meliore Foundation is in turn financially supported by Oak Foundation, KR Foundation, William & Flora Hewitt Foundation, and Grantham Foundation. Also funding ECIU is the Windward Fund (“The Windward Fund is committed to discovering and implementing methods to address energy and climate issues across the globe. Several of our projects are working to mitigate the effects of climate change by researching, establishing, and funding renewable energy sources, energy conservation tactics, and tactics to engage the oil and gas industries. Additionally, projects are combating ozone depletion and pollution using tactics such as carbon capture, methane reduction initiatives, and more.”). Then there’s the Natural Environment Research Council aka UK Research & Innovation (“a non-departmental public body sponsored by the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology”). In other words, the UK government is funding a body which (inter alia) funds other bodies which in turn fund ECIU to commission the CBI to produce a report which will endorse the government’s energy policy. A cynic might wonder, given its timing, if the report was commissioned for the very purpose of supporting DESNZ’s latest announcement. Whatever else the ECIU Report is, it isn’t “independent”. The only surprise would be if it didn’t support the government’s policy agenda.

By the way, if you are interested in going down the funding rabbit hole, you might take a look at Avarice in Funderland.

Moving on, the government press release assures us:

The new target is based on evidence-based assumptions about how the country will take a consumer choice-led approach to the adoption of technologies such as solar, batteries and EVs that will cut bills for families.

Well, there’s evidence and then there’s evidence, but assumptions? What of the claim about “ a consumer choice-led approach”? The reality is that this is the opposite of the truth. The consumer is being given precious little choice. As an example (one among many) – I went to our local VW dealer the other day to discuss possibly purchasing a new diesel T-ROC. It’s one of the few diesel vehicles still made by VW (which is in turn one of the few car manufacturers still making diesels for the UK car market). Or it was. They’ve just stopped making T-ROC diesels, as I was informed in a telephone call from the dealer a few days ago. This isn’t because of a lack of demand. Its because of EV mandates.

As for “ technologies such as solar, batteries and EVs that will cut bills for families”, this is contentious at best, dishonest at worst. I accept that the government has a view, as it is entitled to do, but I don’t believe it should make factual claims that are highly controversial.

Read the press release for yourself – it makes a number of such contentious claims. Then there’s this:

Without action, climate change continues to endanger the UK’s food and water security, exacerbate global population displacement and pose national security risks, including to critical infrastructure, in a context of increased global instability and households already suffering from the price volatility of fossil fuels. The Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) is also clear that the costs of climate damage are getting higher, while the cost of the net zero transition is getting lower. This is about protecting the UK’s way of life and the natural world from significant dangers.

How many times does it have to be pointed out that nothing the UK does to reduce its territorial emissions can make the slightest difference to climate change? And, as Sir Dieter Helm points out in his latest piece, a focus, such as that of the UK, on territorial rather than consumption emissions, is arguably resulting in more, not fewer emissions globally, since the UK is making itself increasingly dependent on products made in countries such as China, which rely much more heavily on fossil fuels. As an aside, that level of dependence on the likes of China hardly represents security of any sort either.

I also suggest Mr Miliband remembers something he seems to have forgotten. When he was the Minister responsible for the Climate Change Act, he signed off its impact assessment. At page 7 it said this:

It should be noted that the benefits of reduced carbon emissions have been valued using the social cost of carbon which estimates the avoided global damages from reduced UK emissions. The benefits of UK action will be distributed across the globe. In the case where the UK acts in concert with other countries then the UK will benefit from other nations reduced emissions and would be expected to experience a large net benefit. Where the UK acts alone, though there would be a net benefit for the world as a whole the UK would bear all the cost of the action and would not experience any benefit from reciprocal reductions elsewhere. The economic case for the UK continuing to act alone where global action cannot be achieved would be weak.

That applies with much greater force today, given that emissions continue to increase globally as the UK’s territorial emissions fall.

The final point to note is that the press release contains little of substance, and relies instead on glowing commendations from a number of people who are euphemistically described as stakeholders. They include representatives of the UK Sustainable Investment and Finance Association (UKSIF); Aldersgate Group (“we advocate the business case for decarbonising the UK economy”); the UK Transition Finance Council; Energy UK (“The UK will only meet its Net zero targets with a thriving, competitive and innovative retail energy market that delivers for homes and businesses”); E.ON UK; RenewableUK; the Climate Change Committee; the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment and the Global School of Sustainability at the London School of Economics and Political Science; (sadly) the RSPB; Green Alliance; E3G; Friends of the Earth; WWF; We Mean Business Coalition (“The SME Climate Hub drives global efforts to strengthen small and medium-sized business resilience. We have created the go-to platform for SMEs to navigate shifting market conditions and decarbonize their businesses, ensuring they remain prosperous, competitive, and future-fit in the low-carbon economy of tomorrow. It was co-founded in partnership with the Exponential Roadmap Initiative and the UN Climate Change High Level Champion’s Race to Zero campaign.”); Corporate Leaders Group UK (“The CLG UK has frequently defined the UK’s business response to climate change – one of the greatest challenges of our time….CLG UK has helped build consensus across the UK business community in support of climate action. It spoke first and loudest in support of the UK’s Climate Change Act …”); Climate Outreach; Round Our Way (“Round Our Way was created for the growing number of us worried that the impact climate change has on families like ours isn’t getting the attention it deserves”); Just Transition at The Young Foundation; Climate Action Network UK (CAN-UK); ClientEarth; The Climate Coalition; the Climate Group; Design Council (“Raising the bar on the UK’s global leadership in regenerative design, getting to net zero faster and building a circular economy”); and Net Zero Programme Director at the Broadway Initiative. .

