Rescuing
Democracy in the United Kingdom from our current Elected
Dictatorship
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Spin, not
face-to-face confrontations with the voters, is the Government's
chosen method of communication. Ordinary
people are dangerous. Ordinary people might ask a question
which throws a politician 'off message'; the Cabinet member
might reveal himself or herself to be a human being like
us, and not a programmed android. Worse still, he or she
might tell the truth.
Ann Leslie - Daily Mail, September
16, 2004
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Power
chief warns of blackout threat
Britain
faces major blackouts in the next decade, it was claimed
yesterday. Andrew Duff, chief executive of RWE npower,
told an energy conference that Government action was
needed to avert a power crisis.
Mr
Duff said a combination of factors could hit supply.
First, coal power stations will have to be overhauled
before 'green' legislation from Brussels is introduced
in 2008. Some will be closed because they are unworkable
under the new laws.
Mr
Duff warned the conference organised by the union Amicus,
that uncertainty about how the Government intends to
implement the legislation could mean investment is not
made in time. He said that in addition the Government
has yet to spell out limits on the amount of carbon
dioxide permitted under separate EU legislation.
And
third, many nuclear power stations are coming to the
end of their life, further hitting the supply of electricity.
Amicus also warned yesterday that Britain faces an energy
'catastrophe' as the nation becomes dependent on foreign
imports from insecure places to supply most of its energy
needs.
Reported
in the Daily Mail, March 2, 2005
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Gone
(nuclear?) with the wind
Lets
go nuclear
Rod Liddle
(The Spectator, August 21, 2004) says the answer to our energy
needs is obvious: cheap and reliable nuclear power. But before
we can embrace a sane future we have to overcome the Cold War
superstitions of the Green Left
I
am not sure whether it is a good thing or a bad thing that there
is almost no oil left anywhere in the world. Out of a sort of
childish spite, one is obviously delighted that soon enough countries
like Saudi Arabia will have nothing with which to hold the world
to ransom. And nothing has caused more environmental damage to
our planet than the consumption of hydrocarbons (except maybe
that comet which allegedly wiped out the dinosaurs). On the other
hand, I am not sure that I wish my children to experience a rapid
return to the Stone Age which will be their future unless
we begin to wean ourselves off both oil and, indeed, gas. And
with governments perpetually disinclined to look to the medium
term let alone the long term it is difficult to
see how that weaning process will be induced.
I
dont think Im overstating the gravity of the situation.
The American energy expert L.F. Ivanhoe, for example, has said,
Permanent oil shock is inevitable early in the next century.
Oil shock is when the oil starts running out and prices leap exponentially
and there is an actual physical shortage of the stuff. And the
bad news is that Mr Ivanhoe wrote those words in 1999: that next
century to which he referred is now with us.
He
goes on to say: The next paralysing and permanent oil shock
will not be solved by any redistribution patterns or by economic
cleverness, because it will be a consequence of pending and inexorable
depletion of the worlds inexpensive crude oil supplies ...many
of the worlds developed societies may look more like todays
Russia.
Or
take this, from Petroleum Equities Incorporated: New assessments
of global oil reserves show that the world faces a relentless
oil supply crisis within the next ten years. The mathematical
models used by the OECD to calculate the timing and extent of
this crisis suggest that peak production and ensuing decline will
occur when half the worlds recoverable oil has been extracted:
we are extremely close to that point now, according to the Oil
and Gas Journal. It is estimated that if consumption continues
at the current rate (which it wont it always increases),
then oil supplies will last for another 40 years. Petroleum Equities
Incorporated predicts a severe crisis in 2015. Time is rapidly
running out for oil and therefore it is also rapidly running
out for us.
Nor
are we safe with gas, which generates 38 per cent of our electricity.
We have little in the way of strategic gas reserves an
estimated 48 days capacity to cope with emergencies (compared
with 70 days in Germany and France). Further, our own supplies
are dwindling rapidly. By 2020 it is estimated that some 80 per
cent of our electricity will be generated by foreign gas supplies
which, in the long term, will mean a dependence upon Russia. And
gas, like oil, is a strictly finite resource.
So
what should we do? The government seems paralysed and distrait,
and its messages are often contradictory. Last years Energy
White Paper ruled out the prospect of building new nuclear power
stations to address the forthcoming crisis, and yet at a recent
Commons liaison committee the Prime Minister seemed to hint that
they might, after all, be thinking of the nuclear option. And
so he might, because right now it is the only feasible option.
The
former environment minister Michael Meacher recognises the problem.
[There] is a complex energy equation with a black hole at
the centre, he says but for him, the answer lies
with renewable energy sources and energy conservation. Wind power,
he insists, is finally clawing its way into the major league,
despite the fact that the total contribution made by renewable
energy sources to the generation of electricity in the UK stands
at 3 per cent. But Meacher says: The big picture is still
that, given the rundown of nuclear to some 7 per cent of electricity
generation by 2025, plus the slow but gradual decline of coal
over the same timescale, a yawning gap opening in UK energy policy
remains unaccounted for. Only renewables can plug that gap....
