The Guardian (USA)

C02 crisis makes a mockery of ‘global Britain’

- Letters

Reading your report, I find myself becoming ever more despondent at the inability of the UK to influence – let alone control – its own future (Why is the UK bailing out US CO2 supplier CF Fertiliser­s?, 22 September).

Boris Johnson, Liz Truss and other government incompeten­ts bang on about “global Britain”, but this phrase is both meaningles­s and misleading. The reality is that the various current crises are caused by Britain selling its most valuable assets to the rest of the world: CF Fertiliser­s is American, four of the big six energy companies are foreignown­ed and GlaxoSmith­Kline is under pressure because its main shareholde­r is a US investment management company. The list of foreign ownership is a long one that includes much of our manufactur­ing, energy and retail base.

When a country loses control of what goes on at home, the chances of having influence globally is nigh on impossible. No wonder John Crace points out that “on the other side of the Atlantic [Johnson] is pretty much a nobody” (Politics sketch, 22 September). Alistair WoodOswest­ry, Shropshire

• So a private company decides to hold the country to ransom and stop production of essential CO2. I must have missed the rightwing media’s response of moral outrage. Instead, the British taxpayer will bail out the company for the next three weeks and pay the costs of production. Whatever happened to the Tory mantra of “let the market decide”? Gary Nethercott-Woodbridge, Suffolk

• Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Pleaseemai­lus your letter and it will be considered for publicatio­n.

 ?? ?? The US-owned CF Fertiliser­s plant in Cheshire. Photograph: Christophe­r Thomond/The Guardian
The US-owned CF Fertiliser­s plant in Cheshire. Photograph: Christophe­r Thomond/The Guardian

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