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Sunday, January 4, 2026

Sci-fi by a climate activist blogging in a room alone- Sudden Fiction today at Heating Planet blog

The email on a Saturday night caught me by surprise. “Join me in a lively chat,” it invited, and the author was “James Hansen.” The email was a response to a comment I had posted on the famous scientist's Substack a few days back. It invited me to chat on WhatsApp where it sounded like I'd have some really cool conversation, and it was Saturday night, and I had had some wine, with a little vodka in it, and so responded: “I'd love to but I can't because Mark Zuckerberg has blocked me from all Meta platforms.” Then I went on with the night and as I was falling asleep I had this wonderful fantasy.

It ended with all of us in Ottawa.

Hansen and a crew of astronomers and climate scientists are gathering a team to go live and work together near Paul Beckwith in Ottawa, and the email invitation means they're recruiting me as the public affairs person. As the climate goes crazy and the US government goes even crazier, this group is going to broadcast truth from Ottawa AND get me out of the United States as well. In Canada I’d finally get to a dentist. And what an exciting job that would be.

In the morning, reality set in, and the Substack monitor emailed saying not to respond to that guy he’s a spammer who does that a lot on Hansen's homepage. Sigh. 

On the bright side, since I'm banned from all Meta, I didn't click on the spam attachment, so there’s that.

-kay ebeling, unable to write fiction no matter how many times I try

GDP growth & climate policy- "economies soaked in carbon"- limited resources & netzero- From UK: The Rest Is Politics: Leading 57-min Dec 29 podcast w transcript- Heating Planet blog

Can the planet sustain infinite economic growth, or is GDP a flawed metric? Is the UK genuinely decarbonizing, or is it simply outsourcing its pollution? How can politicians defeat the populist narrative that Net Zero is too expensive? In this Climate Special, we hear the best bits from Rory and Alastair's interviews with Professor Dieter Helm, Prime Minister of Canada Mark Carney, Caroline Lucas, Ed Miliband, and Emma Pinchbeck. READ & WATCH: Dec 29, 2025 Leading- How Do We Solve The Climate Crisis? Transcript follows-[The Rest Is Politics- Rory Stewart and Alastair Campbell, hosts of Britain podcast, ‘Leading’ from United Kingdom]
TRANSCRIPT

[This is a readable transcript, speaker ID not always clear.

We are facing a catastrophe in climate and in biodiversity. It's something which is now being weaponized by Trump, by the right. Our economies are soaked in carbon. You can't have it both ways. If you don't want to pay for the pollution you cause, you want to go on in an unsustainable way. The spend on addressing the issue is going through the roof. It has almost unstoppable momentum. Infinite growth on a planet of finite resources is not possible. We need to decarbonize by 2050 at the absolute latest. The attempt to create a successful culture war around net zero to undermine the government is not going to work. There is a lot to be concerned about. There are also very clear reasons to hope. Even when the politics around climate change vary, we will continue to decarbonize. 

Hello and welcome to The Rest is Politics with me, Alistister Campbell, and me, Rory Stewart. This is a special episode. We've gone back through all of the interviews we've done and we've cured clips from some of the most interesting voices on the specific theme of the climate and the net zero transition. Environment climate change is obviously absolutely central. We are facing a catastrophe in climate and in biodiversity. It's something which is now being weaponized by Trump, by the right. There is a total shift now happening in approaches to environmental policy all around the world. 

We're talking just after a COP process that's been really really difficult and people have often challenged us for not centering enough on climate. So we're going to give you a series of extracts from some of the interviews we've done that have focused a lot on climate. 

In this first clip from April, you're going to hear from Professor Sadita Helm. He's one of Britain's leading energy economists and he's going to give you what he calls a reality check on climate policy. He describes his approach as being one of brutal realism. 

I'm an unapologetic fan of DA because he's doing something very very difficult in the world. He's definitely not a climate skeptic. He's somebody who doesn't get on planes, is desperately concerned about climate change, but actually believes that the way we're setting about tackling it is wrong. We've got our energy policy wrong. We've got our net zero policy wrong. So, he's in this very interesting space of saying, "I really want to do something about it. There is a climate catastrophe, but I've got a radically different policy thing, which almost everybody else that we're about to hear from will disagree with, and I'd be interested as you listen to it, as you weigh those arguments." 

Do you think you are convinced by DA's position, or are you more over by the very different views of people like Ed Milliband? Our first guest then is Diet How. This episode is brought to you by Wordsmith AI. 

<<<<COMMERCIAL>>>>>

4.00

Our economies are soaked in carbon and this is what makes the challenge of what we have to do so demanding and so important. But it is a huge challenge. You know, think of plastics, think of the world's transport, think of almost anything you do. Write your daily carbon diary down and then have a look at almost everything in your day and work out how much of it's made up of carbon. 

Now, it's true we are decarbonizing in the UK and in bits of Europe and indeed a bit of the US electricity. Almost all the gains have been by switching from coal to gas. That's the great thing Britain achieved. That's why we're in the 70s for the share of fossil fuels in the British economy, not above the 80s. 

But if you look at where the emissions are going to come from in the future, they're not going to come from the UK. You know, we're one %. It's about India, it's about Indonesia, it's about China, it's about Brazil, it's about the Middle Eastern countries, it's about subsahara and Africa, it's about Nigeria, which will have a population bigger than Europe's by 2050. And in these countries, the demand for fossil fuels is rising sharply. India is a classic example. a coalbased expansion and that's the context because global warming is global. It's what it says on the tin and we seem to think that global warming is made in Oxford or in you know in England. 