I find that list of talking heads to be extraordinary. The government is clearly closely connected to a vast number of organisations which support its extremist energy agenda, and which can be relied upon to offer a helpful quote for government press releases. But shouldn’t government press releases be limited to the factual? Shouldn’t they be impartial and any supporting quotes be independent? In fact, shouldn’t there be a law against this sort of thing?

15 Comments

  1. You forget the overriding benefit of our country’s leadership in the saving the planet stakes. Ungentlemanly of you to even raise the sordid topic of coin.

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  2. Sorry to repeat/reinforce the importance of your quote – “It should be noted that the benefits of reduced carbon emissions have been valued using the social cost of carbon which estimates the avoided global damages from reduced UK emissions. The benefits of UK action will be distributed across the globe. In the case where the UK acts in concert with other countries then the UK will benefit from other nations reduced emissions and would be expected to experience a large net benefit. Where the UK acts alone, though there would be a net benefit for the world as a whole the UK would bear all the cost of the action and would not experience any benefit from reciprocal reductions elsewhere. The economic case for the UK continuing to act alone where global action cannot be achieved would be weak.”

    As expected the retort is, we are not acting alone, where we lead, others will follow is the mantra.

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  3. I hope my objections to the press release are clear.

    First, there’s the use of the government website for what amounts to little more than a party political broadcast.

    Second, there are the grave distortions and borderline (arguably actual) untruths it contains. Shouldn’t it be subject to the same laws as subject the claims of businesses to the regulations of the Advertising Standards Authority and Trading Standards departments?

    Third, there is the way that the government consistently ignores the Impact Assessment attached to the Climate Change Act.

    Finally, there’s the way the green blob is fully embedded in DESNZ. The vast numbers of organisations queueing up to offer flattering and congratulatory comments regarding the government’s policy is frankly nauseating. It’s a relationship that is much too close for comfort.

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  4. Of course, the really big story is the crazy policy contained in the press release – the completely pointless and unattainable rush to net zero targets is going to cost us all dearly.

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  5. Net Zero Watch has responded to the press release here:

    https://x.com/MDC12345678/status/2062121166664331509

    Yesterday, while political attention focused on the shocking Nowak case, Ed Miliband confirmed to Parliament what had long been expected. He said the Government intends to legislate for the Seventh Carbon Budget (CB7), committing Britain to cut emissions by 87% below 1990 levels by around 2040. Under the Climate Change Act, ministers must legislate for the budget by 30 June 2026. Miliband has said the delivery plan will be published “as soon as reasonably practical”. Why does CB7 matter? Politicians often sell Net Zero as simple substitution and “transition”. Petrol cars become electric cars. Gas boilers become heat pumps. Aviation fuel becomes sustainable aviation fuel. Life then continues much as before but cleaner. But the CCC’s own pathway shows something much broader and intrusive. It requires not only new technology and electrification, but managed changes in demand, diet, aviation, land use, industry and much more.Aviation exposes the problem. Ministers can use the oldest rhetorical tricks in the book and claim that holidays are not banned, but the real question is whether flying becomes more expensive and restricted. With little evidence that SAF, electric flight or other innovations can decarbonise aviation at scale, demand growth will have to be limited using a mix of indirect and direct measures. As the CCC said in February, “Aviation demand can only grow if aviation sector technology roll-out progresses.” Diet follows a similar logic. Policymakers rarely dwell on meat and dairy, but the CCC pathway assumes lower meat consumption, fewer domestic livestock and land released from farming. Ministers haven’t really started and yet we are already seeing the consequences. Milk, butter and beef are among the fastest-rising food categories, in part because UK policy has helped shrink domestic herds. Cow numbers have been falling by roughly 3% a year for the last decade. This is why language matters. Sanitised terms such as “demand management”, “low-carbon choices” and “land-use change” sound administrative. In practice, they mean state direction of ordinary life and a managed retreat from the freedoms of modern consumer capitalism.

    Ed Miliband has been very explicit about this. In Go Big, his post-pandemic manifesto, he writes that the purpose of his climate mission is “to abandon this 300-year model of economic growth.” This is why the argument now comes down to trust. For two decades, politicians like Miliband have told the public that the green transition would make energy cheaper and more secure. That promise has not survived contact with reality. In 2026, Britain has some of the highest power prices in the developed world. With so little spare capacity, we have also left ourselves more exposed to energy shocks, from the war in Ukraine to instability in the Middle East. The next phase of Net Zero now reaches into family holidays, diet, farming and everyday freedom of movement. Can we really trust the same political class that got energy costs so badly wrong to impose the next round of legally binding emissions cuts? They have failed to protect the public during the cost of living crisis. Why should anyone trust them to protect us from higher costs and taxes over the remaining 24 years of the “transition”? The stakes at the next election could scarcely be higher.

