-----------------------------------------------
Let’s challenge Labour’s dirty energy technofix
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By LES LEVIDOW and SIMON PIRANI. Reposted with thanks from the Greener Jobs 
Alliance web site ( 
https://greenerjobsalliance.co.uk/the-labour-governments-dirty-energy-technofix-must-be-contested-and-replaced/
 )

The Labour government is making empty promises of jobs in “Great British 
industry”, to justify its harmful decision to base its climate policy on Carbon 
Capture, Use and Storage (CCUS).

In October Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced a £21.7 billion investment in 
CCUS.  Much of this is an effective subsidy to oil companies seeking to expand 
production for much longer by falsely portraying CCUS as a decarbonisation 
measure.

( 
https://peopleandnature.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/240321-no-to-false-solutions_ccs-1024x766-1.jpeg
 ) A protest against false solutions in Malaysia. Photo: Friends of the Earth 
Malaysia ( 
https://foe-malaysia.org/articles/stop-promoting-carbon-capture-and-storage/ )

The government combines a modest promise ( 
https://www.gov.uk/government/news/government-reignites-industrial-heartlands-10-days-out-from-the-international-investment-summit
 ) of 4000 jobs from this scheme with a vague claim that it will “support [??!] 
50,000 jobs in the long term”.   That figure is tame, as jobs promises go, 
especially compared with the enormous investment.

Nevertheless Starmer lambasted ( 
https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/30853358/keir-starmer-great-british-industry-net-zero/
 ) anyone who questioned the scheme as “drum-banging, finger-wagging 
extremists” – in the Sun , Rupert Murdoch’s hate-filled rag.

*Starmer’s promises versus CCUS realities*

In reality, CCUS has been plagued by technical problems throughout its 40-year 
history.  It has only ever worked at scale when combined with enhanced oil 
recovery (EOR), a technique for squeezing more oil out of underground deposits.

Nevertheless Starmer described the scheme as “a game-changer in our efforts to 
fulfil our legal obligations to reach Net Zero by 2050 in a sensible way, while 
supporting jobs and industry’, as well as attracting foreign investment.

“Without this tech, heavy industries such as cement, glass-making and chemicals 
will risk having to down tools”, he claimed – with no evidence. In another 
speech ( 
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/oct/04/labour-to-commit-almost-22bn-to-fund-carbon-capture-and-storage-projects
 ) Starmer even suggested that CCUS would “kickstart growth, and repair this 
country once and for all”.

Starmer ridicules and demonises sceptics with contemptuous language that echoes 
his attacks on opponents of Israel’s genocide in Gaza and of racist migration 
policies.

Starmer’s Sun ( 
https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/30853358/keir-starmer-great-british-industry-net-zero/
 ) article tries to set the interests of “working people” against climate 
scientists and young people who despair of an oil-fuelled future.  In his 
words, they are “blockers” who want a “slow decline to the Dark Ages”.

This inflammatory, populist rhetoric can also be heard from some union leaders. 
 For example, Sharon Graham of Unite sets up ( 
https://www.unitetheunion.org/news-events/news/2024/may/unite-launches-major-oil-and-gas-campaign-no-ban-without-a-plan
 ) a false choice between jobs versus life-and-death climate targets.  In her 
words, workers must not be “sacrificed on the altar of net zero”, as if anyone 
suggested this.

Starmer’s stance attracted outrage and sarcasm. Here are three examples from a 
Reddit site ( http://cacctu.org.uk/greenwash ) for Labour Party supporters:

□ “Damn right. Why sacrifice Great British industry to us climate change 
nutters when you can sacrifice the planet as habitable to us instead? That’ll 
show them.”

□ “Clever trick: tarring anyone who critiques the carbon capture funding as an 
extremist, rather than ordinary people who can tell it’s a massive waste of 
money.”

□ “Why use that language? Does he know his own supporter base?”

Indeed, Starmer does know his supporter base: increasingly, capitalist elites, 
including those in high-carbon industries.

*CCUS as a long-time false solution*

Starmer’s empty promises of jobs conveniently distract from long-time doubts 
about CCUS.

For several years before the October 2024 announcement, and especially since 
then, climate scientists and energy specialists have warned against CCUS as a 
false solution. They argue that CCUS would lock in ( 
https://data.carbontracker.org/reports/kind-of-blue ) a long-term large-scale 
dependence on natural gas, increase carbon emissions, and make ( 
https://data.carbontracker.org/reports/curb-your-enthusiasm ) energy 
unnecessarily expensive.  Meanwhile, this priority would delay more 
straightforward means to reduce carbon emissions and provide new jobs.