Don't think anybody thinks that but we do all operate as whether we like it or not as nation states and I think there was a point at which the UK was giving some pretty strong leadership in this area. I think that's been weakened in recent times. So each country has to do what it can do, understanding that we also have to operate internationally. 

But if you think that if I go back to this report from Kingsmill bond he actually mentions India talks about the fact that yes you may be right that they can do an awful lot more, but they have at least put this at the heart of their industrial strategy. He talks about Chile which is building its own hydrogen export industry. He talks about Vietnam which now has a a bigger share of solar than the United States. So there is stuff happening and the qu I guess the optimist which he is is essentially saying this stuff is happening and we have to push it and encourage it and develop it in that way. 

I get the sense that and I know this really will irritate you that you do come across as being quite pessimistic. but then again you I think were very pessimistic about about renewables generally. I mean you were very very very pessimistic about the idea that wind could ever be economic. You were quite pessimistic about the idea that that rooftop solar and biomass could actually make much difference to decarbonization. But they are making a difference. So let's unpack it. 

First of all this idea that the UK is showing leadership. I mean again it's about brutal realism. We've been in de-industrializing. What do you think's going on now? We're going to close Port Tolburn. We're going to close Grangemouth and we're going to import the prochemicals and the steel from China or elsewhere. Okay. 

What happens to global emissions? Do they go up or do they go down? 

Well, they go up, right? And so this notion that the climate change committee trotted out in that you know when we get to net zero, we'll no longer be causing climate change. If only that were true. You know, a lot of those emissions in China are ours for us. So if you measure properly our carbon footprint, which is carbon consumption, not just carbon production, you would get a very different story from the one that's trotted out. Now I understand why politically it's important to say that for politicians, but the reality is not as presented

Now I come back to your point about optimism and pessimism. There's nothing in what I'm saying that says this problem can't be cracked. Nothing at all. And there's plenty of energy. The sun comes up every day. The sun produces in about an hour more energy, I'm told, than the world's electricity industry consumes in a year. There are plenty of technologies out there coming down the track. 

Where I depart from conventional wisdom is while I think that wind and solar have very important contributions to make and I'm very pro both and I think that both should be subsidized because I don't think they're cost competitive now right I don't think we're going to power the world on wind and solar alone and indeed I think that their contributions will always be part play not total play.

In very kind of simple direct terms, if you were talking to a voter, explain why you feel that our approach-

Right, so we got this huge problem but the solution that we've come up with isn't fixing it and isn't going to fix it I'd start off by explaining the facts so two facts I put over to you in this discussion are a we're not actually making progress on reducing the increase in carbon content concentration in the atmosphere

Secondly, we're 80% fossil fuel globally and actually thirdly the main future emissions are going to come from developing countries and not from the UK or elsewhere. 

So just tell people facts because I don't think people see it that way. I think people think we're really doing well. We're nearly there. It's almost there. nets in electricity. It's all gonna be fine. I keep coming back to this, but we've got to resolve in people's head the gap between what Alistister was saying, which is absolutely true, right? 

10.00

We're producing solar more cheaply, there's more and more solar, there's more and more wind, and the point that you're making, which is 80% of our energy is still coming out of fossil fuels. So, try to explain in simple terms how both those things can be true at the same time. 

Well, I'm not quite convinced that Alistister is correct. Okay, but let's just for we're not allowed to utter those words on this podcast. You'll be forthwith banned from the studio. Yeah. Well, I'll wait for that to happen. so, so I'm not quite convinced of that. 

And if you look at the experience of Well, but sorry, can I be provocative? Let's just for the sake of argument say the cost of solar has come down and we're generating more energy from solar and wind than we were in the past. And that that's what gets people cherry. 

Yes. So, so help the voter understand how it can both be true that the costs come down and we're generating more from solar and wind and also we're not making any difference really on parts million? 

I was coming to that- 

What's the experience of what you would call the average voter or the average household or whatever confronted with these changes. 

Well, first of all, there's the costs. So part of the argument which reinforces the frame that Alice is putting on the problem is that, you know what, it's not only going to happen but it's going to make our bills lower. It's all going to be cheaper. And of course if that's true it's like buying the next version of the iPhone. The market will do it. We'll all go out and switch. We'll say yeah get out there tomorrow morning. Let's get our solar panels in. Let's get our heat pumps in. let's buy an electric car. 

But if you go and do that, if you sit down the pub and talk to people about their experiences of what actually happens, it's really expensive to fit a heat pump. It's very disruptive. And you have to have a certain kind of house to make this work. Okay? It's no good having an old house with needing very large radius, etc. And you have a different experience of what comes out of it. That's why they're buying gas boilers still. Okay? If you want to go out and buy an electric car, unless you're a company director, it's fantastically expensive relative to a petrol car. We're talking about, you know, £10,000 plus difference. And that may not be much to people on higher incomes, but it sure matters to people on average incomes. 

Okay. on solar panels. Well, yes. If you work out the costs of installing solar panels, and I have a lot of them installed and you work out the payback period over that and you've got a household budget where you've got no savings and you're trying to pay the mortgage, you don't have that capital to do that, right? And then you look at your electricity bill and the truth is that a lot of your electricity bill, not all of it by any means, is made up of paying subsidies to these very technologies that are supposed to be so cheap.

Right now, it is true the gas price went up, but the gas price now is lower in real terms than it was before the COVID event. It's incredibly cheap once you take the inflation effect into account and it's falling in price. And for most of the public, they don't have the luxury of sitting around thinking like I might that you know- I'm not going to do this and I can afford to pay that etc etc. That's not their everyday experience. 