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  6. Everything the government says about Net Zero (in fact about almost everything, e.g. two-tier policing, freedom of speech) is a lie so we shouldn’t expect their press releases to be any different.

    Net Zero is the foundation of the UN’s dystopian Agenda 2030 and perhaps the government’s most egregious lie (of omission) is that they never mention Agenda 2030 and its implications.

    The USA have wisely withdrawn from both Net Zero and Agenda 2030 (and have cut funding for many UN and WHO malfeasances). Fat chance of that happening here under Uniparty governance.

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  7. Doug B,

    I have little confidence of much changing should the Tories ever be re-elected, but under their current leadership, I live in vague hope.

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  8. Sanitised terms such as “demand management”, “low-carbon choices” and “land-use change” sound administrative. In practice, they mean state direction of ordinary life and a managed retreat from the freedoms of modern consumer capitalism.

    Ed Miliband has been very explicit about this. In Go Big, his post-pandemic manifesto, he writes that the purpose of his climate mission is “to abandon this 300-year model of economic growth.”

    Will people believe me now? Ed is not so much mad as he is bad. He is a saboteur, utterly determined to destroy the UK free market capitalist economy, to decimate industry, and severely degrade and diminish our cherished way of life, by substituting it with a regimented and socially repressive eco-Marxist command and control economy. It was never about the planet. ‘Dangerous’ man-made climate change is a scientific fraud and Net Zero is a monumental scam, perhaps the biggest ever in the history of humanity.

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  9. As I warned on the eve of the General Election in July 2024:

    On the eve of the General Election in the UK in which eco-fascist-cum-Marxist-globalist Labour are predicted by virtually all polls to secure a supermajority, I’m feeling like I woke up after swallowing a whole bottle of black pills by the bedside.

    Hot on the heels of Covid inspired medical fascism, eco fascism is about to be released big time upon the UK, via Miliband and his side-kick Starmer. But you don’t need to understand fascism and understand what motivates it in order to know that it is bad.

    The Labor government is doing evil things in Australia. Labour’s Miliband will do the same in the UK – courtesy of the disgraceful Cons who have gifted them a huge majority. We will all be much poorer for it. The planet is not going to be saved but wild landscapes will be devastated, wildlife will be destroyed, millions of homes will be blighted, agricultural land will be decommissioned and we will all be much poorer and hungrier and much less free by the end of it. This is functionally evil. Functional evil is what is going to destroy our future and destroy human civilisation if we are not careful.

    https://jaimejessop.substack.com/p/a-functional-definition-of-evil

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  10. Jaime,

    I confess my ignorance – I was unaware that Miliband has written a book (about five years ago) called “Go Big”. I have struggled to find a brief summary of its main themes, but here’s an article examining it:

    https://simonmaxwell.net/blog/go-big-how-to-fix-our-world.html

    Without reading the book itself, I can’t comment, but from the above critique, I was struck by this (taken from the book’s conclusion):

    ‘We face a decades-long crisis of inequality and insecurity, a fractured society and alarming levels of distrust with our democracy. . .  Meanwhile, the spectre of the climate emergency looms . . . We must meet the moment by raising the scale of our ambitions for what politics can achieve. There is a new settlement to be built. . . .  We need to recognise a different set of values if we are to tackle the challenges we face. In place of the belief that wealth will trickle down from the top to everyone everyone else, we need a new social contract with greater equality, in which everyone has a stake. Rather than believing that market forces produce fair outcomes, we need to put markets in their place so we protect what we value. And we need to underpin these changes with a democratic renewal through which we can give people genuine control over their lives.’

    Well, I don’t see much sign in the DESNZ’s behaviour of “a democratic renewal through which we can give people genuine control over their lives”. I wonder whether Mr Miliband has forgotten writing those words in much the same way as he seems to have forgotten signing off the Impact Assessment for the Climate Change Act? So far as I can see, we’re to have less choice regarding the vehicles we drive, how we heat our houses, what we eat, how (and how much) we travel. I wrote about the implications of the Seventh Carbon Budget (before the government inevitably resolved to adopt it) here:

    https://cliscep.com/2024/12/31/seventh-hell/

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  11. I could have included more examples in my comment parentheses above, e.g. safe and effective.

    The anonymous Zookeeper sums it up in his comment under this TCW article: “This government’s modus operandi is all about playing dirty. Most of us should have figured that out by now”.

    Liked by 1 person

  12. Mark,

    It’s called ‘decision architecture’, and is supposed to be the method by which ‘libertarian paternalism’ is exercised. The idea is to organise our freedom of choice in such a way as to give us no option other than to make the right choice.

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