Take the flagship project in the government’s scheme, Net Zero Teesside ( 
https://peopleandnature.wordpress.com/2024/07/24/court-challenge-to-net-zero-project-that-is-not-net-zero/
 ) , a new gas-fired power station built by the oil companies BP and Equinor.  
The station is to be fitted with post-combustion carbon capture equipment that 
has never worked – and may never work – on an industrial scale.  Other projects 
involve converting natural gas and biomass into hydrogen fuel, processes that 
also rely on CCUS.

As a Campaign Against Climate Change briefing ( http://cacctu.org.uk/greenwash 
) says: Fossil fuel and biomass companies have mobilised vast resources to 
promote their operations to policymakers, investors, local communities and 
trade unions. This promotion often involves highly misleading claims about the 
numbers of jobs to be created.  “In reality these jobs drop off dramatically 
after the relatively brief construction phase. In addition, it is risky to rely 
on jobs linked to technologies which may well fail or never materialise.”

Despite such long-time warnings, CCUS has been central ( 
https://peopleandnature.wordpress.com/2018/03/12/will-labours-climate-policy-rely-on-monstrous-techno-fixes-like-beccs/
 ) to the Labour Party’s decarbonisation agenda since the Corbyn-McDonnell 
leadership.

After Starmer became leader, in 2023 the Party announced a “clean-energy 
mission”, envisaging multi-billion annual investments in renewable energy.  
Back then its agenda already relied heavily on fossil fuels with CCUS ( 
https://greenerjobsalliance.co.uk/labours-clean-energy-mission-greenwashing-a-high-carbon-future/
 ).

In the October 2024 announcement, the earlier budget plans for renewable energy 
were greatly reduced, while CCUS investment was expanded. Now Labour Party 
policy has become a dirty energy mission.

*Socially just, low-carbon alternatives*

What are the alternatives?  If decarbonisation and livelihoods were really the 
government’s aims, then it would direct funds at different priorities. They 
would integrate labour, environmental and care issues for the public good.

Take one example: the huge potential for insulating people’s homes to reduce 
energy bills, fitting low-carbon heating systems such as heat pumps and 
district heat, and launching local energy projects based mainly on small-scale 
solar and battery storage. These technologies have worked for years and can be 
installed quickly –  unlike large-scale CCUS for power plants and hydrogen 
fabrication.

In October the New Economics Foundation proposed ( 
https://neweconomics.org/2024/10/solid-foundations ) a ten-year scheme to spend 
£33.5 billion on retrofitting homes and £10.1 billion on local energy projects. 
If the government was defending the public interest, it would have considered 
such investments before committing to CCUS. It has not.

Other priorities could include ( 
https://peopleandnature.wordpress.com/2024/06/18/post-election-battlegrounds-for-climate-and-social-justice/
 ) : expanding proven technologies for renewable energy; displacing the Big 
Five energy generators through decentralised ownership; upgrading the UK 
national grid to promptly use new supplies of renewable energy; and boosting 
public transport, combined with schemes to reduce private car traffic.

Alternative livelihoods should also include care roles, which must be valued 
for helping people to recuperate from various harms.

Together these priorities would generate tens of thousands of skilled jobs 
alongside decarbonising the economy.

*Dirty energy lock-in: an ignorant mistake? or a clever fossil-fuels 
partnership?*

Given those straightforward alternatives for the public good, why has the 
Starmer government made an expensive long-term commitment to CCUS?  And so 
locked in dirty energy for the foreseeable future? Is this simply an ignorant 
mistake? Must we educate the government about the evidence?

As a different explanation, perhaps the government has locked in a political 
partnership with the fossil fuel industry, ensuring corporate welfare for 
long-term dirty energy. This explanation warrants different evidence, for 
example:

□ Financial donations: Before the June 2024 general election, the Labour Party 
received £4 million ( 
https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/labour-given-4m-from-tax-haven-based-hedge-fund-with-shares-in-oil-and-arms/
 ) in donations from hedge funds linked with the fossil fuel industry.  These 
donations were not publicly disclosed until after the election.

□ New infrastructure: The government is set on approving the Net Zero Teesside 
power station and associated gas-intensive projects.  Moreover, as North Sea 
production declines, it is also preparing for even greater imports of natural 
gas ( 
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/oct/11/labour-carbon-capture-climate-breakdown
 ) for several decades.  It is therefore gearing up ( 
https://national-infrastructure-consenting.planninginspectorate.gov.uk/projects/EN040001
 ) to approve a Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) terminal on Teesside.

□ Criminal law: The government has maintained the anti-protest laws from the 
previous Tory government, and stigmatised climate protesters as saboteurs, and 
even unpatriotic.  It has apparently encouraged prosecutors to criminalise and 
punish ( 
https://skwawkbox.org/2024/10/24/hundreds-picket-court-to-demand-end-to-govts-criminalisation-of-peaceful-protest/
 ) even their peaceful actions, now carrying severe penalties. These threats 
aim to limit any effective dissent against fossil fuels.