And that's why what should be happening according to these quote optimists who tell you this story about how it is all going to be cheaper, bills are going to fall etc. The reason bills are going to fall, if they are particularly for electricity, is because the gas price is going to fall right and gas is setting the prices in this frame.

So, it just isn't people's lived reality. And I would say for good reason because the story they've been told is not actually true. But I- you see- I think there is a danger that if you simply keep highlighting the downsides, the problems, the challenges. I'm not saying the challenges aren't real, but if a politician were to listen to this and to take your word as gospel, they probably wouldn't get out of bed and because it's it feels so sort of impossible and they might just start to focus on lesser problems and sort of, you know, get some lowhanging fruit and-did you did back in the day I think you were one of those when Tony Blair's government signed up to the EU renewables target., 

lots of your world said this is crazy, right? But it has been met. So I think sometimes politicians have to go against conventional wisdoms, go against they do have to give that bit of hope and optimism and it sometimes does mean setting out the big picture vision and then doing the hard work to get there. 

So what met quite a lot of that renewables target we're discussing Europe biomass things like DRA, right? What's the carbon footprint of that? Have you really thought through what the components of that framework are? Is that an argument for not doing it? 

No, I didn't say that at all. So, let me come to the second point. So, what would you have me do? I know it's true that we haven't made much progress and I've written about why we haven't made much progress, but I should shut up about that, not mention it, and pretend the progress has been excellent. I should go around telling people it's all going to be cheap. It's all much cheaper than fossil fuels

The prices are going to fall, you're going to run out and do this stuff, right? And what happens when it turns out that it isn't and people suddenly find that the story they've been told by politicians by many isn't actually true. 

Then what happens is the reaction is exactly what's going on across Europe now. We have a really nasty reaction which is anti- netzero policies, anti-green. We've got farmers on the streets supported by the public who are begging to keep cheap subsidized diesel and to maintain their pesticides and usage and have further subsidies and they have large support. 

We have populists all over the place. The AFD made progress in Germany. Why? Because they were against heat pumps because the people found them expensive and didn't want to be told to do this. 

Yeah. You know, the consequence of what I call, and forgive me for this, but the happy clappy approach to this is to say that when it turns out that people realize what the world is as opposed to what they've been told, they trust the politicians even less and you get these kinds of backlashes at the moment, which I think are incredibly dangerous for our climate, incredibly dangerous for a natural environment. That's why I come back to being realistic. 

Come in on this because I think you're on to something really interesting for a politics podcast. Of course part of the reason why I feel a emotional sympathy for Dieter is that my lived experience of course in Afghanistan and Iraq was I was the person saying this is all screwed. This isn't working. Look at the facts and figures and everybody was saying you can't say that. We've got to encourage the troops. We've got to encourage the public. We've got to keep being optimistic and hopeful. How are you going to motivate everyone? 

And I was trying to say like Dieter look, I think there are things we can do in Afghanistan. It's going to be much less than you assume it's going to be more difficult but the stuff we can do but don't talk this happy clapping language. And and I guess I I feel that it's a really important theme. 

I sort of slightly feel the same on immigration is that one of the reasons there's a populist backlash on immigration is that we weren't clear and straightforward enough about some of the challenges involved and that then means that people lose trust in us. I think this may be true for actually quite a lot of what we seem to promise in the '9s ands that politicians were too optimistic and when people discovered in general that they weren't delivering it- it's 

18.08

It's provided Trump and everyone the opportunity to say these guys are all a bunch of bullshitters and we shouldn't believe a word they say. 

I agree with Alistister on the following point. Okay. It's not enough to point out that what people are being told may not be correct. It is beholden to do the other side of the equation too, which is okay and I'm surprised you didn't put this question to me which is so what would you do right and I have a very clear view about what we should be doing about climate change and and how positively we could make a great deal more difference for what we're currently spending. And of course I think we should spend more on it beyond that point. 

A: Give us a sense of what Dieter Helm would be doing on the biggest issue facing humanity. How would you set about getting the world to a situation where we don't end up with runaway global warming? 

Dieter: A footnote is I think the destruction of biodiversity is at least as important a problem as climate change. We're in a really serious environmental mess in this century. Okay. So if it's on climate change, what I want to do is say that every penny that's spent ultimately by British consumers and British taxpayers in the UK is spent with the maximum return or benefit to addressing climate change. Okay. So my starting point is what can we do here which is most going to tilt the balance on that two degrees or whatever. So I start with what is the unique contribution we can make and we have two things at least two things going for us which virtually no one else has. We have a great site for offshore wind shallow waters near the coast well understood seabed etc and good wind flows. 

20.00

So, we should do offshore wind. And I'm very pleased we've done it. And I'm very pleased the costs are lower than I thought they were going to be, but they're not as low as people think they are. But it's a great thing. And we should experiment more. So, floating platforms, etc., so we can help other countries do this. The second thing is we are going to have to need some industrial sequestration and carbon capture and storage, putting the gas back underground. We've got empty gas wells, empty oil wells. We've got pipelines in place. The North Sea is shallow, well understood, and we've got supplies of carbon nearby. Best place in the world to try CCS. 

So do those two things and export that technology. Give it away anywhere in the world. That's next up is R&D. We're really good at some aspects of research. We're not that good at turning them into production. But when it comes to things like fusion power, when it comes to developing new materials for solar panels, all these things we're going to need, we're a great place to do it. 

But what you can't do is take a pot of jam, which is what we do, and spread it over everything. Give everybody a bit of money. Give everybody a spot. We're going to do absolutely everything. No, we've got a limited amount of resources. There's a limited amount the public are prepared to pay, are able to pay, can afford to pay. Let's spend that money in a way that has the maximum effect on global warming. And that's not what we're doing. And that's what I think is a big opportunity. And let's also phase out the carbon consumption that we're doing as opposed to simply pretending that we're the poster child of the world because we've de-industrialized. 