Well,
hes right about the problem but surely wrong about the solution.
Even the wind power industry itself accepts that there is an absolute
limit to the percentage of electricity which it can provide in
the best of all possible worlds some 20 per cent of demand.
Above that level and there are insuperable problems with the intermittence
of supply and, whats more, wind power is the most expensive
option available to us by some margin.
The
Royal Academy of Engineering checked out wind power recently in
a robust approach to compare directly the costs of intermittent
generation with more dependable sources of generation. It
calculated the cost in pence per kilowatt per hour of five sources
of electricity generation. This is what it found:
Nuclear
2.3p
Gas 3.4p
Coal 5.0p
Onshore wind power 5.4p
Offshore wind power 7.2p
So
not only can wind power not, in the end, do the full job, its
also more than twice as expensive as nuclear power.
In
fact, the economic case for nuclear power is overwhelming. Not
only is it cheap, but fluctuations in the world price for uranium
have a negligible effect upon the cost per kilowatt hour
largely because the uranium used in our nuclear power stations
is at least 97 per cent renewable.
Built
into those Royal Academy of Engineering figures is whats
called carbon values: i.e., the price to be paid for
clearing up the environmental mess left behind by coal and gas.
If anything, the RAE underestimates the effects of coal and gas.
It has been estimated that nuclear power costs one tenth of coal
in terms of environmental and health impact. Nor is the decommissioning
of nuclear power stations as huge a cost as is often supposed:
these days it ranks at about 9 per cent of the initial capital
expenditure and that figure is decreasing.
Our
apparent antipathy to nuclear power is surely based upon old Cold
War allegiances, superstition and idiocies. It is the sine qua
non of what Lenin once called infantile leftism. Back
when there was still a Soviet Union, nuclear power was opposed
by the Left at least partly because it seemed to imply a commitment
to a nuclear military industry and thus nuclear weapons. I may
be wrong about this its only a guess, based upon
the views of the sorts of people with whom I consorted at the
time but I reckon that everybody who was opposed to an
independent nuclear deterrent for Britain was similarly opposed
to nuclear power. There was no logical reason why this should
be so: it just was. Nuclear power was tainted by its linguistic
closeness to the phrase nuclear weapons much
as the term paedophile has a linguistic proximity
to paediatrician.
The
environmentalists, buttressed by such films as The China Syndrome,
which depicted a scary meltdown in a California nuclear plant,
argued that nuclear power was altogether too dangerous to be meddled
with without ever specifying why or how. And even as the
Cold War drew to a close, Chernobyl gave still more ammunition
to those who wished that Marie Curie and Ernest Rutherford had
never existed, and that we should all try to forget what happens
when an atom is split in half.
Now,
though, the Green lobby is rapidly changing its mind. James Lovelock,
the high priest of Gaia, has recently called for a massive expansion
of nuclear power in order to counteract the effects of greenhouse
emissions. Perhaps he was mindful of the fact that the UK nuclear
industrys contribution to our energy needs saves some 18
million tonnes of carbon dioxide being pumped into the atmosphere
every year; equivalent to five car-free days every month of the
year.
And
the nuclear industrys safety record is better by far than
that of the coal or gas or oil industries. The nuclear industry
in the UK can claim no deaths at all in the last 35 years. How
many have died in our coal mines, or on our North Sea oil rigs?
In
the last 20 years there have been two major accidents
in nuclear power plants worldwide. There was Chernobyl, which
accounted for the immediate deaths of 31 people and an unspecified
number probably in the low thousands of deaths from
cancer across Europe. This is comparable to the number of deaths
of miners in the old Soviet Union across the same period. And
two people were killed at a nuclear plant in Japan. Thats
it: thats how dangerous nuclear power is. Three Mile Island,
back in 1979? A huge scare. But nobody killed, nobody hurt, no
damage done to anything or anyone except the plant itself.
Of
course, while an immediate investment in nuclear power may slash
our greenhouse gas emissions and provide cheap and sustainable
electricity, it will not, at present, do anything to avert the
coming crisis resulting from the oil supplies drying up. To address
that would take real imagination and a boldness which we have
not, so far, seen from our present government. The new, high temperature
nuclear reactors now undergoing trials in Japan and the
US are able to produce both electricity and, as a by-product,
hydrogen. This latter may be our brightest hope to avoid a descent
into the Stone Age when the lights eventually, inevitably, go
out in Saudi Arabia. Hydrogen is a fine fuel source for motor
vehicles, but it would require a massive infrastructure investment
in the UK at the moment and a commitment to an energy supply with
which many on the Labour Left feel distinctly uncomfortable. Yet
they will have to live with that discomfort sooner or later. In
the words of another nemesis of the Labour party, there is no
alternative.
The
European Commissions Marina II study recently concluded
that North Sea oil and gas operations now contributed more man-made
radioactivity to the seas of northern Europe than anything emanating
from the nuclear industry. Meanwhile, British Nuclear Fuels Ltd
is committed to reducing radionuclides emissions into coastal
water to nil over the next 15 years.
