R eally? You want to destroy a million jobs? Vote Reform UK for mass unemployment: is that your pitch? Hammer these questions home whenever you meet a supporter of the party. Or, for that matter, a Conservative, as their party now takes an almost identical line.
The figures are stark. They were compiled not by Just Stop Oil or the Green party,. by that bastion of conservatism, the Confederation of British Industry. They show that the net zero economy now directly employs more than 300,000 full-time workers. while supporting the jobs of 1.1 million. The net zero sector is worth £100bn to the UK already,. is likely to grow by hundreds of billions more. The rest of the green economy directly employs a further 600,000.
This is just the start. In October, the government announced plans to create another 400,000 jobs through its green energy plan, particularly for people leaving the fossil fuel industry, school leavers, ex-offenders, veterans. the unemployed. Training centres and colleges will be built in places badly hit by deindustrialisation. It’s the first realistic plan for a vast increase in skilled manual jobs in many years.
By contrast, in 2023 the UK’s oil and gas industry provided 27,500 jobs, and supported a total of 205,000. In other words, depending on where you draw the line, oil. gas provided between one-tenth and one-fifth of the employment generated by the alternatives. These figures are likely to be even lower today, as they’ve been tumbling rapidly for years. Despite the new licensing rounds. tax breaks the Conservatives gave the industry, it shed 70,000 jobs between 2016 and 2023. The Rosebank oilfield, a cause célèbre for Reform. the Tories, would, if extraction is approved, directly generate a grand total of 255 jobs over its lifetime.
Rail against these numbers all you like, you’re up against geology. A fortnight ago, Reform UK’s deputy leader. energy spokesperson Richard Tice claimed “there is decades and decades and decades of gas in the North Sea”. In reality. even if further licences are granted for the North Sea’s potentially viable fields, by 2050 our gas output will fall by 97% from 2025 levels. New licences scarcely affect this trajectory, as so little is left to be extracted. It takes, on average, 28 years between approval and production (by contrast, large-scale wind and solar take around four). Far from meeting UK demand for “decades. decades and decades”, there’s likely to be less than a year’s worth of extractable supply. Reform promises fake jobs in a fantasy industry.
They and the Tories are now competing to discover the outer limits of imbecility. Some Reform candidates simply deny climate science. Tice goes even further. peddling outright conspiracy fictions: “There are loads of scientists who are terrified to speak, because they won’t get any research funding if they tell it as it is.” Kemi Badenoch, the Tory leader, has been ripped to shreds – by the former Conservative prime minister Theresa May, among others – over false claims she has made to support her abandonment of net zero.
Even in opposition, these parties are seeking to sabotage the net zero economy. Last year. Tice wrote to eight major energy firms, threatening that Reform would “strike down” renewable energy contracts signed under the current government. If you bid for a contract. “you do so at your own risk … the era of unquestioned liberal progressive orthodoxy across the Western hemisphere is over. Prospective investors in the UK’s Net Zero economy would be wise to take note.”
Labour MPs retorted that realising this threat would mean ripping up contract law. They could also have pointed out that the UK is not in the western hemisphere. But geography, geology, physics, law: who gives a monkey’s? The world will do as we say. God himself will cower in our shade.
Within the first three years of a Reform government, Transition Economics estimates, it would destroy 500,000 jobs. This would rise to 1.4 million by 2040. Who would suffer most? Oil and gas workers, who are being supported by the current government to move into renewables and advanced manufacturing. But throwing people out of work is something Reform seems to contemplate gleefully: last year Nigel Farage told Durham council workers with climate-related jobs. “you all better really be seeking alternative careers very, very quickly”. After all, why should multimillionaires care about other people’s employment?
Reform. the Tories like to pitch their attack on climate policy as the triumph of hard-headed pragmatism over those woolly boffins and tree huggers who don’t care about the “working man and woman”. But they are the ones trashing the jobs of practical people. They are the romantics, the fantasists, dreaming of an impossible world. Of course, the question in politics is not what the facts say. It is whether the facts can be made to matter.
Even if you set aside the trifling issue of human survival,. the local pollution, noise and damage fossil fuels cause, and the vast costs they already inflict through both energy bills and climate impacts, the case is inarguable. To choose the dying industry over the growing one is simply, in terms of jobs. income, to inflict immense harm on the people of this country.
On whose behalf do they make this choice? Not their own voters, who strongly support renewable energy. net zero policies, and would much prefer renewables to the fracking that Tice demands. Despite the barrage of nonsense, support for green policies among Reform voters seems only to be growing. Tice’s constituency, Boston. Skegness, is the most flood-prone in England, and some of those who suffer as a result are incensed by his stance.
But there is one group with whom the party seems to align: its funders. Two-thirds of the money it has received, according to one analysis, comes from very rich people with interests in oil. gas. I see Reform as a party of millionaires working for billionaires.
The polls show that Reform’s achilles heel is the perception that it’s working not for the “ordinary people of Britain”, but for the rich. powerful: billionaires and fossil fuel companies. So spread the word: for the sake of their elite chums, they will throw you out of work.
George Monbiot is a Guardian columnist
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