21.44

A: Carbon consumption is one of your big central ideas. And basically what you're saying is Europe pats itself on the back because it's not burning as much coal or oil as it used to. But what it's really done is we're all importing all our stuff from places like China anyway and they're burning coal a great deal or India's burning a lot of coal as well. And therefore, if you actually looked at your consumption footprint, you know, all the stuff in our houses, a lot of it made elsewhere, we need to be taxing that, right? And you seem to have an idea that what you do is you'd calculate how much carbon is embedded in each product. And if you imported, I don't know, some product from China that had a lot of carbon in it, you'd pay a huge tax. You put 70 80% tax on top. How would we ever get there? Because obviously if Britain started doing that and nobody else started doing that, consumers in Britain would be pretty cross. So presumably you'd have to coordinate that across the world. And why haven't you managed to do it given that the logic's there? Presumably every economist agrees. You've been talking about it since 1990. We're not there. So what's the problem? Why haven't we got there in 35 years? 

D: Well, let's put in context. So what I'm interested in is I don't think the top- down cop type process, you know, 90,000 people flying to Dubai or wherever it is they fly to or Azaban next is going to get there. I don't think in this 30 years the cops have made much difference. That makes me very distinct from what most other people think which think this is the way we're going to get there. Okay. 

What I think we have to do is recognize that people are going to do this unilaterally and then to build a bottom-up unilateral club of the willing. Okay. 

So when it comes to paying the same price for carbon embedded in imports as we would for the carbon embedded in say steel production in Lan Vern or not Lanurn port tool but now or wherever that's a kind of in my view no-brainer and we can impose a carbon border adjustment that basis now you might say well you know but the politics that's not going to work. Well hang on-

A: Because the prices will go up for consumers right?

D: Yes. for some things. Yes. And for a country like Britain where we're importing all this carbon, the reality will come home to roost. Okay. 

A: So coming home to roost- I'm sorry just just to be tough about this but the reality coming home to roost is that households would be paying a lot more for the basket of goods that they are accustomed to getting. Right. 

D: Be careful whether it's a lot more. But basically you can't get away from the fundamental fact that we are all living beyond our environmental means. That's why we have environmental crisis because we don't pay for the pollution we cause. We merily go on doing it because we'd rather pollute and let the next generation clean up the mess. Right? So, you can't have it both ways. If you don't want to pay for the pollution you cause, you want to go on in an unsustainable way. And as I put it in my latest book, you know, the legacy that we leave the next generation is that an unsustainable world will not be sustained. And that's what the two degrees or the three degrees is all about. 

Now on the carbon adjustment at the border, I advocated this point with colleagues in 2010, 2011, 2012. Okay, it's a decade later. The EU has imposed a carbon border adjustment. It started, okay, it's the recording year this year. We are now going to do the same. That is a coalition of about 29, 22, 23% of world of the world economy. If the United States were to join, we would get there because everybody else would realize it's a hell of a lot better to pay a carbon tax to their own government than pay it to HM Treasury. Cuz think of the practicality. The ship turns up in Southampton docks. It's full of steel from China. The customs official goes down to the boat and says to the captain, "Can I see your payment of the carbon border tax for the carbon in there?" They say, "Can I get out of it?" Yes, of course you can show us a certificate to show that you paid the carbon tax back in China. Okay. And the captain says, she says, you know,, okay, I'll I'll I'll go back to China and and and make sure they levy it. It's a no-brainer. The Chinese in such a world would levy a carbon tax domestically in order to avoid that tax being paid to the British government rather than themselves and everybody else. 

This is an example of a practical bit of politics which is working with the grain and saying let's build a unilateral coalition of the willing and actually do something about climate change. That's what I want to do and I think that's doable. And I'm delighted we're finally getting into the nitty-gritty of arguing exactly what this carbon border adjustment will be rather than pretending that we can just ignore imports, close port to close graange mouth, close the fertilizer industry, close the aluminium industry, pretend our emissions have fallen and we're the poster child of the world as the minister puts it and just happily let us absorb and benefit from pollution in China and elsewhere and pretend it's not our responsibility. That doesn't work. That's why we haven't achieved very much. 

***

N: Next up, November, we spoke with Mark Carney, who all of you, I'm sure, will know is currently the prime minister of Canada, but who previously had been governor of both the Bank of Canada and the Bank of England. And he is much more optimistic about the net zero transition, though we'll see maybe the next time we see him, we'll find him whether government is a harder place for that. But he makes an optimistic case for net zero transition. He argues that the vast amounts of money going into renewables will drive that transition and that nations should embrace it as a means to achieve economic independence. And that is a view of course profoundly challenged by his near neighbor, the president of the United States. Anyway, here's Mark Carney.

27.47

The politics of climate change. I mean, in some ways, I guess a bit like Alistister and me, you are a product of the optimistic world of the '90s and early 2000s. We're now in a very different age. Since 2014, we've been in an age of populism. And one of the big things that's becoming clear is that entrepreneurial politicians around the world are beginning to sense that the public is reluctant to take many of the steps required to address climate change. Partly because the earlier steps were kind of lowerhanging fruit and now the stuff is really hitting people in their fuel bills or through ultra low emission zones and that's causing a big big problem politically. How do you find a way of reconciling science, your technocratic instincts, your desire to clean up the environment with the raw brutal politics of the fact that politicians around the world, voters around the world are becoming extremely, I don't know, reluctant to to reach deep and take the economic pain to to make the climate change targets? 

