“We will
switch to renewable energy when it is the same price or cheaper than fossil
fuel”
I see this
written and spoken again and again. Most recently, Tom Montgomerie writing in
the Times earlier this week:
‘No half-decent politician in any part of
the developing world was ever going to delay economic progress by embracing
expensive energy sources’.
In the
article titled ‘The greens can’t defy gravity. They’re finished’, he claimed
that green enthusiasts’ policies were always an attempt to defy economic gravity.
My understanding of gravity is that it is indeed a powerful force which usually
wins out in the end. We may try to climb up to a better life on higher ground
but gravity will always be attempting to pull us back down into the bottom of
the pit. We have plenty of evidence that we can defy gravity with soaring
cathedral towers and villages built on the top of hills. These are difficult to
construct, take more effort and cost more but we do it because the outcome is
so much better than digging holes in the ground in which to live and worship.
Regarding
the narrow economic argument that fossil fuel is cheaper so we must use it, is politics
of the sewer. Of course it would be cheaper to wallow in shit but instead we
put considerable time, effort and money into living at a higher level where our
excrement can be washed away out of sight and out of mind. Carbon dioxide emissions
may not have the same smell and texture as excrement but we pump it into the
air we all share and breathe. We had an excuse before we knew the indirect dangers
to our collective health like people living in the early 19th
century suffering from the scourge of cholera. It took the work of John Snow in
the middle of that century to show that cholera is a waterborne disease. That
insight led to investment and expense of public sewers underground. We don’t
complain that it would be cheaper to have open drains in the streets so why do
we hold back from building the low-carbon economy?
It is time
to break the delusion. We need to close down the use of fossil fuel; therefore
energy will cost more. Fossil fuel is so universal in our economy that the economy
will be completely reconfigured. This is not something to be avoided but
something to embrace. Let us getting on with building the soaring low-carbon
cathedral and climb out of the sewer of fossil-fuel dependency.
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