Green energy plan 'will force more families into fuel poverty
- added June 15, 2008
- 76 responses
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- mjsmith11
- added this
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By James Kirkup and Paul Ecclestone
More families will be driven into fuel poverty as a push to generate more electricity from "green" sources like wind, wave and solar power sharply increases household fuel bills, the Government has said.
Electricity bills could rise by 13 per cent and gas prices could go up by as much as 37 per cent as consumers are made to pay more to subsidise green energy production, ministers said in a new Renewable Energy Strategy.
The move away from fossil fuels is likely to cause an increase in energy bills
At current levels, green tariffs make up around 14 per cent of average domestic electricity bills and 3 per cent of average gas bills.
Those tariffs will have to increase as ministers bid to wean Britain off fossil fuels like oil, gas and coal.
"Our policies to encourage renewable energy deployment in line with our 2020 goals will add further to energy bills," the strategy paper says. "Reflecting some of the costs of tackling climate change through energy prices means that prices more closely reflect the true social, economic and environmental costs of climate change."
By 2020, the document estimates that the full raft of new green energy proposals could increase domestic electricity bills by between 10 per cent and 13 per cent.
Gas bills could rise by 18 per cent to 37 per cent. Petrol prices could go up by 4 per cent. Campaigners say that 4 million households are currently in fuel poverty, having to spend 10 per cent or more of their total income on electricity and gas.
The Renewable Energy Strategy says: "It is likely that the measures we need to use to increase renewable energy will add to the challenges we face in combating fuel poverty."
Government officials said that the fuel bill increases were based on the assumption that world oil prices will average around $70, roughly half their current level.
Were oil prices to stay above that level, the added cost of green energy would be smaller, because of the savings involved in cutting oil use.
John Hutton, the Industry Secretary, said the fuel bill increases were "reasonable and modest" while the cost of doing nothing to cut greenhouse gas emissions would be high.
"Is the era of cheap energy over? We all know it is, and that presents us with some pretty stark choices we have to make," he said. "This is the time to make a decisive shift to a low-carbon economy."
Alan Duncan, the Conservative shadow business secretary, endorsed the Government's plan, but said ministers should go further.
He said: "After a series of painful and reluctant U-turns, it seems like the Government is at last coming round to our vision of a greener Britain."
The shift to green power will mean 7,000 more wind turbines being built -often in the face of local opposition - across the countryside and around the coastline.
The renewable energy strategy was presented by Gordon Brown, who pledged to break Britain's dependence on oil and to convert the country to a greener way of life.
The Prime Minister said the government's commitment to a target of producing 15 per cent of the country's energy from renewable sources by 2020 amounted to a green revolution in the making.
"It will be the most dramatic change in our energy policy since the advent of nuclear power," he told an energy conference in London.
Meeting the 15 per cent target will cost the UK economy between £5 billion and £6 billion a year, according to Mr Hutton's department.
The Government published its energy strategy as Lord Stern, the former Treasury economist who called on the world to spend 1 per cent of its wealth fighting climate change said the price of averting environmental disaster had now doubled to 2 per cent.
More families will be driven into fuel poverty as a push to generate more electricity from "green" sources like wind, wave and solar power sharply increases household fuel bills, the Government has said.
Electricity bills could rise by 13 per cent and gas prices could go up by as much as 37 per cent as consumers are made to pay more to subsidise green energy production, ministers said in a new Renewable Energy Strategy.
The move away from fossil fuels is likely to cause an increase in energy bills
At current levels, green tariffs make up around 14 per cent of average domestic electricity bills and 3 per cent of average gas bills.
Those tariffs will have to increase as ministers bid to wean Britain off fossil fuels like oil, gas and coal.
"Our policies to encourage renewable energy deployment in line with our 2020 goals will add further to energy bills," the strategy paper says. "Reflecting some of the costs of tackling climate change through energy prices means that prices more closely reflect the true social, economic and environmental costs of climate change."
By 2020, the document estimates that the full raft of new green energy proposals could increase domestic electricity bills by between 10 per cent and 13 per cent.
Gas bills could rise by 18 per cent to 37 per cent. Petrol prices could go up by 4 per cent. Campaigners say that 4 million households are currently in fuel poverty, having to spend 10 per cent or more of their total income on electricity and gas.
The Renewable Energy Strategy says: "It is likely that the measures we need to use to increase renewable energy will add to the challenges we face in combating fuel poverty."
Government officials said that the fuel bill increases were based on the assumption that world oil prices will average around $70, roughly half their current level.
Were oil prices to stay above that level, the added cost of green energy would be smaller, because of the savings involved in cutting oil use.
John Hutton, the Industry Secretary, said the fuel bill increases were "reasonable and modest" while the cost of doing nothing to cut greenhouse gas emissions would be high.
"Is the era of cheap energy over? We all know it is, and that presents us with some pretty stark choices we have to make," he said. "This is the time to make a decisive shift to a low-carbon economy."