28.40

Carney: Yeah, it's in many respects the question., and I'd say the following. First is I think it is important to underscore just how much progress is being made. And there's various ways to package that. Maybe we don't have time for me to do all that. But if back, you know, 7 8 years ago at Paris, the world was heading to3 and 1/2°. Today we're headed to.4°, but realistically it's probably sub 2 degrees given where momentum is on policy. I'll just give you one figure, and this isn't a retail point. I'll get to the retail points in a moment, but 5 years ago, the world spending $500 billion on clean energy. Okay, 900 billion on oil and gas, conventional, etc. a year. Last year,.2 trillion clean energy, 900 billion oil and gas. This year,.8 trillion clean energy, half of that on oil and gas, basically. So the spend on addressing the issue is going through the roof.

And it has almost unstoppable momentum. And these numbers and I could give you a slew of statistics in it around it, but the progress that's being made is much faster than people expected at Glasgow 2 years ago. It's much more impactful. It's much more economic. This is where the future is and the future is now. 

But let me get to the difficult question of the now, because you've got to hold the political consensus. You have to reinforce it. I think the first thing is you do need- I'm a big believer in mission, purpose, objective, and having that clear objective. And if you're Canada, I'm in Canada, you're appealing rightly to Pride. 

We have been an energy superpower. We are going to be a clean energy superpower. That is a core goal of the country. 

29.55

I think the second thing is you need to and you are both far more expert than this than I but you need to see things. I mean one of the things that struck me one of the lessons I learned over time is you see clearest when you see from the periphery, right. So when you go to people who policies affect- we talked about austerity earlier- you think about climate change and climate change policy. So who is being affected by the energy crisis in the UK right now, it's you know it's households up and down the countries households in the north northeast where the heating bills have been going through the roof you know tapped down by government intervention But they basically have a structure of housing that lays them exposed to this. And so the number one priority should be to address that. If I were to spend climate dollars in the UK, I would spend it on heat pumps. I would spend it on home retrofits. L you know, as Boris Johnson used to say, the UK is lagging on lagging. That's absolutely right. 

Q We don't- often we don't allow Boris Johnson was right statements on this podcast. Mark, I'm sorry. You'll have to rephrase that.

MC: Someone once said, someone once said that the- so going into that because you have to give as you know tangible results to people that this is part of the bigger mission and and we're talking you know 4 or 500 pounds a year of savings for people on their energy bill. I mean that's real money. Those are climate change committee points or calculations. And then the last thing and again you'll be better judged than I but I think part of what has to come here is this is about security. It is about geopolitical security obviously not being hostage to Putin not being hostage to large pro states whether they decide to pump oil. but it's about economic security. We've talked a lot about the future of this economy the UK economy. look this is the future. This is what- this is a fundamental driver of jobs competitiveness, exports growth and the UK has had a leadership position in this. It in my judgment absolutely should double down on that position because that is part of what's going to that's that's what's going to return some of the productivity that's been lost. 

33.15

Q: in this March interview with Caroline Lucas. and Caroline is the former leader of the Green Party. She's Zach Palansky's predecessor. We're looking at the tensions between economic growth and environmental sustainability. I am an unashamed enthusiast for Caroline Lucas. I think she's one of the most thoughtful, nuanced, intelligent commentators on this and she takes a much more radical view I think than almost any of our other guests because she essentially says that we need to challenge the whole idea of growth. She's with Kate Rowith. She thinks constant economic growth will destroy the planet. She says that Kia Starama's objective, which at that point was about having the fastest growing economy in the G7, was leading us down the right path and that the only way to try to deal with it is to completely change our minds about growth and therefore about what we can expect in terms of our living standards. Here she is-

Currently central to his vision is growth. You know, he says his number one objective is for Britain to be the fastest growing economy in the G7. That takes us onto something really important and interesting for the next, years because we've interviewed Kate Rowith on the show and this question of endless growth, you know, infinite growth with finite resources presumably central to your philosophy. Tell us a little bit about what you think about growth and the problems of growth and the way in which if you were prime minister, you'd be approaching the question of growth.

34.44

KR: Let me just reflect for a second on what an extraordinary objective that is for Kier Starmer to have set himself. How does that resonate with most people that we are the fastest growing country or or or whatever? I mean, you know, if he'd said, you know, your kids can get a decent education and we're going to transform housing so that everyone's got a roof over their heads, or if he'd talked about some of the fruits of economic prosperity, then perhaps people could get behind him. 

But the idea that GDP growth is by and of itself the objective, that is what I find so problematic 

[KE Blogger: Me too. Humans have to learn how to live in harmony with nature, stop trying to dominate it]

Because just knowing that you've got the fastest GDP doesn't tell you who's benefiting from it. It doesn't tell you who's getting it. It doesn't tell you how it's been caused. We know that a big pileup on the M5 is fantastic for GDP growth because everyone has to go out and spend money repairing their cars or buying new ones. 

So GDP growth as a main indicator of anything very much I think is well past its sell by date. So let's instead have a well-being economy. Let's measure things in terms of well-being.

Q: And the environmental costs. I mean where are you in relation to Kate R and the more radical critique which is that actually in the end we've got to stop having growth at all?

