The Guardian Australia

The Guardian view on the Tory energy rebellion: get rid of the onshore wind ban

- Editorial

The lesson from the parable of onshore wind is that Rishi Sunak lacks authority, credibilit­y or identifiab­le policies in key areas. He appears to have few core beliefs that he is willing to stand up for, and looks increasing­ly vulnerable to determined groups of rebels on his own backbenche­s. By backing down over an effective ban on land-based windmills, he has U-turned twice in less than a week on the levelling up and regenerati­on bill. Last Tuesday’s volte-face came after dozens of Tory MPs threatened to defy him over housebuild­ing targets. His reversal over wind power on Monday came after his predecesso­rs Boris Johnson and Liz Truss united against him.

The block on building land-based windfarms in England is absurd. Wind is bringing down the cost of bills as UK households face the biggest cost of living rise in a generation. It helps reduce carbon emissions and dependence on foreign energy imports. Polling suggests onshore wind turbines to be popular with the general public – with no loss in support from those living close to the whoosh of the blade. Yet during the Tory leadership election campaign in the summer, which he lost to Ms Truss, Mr Sunak pledged to keep the ban on onshore windfarms because of the “distress and disruption” they could cause to local residents. Mr Sunak’s policy then was about telling the mostly elderly, southern, male Tory party members what they wanted to hear. YouGov in July suggested only 4% of them thought net zero should be a priority.

Once in office, and facing a revolt of cabinet ministers as well as backbenche­rs, Mr Sunak has decided to relax the ban – but not by much. The prime minister seems likely to install a restrictiv­e planning regime that risks blocking green energy developmen­ts and keeping bills high. The onshore windfarm ban survives somewhat intact because of the vexed politics of the English right. Conservati­ve activists and Tory MPs are concerned

about being outflanked by rightwing populists who trade in climate denialism and are attached to a turbinefre­e landscape. This anxiety is heightened by reports that Nigel Farage, who is agitating for a referendum on net zero, is eyeing up a return to frontline politics.

With Mr Sunak in charge, Britain ends up in hock to his party’s worst instincts. Labour’s Ed Miliband is right to call for the scrapping of the onshore wind ban completely. The country has suffered because successive Conservati­ve government­s have “cut the green crap” over the past decade. An analysis by Carbon Brief shows that almost all of the energy requiremen­t from the UK’s net import of Russian gas in 2021 could have been met if the country had continued to add land-based wind turbines at historical rates. The problem with Mr Sunak is that he does not have an agenda that chimes with British public opinion. The prime minister’s strategy is to muddle through and hope for the best. Britain is in the midst of multiple crises. Mr Sunak has only been in Downing Street for a month but he has already exposed how that approach has reached its limits at the heart of government.

 ?? Photograph: Nathan Stirk/Getty Images ?? The view of Frodsham wind farm from Helsby Hill in Helsby, Cheshire.
Photograph: Nathan Stirk/Getty Images The view of Frodsham wind farm from Helsby Hill in Helsby, Cheshire.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia