The Scotsman

Thatcher’s ghost haunts Green movement

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The end of Bifab feels like the return of Thatcher. A flashback to a darker time when the very breath of Scotland’ s beating industrial body was choked out of us. Factory closure followed factory c losure and the sheer weight of industrial collapse crushed all opposition. Back then it was the free market, now it’s the Green movement. Pious principle may have replaced price as the catalyst for change but the impact on working-class communitie­s is the same.

As Fifers have discovered, the global green marketplac­e is no friendlier to the worker than the carbon economy before. At least when the mining industry expired and power privatisat­ion arrived, severance payments were made with pensions topped up. I suspect that many of the modern redundancy terms would’ve made even Maggie blush.

Where are the pay-packets coming from for the new electric cars, replacemen­t gas boilers and soaring electricit­y costs? We can’t all work as Green lobbyists or government bureaucrat­s. A golden Saudi Arabian dawn of wind energy was promised but all the Fife workers tasted was sand kicked in their faces.

It’s no better across the river Forth in East Lothian, where this Green reign of terror will deliver three monster substation­s to connect the wind farms to the grid. Rendering once productive land useless and threatenin­g the last great hope of a modern Cruise/ferry terminal.

The blind faith race to wind power has no pause for thought as it transforms Scotland into one giant pin cushion. However, more than a voodoo doll is needed to ward off a dramatic fall in sustainabl­e base load: just one long cold wind less winter will bring this country to its knees.

A reboot of our thinking on clean/reliable/safe electricit­y production would lead logically to the commission­ing of both Torn es sB and Hunters ton C. An industrial strategy, if we had one, would identify nuclear power as the forgotten means to securing high-tech Scottish jobs and apprentice­ships in the future.

CALUM MILLER Polwarth Terrace, Prestonpan­s

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