Looking
for a clean and comparatively cheap, environmentally friendly
source of power? Assuming the rogue scientists Pons and Fleischman
got it wrong, and cold fusion is indeed nothing but a chimera,
there is only one answer to our energy problems, and sadly it
is not a serried rank of windmills just off the Norfolk coast.
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Do
you want nuclear plant built on existing nuclear sites rather
than have thousands of wind turbines on swathes of green
acres of our countryside, or built off-shore - a serious
hazard for shipping and our fishermen.?
Agree
strongly
Agree
Disagree
Disagree
strongly
Don't
know
Don't
care
Please
click one of the
links
above to cast your vote
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For
the health of our democracy, we, the people of the United Kingdom,
must find a way to force Mr Blair to resign
Such
defiance of the democratic process and the will of the majority
of we people of the UK, must be exposed by voters as a matter
or urgency, and not just in the two by-elections we have had this
July and the European elections in June 2004. But how can this
be done?
The
most effective way of getting our deceitful PM to resign would
be to mobilise the army of Labour MPs currently in the House of
Commons and get them to demand it, the loss of their seat to be
a penalty if they did not. All voters in Labour-held constituencies
need to write a letter along these lines to their local Labour
MPs:
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Dear
Despite
his absolute and unequivocal assurances over the past
year of the serious risk to our security of Saddam
Hussein's 'weapons of mass destruction', Prime Minister
Blair has admitted, that the threat was non-existent.
For that critical error of judgement and for his gross
incompetence in handling this very important issue,
I ask you to take immediate steps to ensure that Tony
Blair does the honourable thing and resign without
delay..
I
would therefore be much obliged if you would propose
and help mobilise a Parliamentary vote of 'No Confidence'
in Mr Blair which, despite Labour's huge majority,
would leave the PM with no option but to resign.
If
I get no reply to this letter, I shall assume you
will continue to support Mr Blair as our Prime Minister.
In such circumstances I shall not vote for you in
the forthcoming General Election.
Signed:
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Simple,
non-violent, protest letters along these lines on a variety of
issues could be the basis for re-vitalising our democracy and
increasing voters' interest and participation in politics. Download
a printable copy of the above letter here.
There
is another way for the voice of the silent majority to be heard,
a voice that made sure broken promises would not only be revealed,
but punished in subsequent elections.
In
the year available before the General Election expected in 2005,
many topics are available as ammunition, each one asking questions.
A weapon for our purpose will be the results of Opinion Polls
in individual constituencies using ICM, NOP, Gallop, Mori
or YouGov.
Questions
suggested for this purpose are listed here.
CAST
YOUR VOTE ON A VARIETY OF OTHER IMPORTANT ISSUES HERE.
Current
and prospective Parliamentary candidates of all Parties running
for election could share a platform at public forums in every
constituency. They would be presented with the results of
polls on this issue expressed by the majority of voters in that
constituency.
The candidates could be asked if their own views and that of their
Party manifesto corresponded with the polls, and if not, how they
intended to represent the will of the majority of local voters.
Local and National Press, Radio and TV coverage would be arranged
and the results published on this web site.
Here
is another powerful strategy for using your vote effectively in
the forthcoming General Election. Send your sitting and prospective
MPs a letter defining your requirements if they want your vote.
This example deals with the proposed
EU Constitutional Treaty.
Your
letters would end: "If you do not answer
this letter, I shall take it that you intend to follow the Government
line. I shall act accordingly in the forthcoming General Election.
Or
why not create a questionnaire that you send to all the candidates
in your constituency, getting them to give yes/no answers to questions
of your choice, and ending it with the same paragraph(above).
Download
a printable example of the questionnaire.
It
is high time for the people of this United Kingdom to stop allowing
themselves to be manipulated by politicians. We need our representatives
in Parliament to genuinely reflect the view of the majority in
their own constituency, even if this means going against their
personal and/or their party's policy. While they may argue their
case, hoping to change the minds of the majority in their constituency,
they should ultimately be obliged to reflect the majority view
of those who elect them.
It
will be argued by politicians of all parties that most voters
don't have the knowledge necessary to express an opinion on important
subjects at issue, and that our vote is a form of delegated democracy.
We should argue that it is their duty to ensure that we voters
do have ready access to such information as is necessary to form
an intelligent opinion. That, after all, is one main purpose of
Opposition Parties in our Parliamentary Democracy.
Most
important of all, such proceedings would rekindle in voters their
latent interest and obligation to cast their vote, knowing that
the candidate of their choice would be more likely to act in accordance
with their wishes. A much higher turnout in elections would be
the result.
Contact
your local Party Chairman. Gain his support for setting up public
forums in your constituency on these, as well as any other relevant
topics, well before the next General Election expected in 2005.
You should then, depending on the integrity of the candidate of
your choice, feel fairly certain that your view on any subject
being debated in Parliament will more accurately be reflected
by your representative in that assembly.