Leadwasp
Well-Known Member
The problem is that energy, energy reserves and therefore accessible energy reserves are of vital strategic importance to the UK. However we refuse to let these be developed and would rather rely on imported gas and coal or the resultant electricity over electric string from Europe. Our generating capacity is also lagging. Our power stations are ageing. Very little renewable energy is UK owned - for example most of the money in tidal is not UK investment. Our refinery capacity is reducing too - look at the situation on the Thames. If the Suez canal goes courtesy of the fallout of the Arab spring then suddenly all our gas imports into Milford Haven suddenly leap in cost. Putin controls Nordstream, Blue Stream and South Stream (condolences to Turkey). China is buying into the North Sea and now the nation with the crappiest quality record is building nuclear power stations for us. That really is supping with the Devil. Need I say more.
Ultimately you can only generate wealth through the 4 primary industries (fishing, farming, mining or forestry) yet we live in a country where people are more motivated to hold a sit-in in Sussex over a technology - fracking - that they don't understand rather than employ their energies in keeping the incubators going in Great Ormond Street. As an example I live in a National Park where the authority is proud (PROUD) of the fact that the area hasn't allowed any new mineral extraction for over 20, possibly 40, years!!
Coal is too expensive in the UK and any unionised industry is pretty screwed over costs to start with. Chinese miners are cheap and don't often sue when they get squashed. However the national importance of deep coal technology in the 21st century IS now more relevant than perhaps it was a generation ago. Not only will we lose the skills to mine it but also the support infrastructure and industry too. Yet most importantly those reserves which have been developed but not extracted will be denied to future generations because of ground collapse. It is highly unlikely that these areas could be safely mined again - the same is true of any coal mine that is abandoned. So perhaps it is of national strategic interest that mines are put into care and maintenance literally as a matter of national survival. Some things go beyond corporate economics and into those of survival. We've forgotten where our wealth and security comes from, we just move other people's money around now and they might choose to bank elsewhere..
Ultimately you can only generate wealth through the 4 primary industries (fishing, farming, mining or forestry) yet we live in a country where people are more motivated to hold a sit-in in Sussex over a technology - fracking - that they don't understand rather than employ their energies in keeping the incubators going in Great Ormond Street. As an example I live in a National Park where the authority is proud (PROUD) of the fact that the area hasn't allowed any new mineral extraction for over 20, possibly 40, years!!
Coal is too expensive in the UK and any unionised industry is pretty screwed over costs to start with. Chinese miners are cheap and don't often sue when they get squashed. However the national importance of deep coal technology in the 21st century IS now more relevant than perhaps it was a generation ago. Not only will we lose the skills to mine it but also the support infrastructure and industry too. Yet most importantly those reserves which have been developed but not extracted will be denied to future generations because of ground collapse. It is highly unlikely that these areas could be safely mined again - the same is true of any coal mine that is abandoned. So perhaps it is of national strategic interest that mines are put into care and maintenance literally as a matter of national survival. Some things go beyond corporate economics and into those of survival. We've forgotten where our wealth and security comes from, we just move other people's money around now and they might choose to bank elsewhere..