Alan Duncan, the Conservative shadow business secretary, endorsed the Government's plan, but said ministers should go further.
He said: "After a series of painful and reluctant U-turns, it seems like the Government is at last coming round to our vision of a greener Britain."
The shift to green power will mean 7,000 more wind turbines being built -often in the face of local opposition - across the countryside and around the coastline.
The renewable energy strategy was presented by Gordon Brown, who pledged to break Britain's dependence on oil and to convert the country to a greener way of life.
The Prime Minister said the government's commitment to a target of producing 15 per cent of the country's energy from renewable sources by 2020 amounted to a green revolution in the making.
"It will be the most dramatic change in our energy policy since the advent of nuclear power," he told an energy conference in London.
Meeting the 15 per cent target will cost the UK economy between £5 billion and £6 billion a year, according to Mr Hutton's department.
The Government published its energy strategy as Lord Stern, the former Treasury economist who called on the world to spend 1 per cent of its wealth fighting climate change said the price of averting environmental disaster had now doubled to 2 per cent.
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While our prison system is overcrowded with non-violent drug offenders, legal drugs are doing greater harm. I am against drug abuse. I also feel that we need to have drug laws that protect us, not kill us. While prohibiting some drugs in the name of public safety and allowing the drugs that are doing the greater harm to be distributued is wrong. If drug dealers have to go to prison, so should doctors who prescribe drugs that are abused. Alcohol and tobacco do the most harm.
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MJSMITH11 - First off, don't be a moron. Why should doctors even be classified in the same category as drug dealers? There are people in this world, like myself, who need pain killers due to surgical reasons...it isn't the doctor's fault that there are idiots in this world who decide to use those pills to get high. Also, Florida is the same state, if you remember correctly, that hired a terrorist-linked *professor* at one of their colleges some years back, and also screwed up the first Bush election and gave us a retard for a President..so forgive if I don't believe any "statistical information" that comes out of Florida.
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- poeticdreams1281
- 2 months ago
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I don't think anyone will argue that other legald drugs, namely Alcohol and Ciggarettes kill more people than the illegal ones. If they do they are morons.
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- SilenceNoMore
- 2 months ago
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notice ECSTASY and HALLUCINOGENS missing, yest, they lead to about 1 death a year. funny how the "funnest" substances are also the "safest". ya, whatever!
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- Wessagusset_Oracle
- 2 months ago
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Visit http://www.askapatient.com/rateyourmedicine.htm to see patient reports on drugs side effects. Remember that it is common to use many of these drugs at the same time.
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- CarolynGillis
- 2 months ago
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tes..tes.. America is so backwards
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- lukeskywalker
- 2 months ago
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no surprise there, its a lot easier to get your hands on those drugs and for a lot cheaper than the hard shit. people don't think most opiates are that bad and don't consider them hard drugs.
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They are stating the obvious. Ironic how pharmaceuticals profit off of sick and dying people, while killing more Americans than the drugs they try to keep out of the streets. The only difference between the two drugs are, one can be made at home and sold for without paying taxes to the government, and one can only be made and regulated by the government. They don't care about you, they just want more money. The more diseases the government can spread in America, the more they profit.
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- cerealforeal
- 2 months ago
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This is a cool blog from the BBC about the difference in advertising standards between the US and Europe.
It's illegal to advertise prescription drugs in nearly every country in the world apart from America. -
Ask your dealer if marijuana & cocaine is right for you.
mjsmith wrote: "If drug dealers have to go to prison, so should doctors who prescribe drugs that are abused."
LOL! What about personal responsibility? The article and findings are interesting, but it sounds like you want more and more laws that strip us of our choices for health care and even illegal organic medicines as well.
If people abuse legal or illegal drugs, it's not your or my problem. It's theirs!
The message of this article by mjsmith sounds an awfully lot like an NA (Narcotics Anonymous) meeting.
Me thinks thou doth protest too much??? -
However, a majority of those prescription drug deaths were suicides or accidental.
Since legal drugs are easier to obtain, deaths by them are more prominent. -
I live in Florida. I also go to a pain management doctor once a month for a handful of morphine pills for my knee pain, Thanks to 30 mg of morphine a day I can work full time, exercise, and have a normal life.
Yet, I live in fear.
Florida is the state that prosecuted a man in a wheelchair because he had "too many" pain pills in his medicine cabinet. All the pills were legitimate prescriptions. They put the poor guy in jail for years, convicted as a "drug dealer" though he never sold any of his personal pain pills to anyone.
There is something seriously wrong with prosecutors here in Florida. They are not content to lock up every street drug user they can find, they are now going after doctors and patients using any kind of pain medication. I'm afraid if I have one pill leftover in my bottle before I go to get a refill I'll get prosecuted for having too many pills just like the guy in the wheelchair. -
This is caused by how easy it is to access those drugs. Though prescribing advil would cause headaches, at least you have the advil, and you wouldn't be dead.
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As every pothead already knows.