A: I don't think she quite I was listening to her the other the other the other day the great interview that she did with with you and and and I and I agree with her but I don't think I mean I remember you had this debate about whether she's agnostic about growth or whether she's anti-growth. I think what she's saying is don't make growth the be all and end all of your economic policy bit bit more than that I think I think she is a bit she's a bit more radical. She's saying there's planetary boundaries. I well I and basically she's saying she's saying our resources are finite and that if you actually multiply what% growth would be over years you're rapidly using up the finite resources and you're leaving other places like so so ultimately the logic of that has to be that a time comes when you stop growing and you start distributing more to poorer countries yeah the reason I'm sort of pushing back a bit on this idea of stopping growth is that it means it sounds as if everything just gets pickled in aspic tomorrow whereas Kate would say, as I would say, that some things need to grow. We need some massive growth in renewable energies, let's say. And if you're going to do that, then absolutely you need to stop growing in other places. So, I would say no more new roads, and while we're at it, let's not have any new airports. Thank you very much., but I I think the the framing of it all in terms of whether or not it's it's GDP growth doesn't really resonate with ordinary people and doesn't really tell us very much about whether or not the economy is is allowing people to have meaningful thriving lives on a planet that is not being destroyed. And the concern I have right now is and the one that she has is of course that our economic model right now is trashing the planet and isn't even in the process doing very much for the poorest people either because the people who are reaping the benefits of the kind of extractive economy that we have are the richest not the ones who actually need the resource. So I think it's slightly more complicated than than you say, but certainly I would be among those who would say that infinite growth on a planet of finite resources is not possible., and if you needed just any more kind of ways of looking at that, we need to decarbonize by by at the absolute latest. By, the global economy is due to be about three times the size that it is now. It is going to be hard enough to decarbonize an economy the size of the current global economy by. The idea we're going to be able to do it with one three times the size. However your heroic assumptions are about how much you can decouple energy use from from from output, it's not going to happen. It can't happen. So let's start preparing for it now and have a transition that is fair, that has workers at its heart, that makes sure that the the price for for that transition is not paid by the poorest people, but rather by those who can afford it. All of those things are the things we should be discussing now. 

Q:  Right now I guess it's time to hear from the politician given this is the rest is politics who is chiefly responsible in the UK government for this policy area and that's Ed Milliband who's the secretary of state for energy and net zero. and we talked to him about the huge political battle that now rages over climate policy and in particular the attempts by the populist right to turn the net zero transition into yet one more culture war. One of the things I'm really interested in on the politics of all this and populism and so forth is is how well how successfully the right the populist right have weaponized net zero. And I just wonder what your reflections were on that, whether you've got the right strategy for dealing with that or whether actually there is a sense that you're kind of on the back foot the whole time now. 

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EM: Absolutely not. We're not on the back foot and we're going to win the argument. So I'm in this odd position where I did the job before as climate change secretary under Gordon. Under Gordon you know introduced the climate change act started by my brother you know seen through by me worldleading act. 

So over the last 5 years, we've constructed an a a big argument around climate, which I think is the coalition building on the right argument, which is  a climate argument and also an energy security argument and a jobs and growth  argument. And I think what is really important is it's absolutely in Kier's DNA.  Indeed, he said the other day, it's in the DNA of the government. This is the route to secure energy, energy  independence. This is the route to lower bills. This is the route to the jobs of the future. And it's the route to  doing the right thing for future generations. And there's a really important thing here which is there is a  right-wing ecosystem that wants to say net zero is terrible. and that's not  where the public is. Talk to any of the pollsters and they say the same thing which is the the attempt to create a  successful culture war around net zero to undermine the government is not going  to work because it's not where the public is. 

Now, that isn't to say we don't need to be careful, and that's why allying the climate argument with the  security and bills argument is so important and the jobs argument is so important. But we absolutely can win and  are going to win this argument. 

Q: I wonder if you can reflect though on the way in which we talk about this and why people  feel anxious about it because it can be seen as part of that whole story of the  '90s and 2000s that you could group it with international development spend, interventions markets as being something where experts  had a very clear consensus. Everybody agreed everybody was doing the right thing. all the parties converged and  somehow the public began to become a little bit alienated and anxious.  What do you think made some people in the public feel a bit anxious? 

EM: But the thing is very I will sort of answer your question but just to be  really careful on the premise here because people are trying to persuade you of the premise that there is a big  net zero backlash out there and there just isn't the evidence for this. Yes, there is a political party [overlaping]  winning drill baby drill. Farage pushing net zero. Well, well, hang on. AFD. I mean, there's there's a lot of political  sense. Well, hang on a minute. I mean, different things going on. I'm talking about Britain here. 

Let's start with Britain. And my lesson, which I would  apply to Britain and apply elsewhere is if you say to people in order to tackle  the climate crisis, you an ordinary person suffering from the cost of living crisis going to have to pay thousands of  pounds more. It's not going to work. Right? But that's not our argument. 

And here's the two big things that have  changed since I was last climate change secretary. First, the situation has got far worse. The emergency has got far  worse. And it's really important to say that hottest years since, you know, extreme weather events all around  the world from Doncaster to California. But secondly, there's been this dramatic  thing that has happened which is the fall in the price of renewables. So it is now they're now cheaper than fossil  fuels not just for Britain but for two thirds of the world. Solar wind the  you know solar cost down 90%. Wind cost down 60%. And Russia Ukraine showing our  dependence on fossil fuels is what ruined family finances business finances and the public finances. And so what's  changed is you can ally the energy security bills argument as well as the jobs opportunity with climate today and  tomorrow. 

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Q: To be cheeky for a second, I would say that the way you're talking now is exactly the way Alistister would have wanted you to talk. You're  defending the record. You're not conceding the criticisms of the opposition. Yeah. I mean, one of the  reasons it's so strong is that you're not tempted to say, well, you know, we got a lot wrong about the way we used to  talk about climate change. There are lessons that we've learned and here's a new thing. You're saying absolutely unambiguous. In fact, you were refusing to  accept my premise that there was stuff that we got wrong.

