Public Support Net Zer0–But Don’t Want to Pay for It!

A view of offshore wind turbines against a sunset, representing renewable energy and Net Zero initiatives.

From NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT

By Paul Homewood

There’s a new poll out from YouGov on Net Zero:

A silhouette of wind turbines against an orange sunset sky, with the text 'How far does the public support net zero?' displayed prominently.

No doubt the Net Zero promoting lobby will run with the headline poll:

Bar chart showing the support levels for the UK government's commitment to net zero by 2050, indicating that 60% of Britons support the initiative, with varying degrees of support across different political parties.

It’s like asking if you support Xmas or saving fluffy seals. It is a meaningless question, especially given the propaganda surrounding Net Zero and the lack of understanding about how it will be achieved (or not),

But when we get to some of the implications, the answers reverse themselves drastically:

Chart showing public support and opposition for various policies related to achieving net zero in the UK, with a focus on measures such as taxes on air travel, banning gas power stations, and new taxes on certain foods.

There are large majorities against banning gas boilers, banning petrol cars, new taxes on meat and taxing gas bills.  All these are either already government policy or are being actively considered.

Even banning gas power stations is disapproved of, Only new nuclear and taxes on frequent flyers get net approval. The former interestingly gets most support from those opposed to Net Zero. The latter gets approval for the simple reason that it does not affect the vast majority of people.

We get similar results from another question:

Chart displaying public opinion on various government policies to tackle climate change, including support and opposition percentages.

Pain free solutions are popular – planting more trees, subsidies for insulation, single use plastic bans. Increasing fuel duty, blanket flight taxes and rationing meat are extremely unpopular.

I don’t think we need to be psychics to guess what the answer would have been to the question – “Would you be prepared to pay £1000 a year for Net Zero”? Given that this is pretty much what every household pays, without realising it, it is a shame it was not.

As I have often commented, Net Zero has long been sold on the basis of easy, new taxes – nice, clean renewable energy, planting trees and so on.

Attention is being diverted away from costs already being incurred by, for instance, blaming high electricity prices on “sky high gas prices”.

The truth has been deliberately kept from the public. If they knew the harsh reality, most would not support Net Zero at all.


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