Phasing out fossil fuels ‘doomed to fail’, says Tony Blair as he calls for rethink of net zero policy – UK politics live

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Blair calls for ‘reset’ in net zero policy, saying voters won’t make sacrifices if they think impact on emissions minimal

Jessica Elgot

Jessica Elgot is the Guardian’s deputy political editor.

Tony Blair has called for a “reset” of action on climate change, to the dismay of some green campaigners, suggesting the government should focus less on renewables and more on technological solutions like carbon capture.

In remarks that have antagonised some in Labour and in industry, the former prime minister said people were “being asked to make financial sacrifices and changes in lifestyle when they know that their impact on global emissions is minimal”.

Blair, who was writing the foreword to a new report from his thinktank, the Tony Blair Institute, echoed similar criticism of net zero made by the Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch. He wrote “any strategy based on either ‘phasing out’ fossil fuels in the short term or limiting consumption is a strategy doomed to fail.”

The former Labour leader, whose institute has been highly influential in Labour circles, said that the current climate debate was “riven with irrationality” and suggested net zero was losing public support.

The paper itself, written by the TBI’s Lindy Fursman, said that net zero policies were now being seen as “increasingly viewed as unaffordable, ineffective, or politically toxic”.

In the UK however, climate change policies have retained popularity. The thinktank Persuasion UK said in a report published yesterday that Labour could potentially lose far more seats from disillusioned leftwing Labour voters defecting to the Greens than from those defecting to Reform.

Last week Keir Starmer told conference in London that tackling the climate crisis and bolstering energy security were “in the DNA of my government” and that “we won’t wait – we will accelerate.”

But Blair said that present policy solutions were “inadequate” and said leaders should shift towards a “pragmatic policy” that prioritised technological solutions. He said this was borne out by rising demand for production of fossil fuels, especially in China and India and the doubling of airline travel plus increased demand for steel and cement.

He said he still believed climate was “one of the fundamental challenges of our time” and that renewable energy was necessary. But he said the government needs “to alter where we put our focus”.

Blair said there should be more focus on carbon capture, saying: “The disdain for this technology in favour of the purist solution of stopping fossil-fuel production is totally misguided.” He also called for a major new international embrace of nuclear power and to intensify work on new small modular reactors.

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Badenoch says Spanish power cuts probably partly caused by reliance on renewables – as No 10 says these claims ‘unfounded’

Downing Street has said suggestions that a reliance on renewable energy contributed to blackouts in Spain are “unfounded claims and speculation”.

Echoing a theory promoted prominently by the Daily Telegraph in its splash story on the power cuts in Spain and Portugal, Kemi Badenoch said she thought it was likely that having a grid reliant on renewable energy was a factory.

She told journalists:

I’ve heard different theories about what’s happened.

Some have said that it’s cyberterrorism, but the more likely issue is the grid – that when you have an electricity supply that’s reliant on renewables, you need a lot of battery storage. And quite often, what we’re seeing is renewables running ahead of the storage facilities, which means that when you have surges one way or another, you end up with blackouts.

And this is one of the reasons why I’ve been saying that the net zero plans we have are not thought through.

But Dowing Street said these were “unfounded claims”. At the afternoon lobby briefing, asked about the theory that there was a renewable energy link to the power cuts, a No 10 spokesperson said:

In terms of the claims of reliance on net zero energy leaving countries affected vulnerable to power cuts, these are unfounded claims and speculation at this stage.

It is too early to confirm the exact cause of the incident, and the priority has obviously been the restoration of power.

Switching fossil fuelled generation for home grown, clean energy from renewables and other clean technologies offers us security, electricity supply that fossil fuels simply cannot provide.

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