| > It's not even an energy poor country. Looking at the tabulated data [0], in 1965 the UK was roughly 200% the European average for per capita energy consumption. Now it is ~75% of the same. It has dropped in absolute terms too (dropped to ~75% of the 1965 figure). In fact, on a per-capita basis the UK is neck-and-neck with China. Nearly, actually it is slightly behind. It looks a lot like an energy poor country. > That's not the fault of windmills and solar panels, and it's disingenuous to suggest it is. I'm not suggesting that. I assume it was decades of policy where people were asking "how do we kill off our cheapest source of energy", consistent with other western states. The UK - like everyone else - should have been focusing on how to secure cheap fossil fuels, how to bring down the cost of nuclear energy and loosening the regulatory state to accept that energy is needed despite NIMBYism. If the market says wind and solar are cheap then build those too, but only if they are cheap enough to make stand-alone economic sense. Instead I suspect policy attempted to achieve an unachievable level of environmental non-interventionism and look like they are paying the price. [0] https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/per-capita-energy-use?tab... POSTSCRIPT https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:UK_electricity_production... - mission success! Fossil fuels being phased out without a ready replacement. A country becoming energy poor in one graph. Of course there'll be some political tension with these sort of fundamentals. |
> It looks a lot like an energy poor country.
I'm not sure that follows. Couldn't you also say "it looks a lot like an energy efficient country"?
The Core i7 in my laptop uses a fraction of the energy of the Pentium III in a desktop a couple of decades ago, but I certainly don't want to go back to the P3 today.