EM: Look, [overlapping] I think it's a slightly different category of things we defending the  present. Well, I'm defending the present and the future. The other thing is we'll get on to TB and his intervention.  Should we should we read out the messages you sent to me when TB intervened at the net zero debate?  You're going to deny I don't know. 

Q:  Can I just explain this? So, and there'll be a lot of the two of you  explaining he didn't quite mean it, but so the Tony Blair Institute released a  report called the climate paradox. why we need to reset action on climate change. In the forward, Blair argued  that voters are noticing the credibility gap between being asked to make financial sacrifices and changes in  lifestyle whilst knowing that their impact on global emissions is minimal.  Blair also believes that limits to fossil fuels in the short term are doomed to failure- Cue, he didn't quite  mean that. It's been taken out of context and none of you disagree with Tony Blair. Over to you. [overlapping] I'll check it. I'll check it against the  text. Alistister and I had a spirited exchange on the day where we agreed actually. although you I then noticed  on the podcast you sort of said oh it's a I said it was a timing issue which was an extremely sort of you know a  chicken shit way out if I may say so. Look basically said what the f is he up to  now? Yeah. Okay. The report itself was he wrote forward the report. 

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EM: The report itself is perfectly  unobjectionable to say bot going  well he didn't quite say that. He just said there was a timin problem. the  report itself, look what's disappointing about Tony's forward and I have huge respect for Tony is I think it's  incredibly defeatist. which is not what Tony is. It's really defeatist because  to say that fossil fuels- well it sort of says we're not going to succeed and you know we're not going to achieve 1.5 and that the whole thing is  it's all it's all going badly. Let me just sort of give you some context to this. Right when I was climate change  secretary nobody mentioned the word net zero. I didn't know the term net zero  because our ambition was for 80% reductions in emissions by 2050, right?  Pre-Trump, but still a majority with 90% of the world was covered by net zero targets. 

Now it's something like well  it's a majority of the world, right? I was looking back because I'm an absolute bloody nerd at a document you both won't  be familiar with called the UNEP emissions gap report. We did an emergency. I'm sure we did  right in 2010. Actually preparing for this made me sort of think about this. They said that this is after the  Copenhagen climate summit which didn't go well. They said that the pathways  from Copenhagen through to imply temperature increase of between 2.5 to 5°. Right? We were heading for  potentially up to 5°. 

Now we are heading for something like 2 and 1/2 maybe 3°. Don't get me wrong, two and a half three degrees, very bad, but it's just not true to say the world hasn't made  progress. The world in its very difficult way through the multilateral process, which is kind of a nightmare,  you know, has made progress. India has a net zero target. China has a net zero target. The UK has a net zero target.  Now, you know, is China, India doing everything right? No. Is Britain doing everything right? We're trying to, but  you know, it's not true that the world isn't taking this seriously. Why? It's because of self-interest.  is self-interest and economic opportunity. They think they see the dangers of climate, what it's doing,  and they see that actually there is a path through. 

Q: To channel Tony Blair for a moment, right? I mean, surely he's  right. 

[From here to end, transcript continues unedited for readability as blogger ran out of energy.]

There is a kind of credibility gap between the changes in lifestyle that are being demanded with the fact  that actually, as he points out, the impact on global emissions of what you're doing is going to be minimal.  

EM: Well, okay, two points. One, I don't. I sort of don't like the phrase changes in lifestyle. We're going to have better  lives for people in the net zero world, right? The climate change committee in their seventh carbon budget  published earlier this year says that moving to net zero will cut people's energy bills by £700, will cut people's  motoring costs by £700. That's a better life for people. Warmer homes, tackling fuel poverty, green spaces, good jobs,  they're all good things about it. And secondly, I think you, if I may say so in that  question, are being far too defeist about Britain. We passed the climate change act, started by my brother,  completed by me. Countries around the were the first to do it. Countries around the world emulated us. Lots of  countries around the world. We've got this mission, clean power by. If we achieve that, and I'm absolutely  determined we do, other countries will say, "Look, look what Britain's been able to do. We can do that, too." So, so  let's not have a diminished view of Britain. We really matter in this. So many countries come to come to me and  say, "You've got a really important responsibility here." There's many, many other people that  we've interviewed which we'd love to refer you to. So, I'd love you to go on leading and listen to what Cristiana  says about this or indeed what what Bill Gates says about this issue. But we're going to finish with an interview with  Emma Pinchbeck because she is the chief executive, the CEO of the Climate Change Committee and the former CEO of Energy  UK. So she really is trying to hold the ring for UK policy and is talking about  why the UK needs to decarbonize as much as other nations that pollute more  aggressively. why the UK instead of getting caught on the fact that it's only let's say contributing% of global  warming needs to be more than doing its part in terms of global leadership and it would be wonderful to hear back from  listeners about who really won you over these are five very different voices are you won over by the views of Emma  Pinchback you're about to hear or Caroline Lucas on zero growth Mark Carney looking at private finance Ed  Milliban right there in the seat of government trying to do it as the secretary of state or diet helm with his  cold economic analysis of where he thinks we're going wrong in policy. Please tell us which of these five  voices appealed to you more. And here's Emma from the CCC. My final question I want to ask you, as  you know, you said a couple of times, you've got a young family and I know people who have have been putting off  having children in part because they're absolutely terrified about about climate change.

