So far, the year 2023 has done its upmost to prove that the catastrophic climate crisis is the new normal. This has manifested in the form of devastating wildfires, boiling seas, and record lows of Antarctic sea ice. Despite this, Rishi Sunak has vowed (threatened?) to “max out” our oil and gas reserves – even though fossil fuels are one of the primary causes of the ongoing catastrophe.
While Labour has criticised Sunak’s plan to suck as much death-juice out of the Earth as possible, Keir Starmer has also said the party will continue sucking it up when it’s in power – i.e., it won’t revoke any of the 100+ North Sea licences that the PM plans to issue. Given this complete lack of political opposition to the climate apocalypse, it’s understandable why people like Chris Packham are taking a stand:
Westminster are playing politics with life on earth .
We need to shout above the noise – Download , Print , Post from https://t.co/3TQerKK1Al#NoNewOil pic.twitter.com/vYe2VSooti
— Chris Packham (@ChrisGPackham) August 5, 2023
However, it’s arguable that the ambitions of this campaign don’t go anywhere near far enough.
Chris Packham: no ‘new’ oil?
If the above image isn’t clear, the flyers read:
WARNING
[POLITICAL PARTY NAME]
if you do not include an unambiguous
assertion that you will not
sanction any future licencing of
OIL AND GAS
and immediately cease subsidies to
OIL AND GAS
companies in your manifesto
YOU WILL NOT GET MY VOTE
The obvious problem is that these manifestos will almost certainly be written after Sunak’s 100+ licences are issued – i.e., Labour could promise no ‘future’ licences without promising to revoke any. Given that, it’s unclear why Packham has adopted a position which would allow for catastrophic climate change to continue at the current pace. The No New Oil site isn’t much clearer on this, with this being all it has to say:
This week the Conservative government, our elected leaders, approved the licensing of 100 new oil and gas fields. Westminster is focused on votes over the biggest crisis to ever face humanity. But we, the people, hold the power with our votes.
This is a warning to our current and potential future political leaders – we won’t vote for new oil and gas. The ballot box is our voice and louder than ever we are calling for no new fossil fuels.
This is a call to action – use your voice, use your vote. Print the posters, post them far and wide. We, the people, vote for the long-term survival of ourselves and future generations, not for short-term political gain.
The oil party is over.
Hopefully the movement will come up with a clearer stance between now and the sky catching fire.
Greenpeace joins Packham: #NoNewOil
Greenpeace is also using the #NoNewOil hashtag, like Packham. However, the group is it least being clear that the 100+ new licences cannot happen full stop:
The companies that own the oil and gas will export most of it overseas and any that is sold back to us will be done so at the international market price.
— Greenpeace UK (@GreenpeaceUK) August 5, 2023
As we’ve seen so clearly over the last year, the fossil fuel market is really volatile.
It makes no difference whatsoever if we develop more domestic oil and gas or not, because the private companies who own it will simply sell it at the prevailing international market price.
— Greenpeace UK (@GreenpeaceUK) August 5, 2023
The only ones who will win from this are the oil companies.
It’s time for Sunak to choose between big oil’s profits or our future on a habitable planet.
— Greenpeace UK (@GreenpeaceUK) August 5, 2023
There are 649 UK onshore wind and solar projects which already have planning permission. If they all went ahead, they’d save more gas than we used to import from Russia.https://t.co/3eJd5xUA56
— Greenpeace UK (@GreenpeaceUK) August 5, 2023
It’s clear that politicians won’t step up unless we make them.
Elections remain one of our best chances to hold them to account.
It's time to demand better. Join us by signing this open letter to all party leaders
Join us >> https://t.co/hAJb18nQa0
— Greenpeace UK (@GreenpeaceUK) August 5, 2023
Greenpeace’s open letter, however, isn’t significantly better – stating:
Fossil fuels need to become a thing of the past. That means no new oil and gas and no more unjust profits for fossil fuel bosses. The biggest polluters must be taxed for the destruction they’re causing to our planet. And workers in polluting industries must be supported into good green jobs.
As Greenpeace UK noted, these oil and gas licences are held by private companies, so none of this would stop them from extracting as much as they like and selling it to whoever stumps up the cash. It might technically be illegal to revoke these licences once they’re issued, but given that there’ll be no one left to put on trial should we continue extracting fossil fuels, who cares?
Sunak’s (self) interests
An important point to factor into this story is that renewables have actually been reliably cheaper than gas, and the government predicts this situation will persist:
NEW
The UK government has just quietly published estimates showing wind and solar will be several times cheaper than gas, for the foreseeable future
A few senior cabinet members (& a large section of the media) might like to take a look?
THREAD with charts + caveats pic.twitter.com/8CVFuap3pX
— Simon Evans is on holiday (@DrSimEvans) August 4, 2023
An equally important bit of information is this:
A reminder that none of this is currently declared in Rishi Sunak's register of ministerial interests because he doesn't deem it "relevant" https://t.co/JFnLaAryUR
— Adam Bienkov (@AdamBienkov) July 31, 2023
This highlights what’s obvious to us all already – that the fossil fuel industry is a pyramid scheme designed to enrich a handful of billionaires while the rest of us choke.
Preventing the expansion of oil extraction is something, but it’s not enough. We salute Chris Packham – but also say ‘please go further’. If we’re going to hold our politicians’ feet to the fire, it should really be to the fire that’s already raging – not some smaller fire from the future that will barely be noticeable in the inferno that current emissions have whipped up.
Featured image via Chris Packham – screengrab