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I agree that tobacco and alcohol kill more people than any other drugs out there. Prescription drugs are working their way up there. I just had a friend OD on fentanyl the other day. I'm not sure who is to blame. Yes, it's stupid of people to use these drugs to get high, however... the government isn't doing much to enforce distribution if so many extra pills, patches, bottles, etc. are getting around. I understand that some people need painkillers. I know of one schedule one drug (you know the most dangerous ones with no proven medical use) that has NEVER KILLED ANYBODY. Smoke a joint and call it a day.
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- elisealcyone
- 2 months ago
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prescription drugs are by far the number one drug problem in the US today. more than heroin , coke, and everything else put together. i know from first hand experience with all my friends and people close to me have had so much trouble with prescription drug problems. yet, this issue will never be properly dealt with because big pharma lobbies have way too much money power and influence to ever allow the truth to be told.
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- diabolical44
- 2 months ago
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Decriminalize drugs now!
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- natedawson
- 2 months ago
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Everything is about moderation.
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Yes fa-wn moderation and research the hell out of every drop you put in your body..no one else will do it for you until Bush is out of office.
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- CarolynGillis
- 2 months ago
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notice no one dies from marijuana...
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I don't think people understand. Most drugs are not completely chemically understood. There are so many chemicals in your body naturally, to investigate a new drugs interaction with each one would be impossible.
Drug research consists of clinical trials. Subjects are given doses then monitored for abnormalities. If anyone needs the flaws in such a method of drug research pointed out, let me know. -
What a thought. The government regulated drugs that we throw around ends up harming more than the illegal ones. As long as the government says its okay, its gotta be yeah? There are so many things wrong with the situations we are currently in, but if we don't address them, then more people will be locked away for the wrong reasons, and the select few will still benefit.
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I'm 20 yrs and have a spinal cord injury; i have a drewer full of vicodin, valium, uppers and downers. Most of them help my spasms, pain, ect... But they leave me feeling like crap. I have found one drug helps me the most of anything, yet it is illegal to obtain in my state... Marijuana
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The trouble is that legal drugs can also be abused or taken improperly.
It's not the doctors fault if the patients don't follow the instructions they give them.
Most of the people that die from them are using someone elses prescription, so in those cases they are illegally abusing "legal" drugs.
Alcohol is legal but it still easily abused and doctors would be the first ones to try to help you if you show signs of it. -
i love how the put death from Marijuana (0)
classic -
So how many died from marijuana? Zero? CNN just reported that pot is 'Not as harmless as people think." Well, how harmful is it, then?
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That picture is gruesome...
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For the idiots out there who keep blaming deaths on drugs: Drugs don't kill people, people kill people. Stupidity kills people. People taking these prescription drugs without looking into the side effects, or drug interations, and then taking 10-15 pills a day mixed with other pills or drugs...that's what kills people. Lack of common sense kills people. For that Smith11 guy up there who keeps insisting that doctors kill people by giving them pills...again I say, don't be a moron. Doctors don't hand out prescriptions and say "Here's some drugs...please...pretty please, abuse them". Upset because I called you a moron? Well, try not being a moron then.
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- poeticdreams1281
- 2 months ago
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holy crap that looks scary
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- irvinsssalzar
- 2 months ago
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What is the debate here? Prescription drugs when used recreationally or appropriately can be as lethal as illict drugs. You only have to ask a few people before you discover a prescription drug horror story. A friend of mine was prescribed Ambien at the age of 12 vividly remembers the horrific psychedelic trips that it induced. I know a man who was using his prescription correctly and passed out at the wheel and was charged with a DWI. Go to any college town and you will find pills are as easy if not easier than pot to get.
As a society we are over prescribed. Period -
I don't mind stupid people killing themselves. Just as long as they keep the deaths within their own stupid realm. When they reach out and kill people who are not, that's where the problem starts.
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this country is ass backwards. check out foodmatters.tv and tell me that "Big Pharma" is not just in it for the money. they are profit driven companies that don't care if a few people die, they have a responsibility to their shareholders. this is BIG business. you don't matter to them, sorry you do, as long as your paying them.
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- joshua2310
- 2 months ago
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Hello? Are we learning anything yet? Keep pushing alcohol and cigarettes and start your kids off young on all kinds of pills for depression and whatever else you can do to make the weak and uneducated feel like they are not normal and need something to make them so.
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duh .
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I don't get the point of this article. What are you trying to say? Its okay to do illegal drugs because its killing people but less than prescription drugs?
Maybe that's the very reason less people are dying from the illegal drugs in the first place, because they are illegal.
Many people die from prescription drugs because they are often taking more than one drug, and when they mix them, they become toxic.
If you are trying to say that illegal drugs are causing less problems than legal ones, therefore its okay to do them, that is dumb.
I hope that is not the purpose of this article. -
I want to know where that photograph came from and how it is related to the story. I didn't see it with the actual article from the NY Times and it's quite creepy.
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- MaryJane20
- 2 months ago
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