50.00

you know, the question, can you really  bring children into a world that feels like it's sort of burning to hell? On a sort of to scale, where one is  honestly sleep easy at night, nothing to worry about, it's all going to be fine, and is we're doomed. , where are you most days of the week? I  think that there is a lot to be concerned  about with climate change and I think the public know that. I think it's really important we don't patronize people into the idea that the British  public don't understand that climate change is happening or that the global population don't. We're all seeing and feeling and experiencing it. And we've  just put out our climate adaptation report in the UK, which says something like a quarter of UK households might be  affected by flooding in a world where we don't tackle climate change, where we'll have potentially  tens of thousands of people dying in extreme heat waves by. That there are real impacts to this that we will  all experience more human populations moving, less stability in food, less  stability in energy systems, just a less stable world. And of course I thought about that before having the children.  But for the last 5 years of my life, I've been working in the private sector  with companies who are investing in the alternative. And those companies care  about the environment for all the reasons I just mentioned. But they also can see where the economics of energy  are going. And I am very confident that we're moving into an age of electricity.  And because the economic signals are there, that gives me hope that even when the politics around climate change vary,  we will continue to decarbonize. Now, the speed is the thing and that is what  government needs to do is set the framework for this change to continue to happen. But in as much as there are  sometimes reasons to be worried, there are also very clear reasons to hope. And I suppose on the  day that I decided to have my children, it was the day where I was feeling particularly hopeful.  And my final question, which I guess is probably one you get too much, but  the anxiety is we decarbonize in the UK. In other words, we we don't pump as much  carbon into the atmosphere from the UK, but we continue to consume huge amounts,  you know, our clothes, our toys, everything which are produced in other people's countries who are pumping  carbon into the air. you we buy the stuff from China. So in terms of our carbon footprint, it remains really  really high. And so I guess the anxiety would be from a UK only point of view,  all we're doing is getting rid of our own industry, but continuing to support carbon polluting industries and other  countries through our buying patterns. And then the second point, which I guess is Alistister's bigger point, which is  we're a drop in the bucket. And unless there's a a big international carbon  pricing scheme that really has big ratchet mechanisms on carbon consumption  that takes in China, the US, India, you know, you could meet all your targets  and it wouldn't have any effect on climate change. A few things in that. Firstly, I I  checked before I came to do this, but our consumption emissions in are down. And of course a lot of our  consumption emissions from trade come from Europe which has a carbon price and a net zero target. So in terms of our  own imports they will be decarbonizing over time. China of course looks like its emissions will peak and then start  declining in thes because of the investments they're making far more than the rest of the world into renewables  and into things like electric vehicles and and clean technologies. So, China, no question, is a key economy in  decarbonizing the globe and has moved ahead and watching it is important, but I would expect to see our consumption  emissions come down as those economies change too. There's a thing in this  about why don't we talk more about lifestyle change and resource management more generally and it comes back to the  mandate of the climate change committee which is our job is to show that it is possible inside the existing economic  framework to do this that you can do it and grow GDP you can do it and have your  manufacturing GVA increase you can do it and keep the way that we live pretty  similar so you'll still have a warm home you'll still drive a car but those technologies will change there is some  necessary behavior change in our analysis. But again, it's driven by choice rather than just forcing people  to do things. And generally speaking, especially in an age when people are tired, when the economy has been challenging, when you've got more  children that wake you up at night, I think the idea that you can put the emphasis on individual change rather  than system change and the energy transition is probably not what I would stake decarbonizing and looking after  the planet on. And then lastly, why should we when emissions are small?  Well, something like a quarter of global emissions come from countries where their national impact is about% of  those global emissions. We are all in it together and we all need to do our bit and that is behind the international  framework on climate action. The idea that we all do our part and industrialized economies that have more  resources go first and invest in these technologies early. And I suppose I  often think about this again in relation to what it's like to parent a three-year-old in that you don't there's  a kind of moral thing here in that if you can see the right thing to do, you don't go for the lowest common denominator. I don't say he can like  poke his sister in the eye so long as his friends are doing it. I say poking your sister in the eye is just the wrong  thing to do. So we're not going to do it. And we know that climate change is a problem. The public knows that. In poll  after poll after poll after poll, they tell us they want politicians to do more. But they do want it to be fair.  They do want it to be straightforward. They want to be able to do it whilst living their lives straightforwardly.  And they want clarity from government about what they're being asked to do. So  I think there is actually a very simple if long answer to the thing that I get asked all the time is why should we try?  And very lastly, I think I said this when I did question time with Alistister. This is a challenging decade for the  energy transition because there's more competition and there's global supply chains and there's the kind of condition in global markets we've all talked  about. But ultimately the energy transition is going in one direction. If you care about growth in the future of the economy are going to have to adopt  electric technologies and get on board with cheap electricity. And the countries that do that early, which China and others certainly have moved to  do, will get the most industrial benefits. That's what happens in economic revolutions, we are in one of those moments now. So whether you care  about climate change or not, whether you call it call it industrial policy or social policy or your energy policy,  fine. But you are going to end up doing a lot of the things that we're proposing that you do in order to meet the UK's carbon budgets.  Good. Well, thank you. Thanks for your time. And I think you did say that. You did. I remember it. The the world  felt a bit more optimistic then though. This issue felt possibly I possibly. But equally, Alistister,  the technologies have continued to improve, right? So we've harved the costs of achieving net zero between the  last time we invited government which was around that time and now because the technologies have continued to improve  regardless of what's happening in the politics. Yeah. Well, listen, I hope you enjoyed that.  As Rory said earlier, there are plenty more interviews where we've talked about climate and net zero transition and you can check those out, but these are the  ones that we thought were worth bringing together in this special episode. So, I hope you enjoyed it. See you soon.  All From The Rest Is Politics: Leading Podcasts https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FIyqBnuTnOs
[KE: Everything scientists predicted about global warming/ climate change since the 1970s is coming true, only faster]