*False “net zero”* *techno-saviour*

The government’s political partnership with fossil fuel companies runs more 
deeply than a conspiracy. It is also ideological, using false narratives to 
co-opt union leaders and reassure their members – while sidelining critics 
including scientists, and criminalising protest.

Like many hypothetical techno-fixes for societal problems, CCUS has been 
invested with a narrative of “saving British industry”, encouraging the belief 
that it will protect or create jobs.  This narrative has hijacked the Just 
Transition concept, inverting it into an unjust high-carbon continuity.

( https://peopleandnature.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/img_2511.jpg 
) A carbon capture demonstration plant, opened by Toshiba in Omuta, Japan, in 
2020

This has been promoted by trade unions with members in the energy sector 
(Unite, GMB, and Prospect), calling themselves “the energy unions”. The 
government directs funds at capital expenditure, especially high-carbon 
industrial continuity, while perpetuating austerity for public services.

Starmer’s ambitious claim for long-term job creation remains wishful thinking. 
But it reinforces a wider narrative that a future technology will regenerate 
Britain’s high-carbon sectors … led by the capitalist elites that have managed 
its decline in recent decades.  This narrative imagines that these industries 
could continue (even expand) in a similar form, if only replacing current 
technologies with new ones.  It evokes a seductive nostalgia for 20 th century 
manual work, tranquillising doubts about the techno-fix.

Together with the world’s most powerful governments, the Labour government 
weaves another strand of this ideological rope: the very idea of “net zero”. 
Originally a scientific concept, it  has evolved through more than three 
decades of international climate talks.

Decades ago, “net zero” simply meant a physical state where greenhouse gas 
emissions were so low that they would be balanced by drawdowns of those gases 
from the atmosphere, mainly by forests. But politicians have warped and misused 
the concept for a different meaning.  It has become a cover for technofixes to 
displace or delay measures that really would cut emissions.

“As the mirage of each magical technical solution disappears, another equally 
unworkable alternative pops up to take its place. The next [large-scale 
geo-engineering] is already on the horizon,” wrote the climate scientists 
Wolfgang Knorr, James Dyke and Robert Watson in 2021.

Their powerful statement ( 
https://theconversation.com/climate-scientists-concept-of-net-zero-is-a-dangerous-trap-157368
 ) warns how “net zero” had become a dangerous trap, whereby hypothetical 
technologies justify expanding fossil fuels. “Current net zero policies will 
not keep warming to within 1.5°C because they were never intended to.”

When Starmer denounces “net zero extremists”, he means those who oppose 
twisting “net zero”  into a high-carbon agenda.

*Government’s dirty energy mission: what political counter-force?*

The government’s dirty energy technofix should be contested at many levels, as 
a deceptive narrative and as physical infrastructures *.* Carbon capture 
projects impose burdens on local communities, while denying them the benefits 
of genuine decarbonisation schemes.

They have rightly attracted fierce opposition by campaigners in north-west 
England and Scotland, e.g. the Hynot ( https://www.facebook.com/HyNotNW/ ) 
campaign opposing the Hynet CCUS-hydrogen project.  We also welcome the legal 
challenges ( https://www.crowdjustice.com/case/net-zero-teesside/ ) by the 
climate scientist, Andrew Boswell, which could force cancellation of some 
wasteful white elephants.

Now we should aspire to build a more powerful counter-force that can discredit, 
rupture and replace the false narrative of the elite high-carbon partnership. 
We should counterpose the alternatives mentioned above, especially home 
insulation,  heat pumps, solar panels, and the other measures.

A political counter-force could start with a broad alliance of civil society 
groups, environmentalists, and trade-union groups.  The latter could encompass 
the PCS, UCU and dissident groups within the “energy unions” (GMB, Prospect, 
Unite), e.g. the Unite Grassroots Climate Caucus ( 
https://actionnetwork.org/forms/join-the-unite-grassroot-climate-caucus ). How 
to create an effective alliance warrants urgent debate and practical 
strategies. 1 November 2024

*The authors*

Les Levidow is Senior Research Fellow at the Open University, also a member of 
UCU’s Climate and Ecological Emergency Committee (CEEC).  He is author of 
Beyond Climate Fixes: From Public Controversy to System Change ( 
https://bristoluniversitypress.co.uk/beyond-climate-fixes ) (Bristol University 
Press, 2023)

Simon Pirani is honorary professor at the University of Durham, and author of 
Burning Up: A Global History of Fossil Fuel Consumption ( 
https://www.plutobooks.com/9780745335612/burning-up/ ) (Pluto Press, 2018). He 
is a lifelong labour movement activist


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