A couple of days ago, a man with a tousled mop of hair, a paunch and a beard knocked on my door. I had never met him before, but without any questions I handed Manu — for that was his name — a perfectly functional Freeview box that the efreaks no longer needed. He smiled, thanked me and headed off into the night…

No, I said Freegle

This was my first experience of Freegling. Using Freegle is beautifully simple. If you have something you are keen to get rid of but don’t want to dump it at the tip, you pop the details on a website. Other people who live near you see it online and, if they want it, drop you an email and arrange to pick it up. I had 20 emails within two days for the Freeview box (remote control included). Alan wanted it for more channel choice during the World Cup. Kati wanted it because her’s had broken down and the kids were pestering her to watch TV during half term. Rowan definitely wanted it, although he wasn’t sure how it worked. In the end, I plumped for Manu simply because he was the first person to email me (about an hour after I posted it) — but apparently in Freegle etiquette, you can choose whoever you like to give it to.

We have an increasing problem with waste in the UK, as landfills are filling up fast. Of course, the best thing to do to help is stop buying stuff you don’t need. But before you throw away the 18th candlestick holder you got as an engagement present, think about whether some poor sucker who (more…)

There were high hopes among some treehuggers that the new coalition would make green issues a priority, mainly because it was one of the few things the Cleggies and Cameroons vaguely agreed on. The Tories’ recent shift to ‘Vote Blue, Go Green’ appears to have convinced the LibDems that Dave’s chums are not the evil babykillers they all said six days ago.

The coalition agreement specifies 19 separate environmental policies. Here is a quick summary and that all-important efreak commentary:

Transport

LibDemCon: bad for stag dos

(1) Replace air passenger duty with per flight duty. This means each plane trip will be taxed, not each passenger. This should encourage airlines to make sure flights are fuller, and could hit freight travel. This could be a huge deal, depending on what level the tax is set at. LibDems said in their manifesto they could raise £3.5 billion from this, which is a lot. Expect plenty of bleating from cheap airlines and tulip sellers. Could be bad news for that weekend jaunt to Aberdeen.

Other air travel measures included (2) the cancellation of the third runway at Heathrow and (3) no (more…)

There remain few industries in which Britain leads the world — arms-selling, high-end motor sport, queuing… One that does not get much attention is offshore wind. Obviously, we do not design any of the turbines ourselves, we leave that to those clever Germans and Danes. But after a flurry of activity in recent years, Britain now generates more electricity from wind turbines plonked in our seas than anywhere else in the world.

How much?

A combination of very strong winds and arch-Nimbyism means that if we want to meet our aggressive targets to increase the amount of electricity from renewable sources (wind, solar, etc) we need an enormous increase in offshore wind over the next 15 years, from 1GW of current capacity to about 29GW (producing at least a sixth of the UK’s electricity needs). This means putting up a new giant turbine in tricky waters every day between now and 2016 (over the last six years, we have erected one every 11 days. Lazy).

Unsurprisingly, offshore wind is more expensive than onshore wind. But while you generally expect new technologies to get cheaper as they mature (think how cheap DVD players are now), new (more…)

If there is one reason to vote Labour this time (at least if you decide these things on environmental issues) it is because of what Ed Miliband, Energy and Climate Change Secretary, said at 2:17 of this Newsnight interview last November:

Paxo: Electricity bills will have to rise to pay for these [new nuclear power stations], won’t they?

Milibo: Er, well, no, er, not necessarily [not a strong start]. Electricity bills are going to have to rise anyway to make the transition to low carbon and I have been very open about that.

Countryside vandal, no feet

Telling people their bills are going up is not easy. But here is the energy minister himself unequivocally asserting that you, Mrs Lightson of 120 Watt Avenue, are going to have to fork out a little bit more to power your tumble dryer than before. As if people don’t hate wind farms enough, the littler Miliband says we are going to have a lot more of them (and those nukes) AND it is going to cost you more. This is a rare and impressive kind of political leadership.

(more…)

You know people are getting juiced for this election when more than 150 people crammed in to a Monday night hustings organised by the glamorous trio of Highgate Climate Action Network, Muswell Hill Friends of the Earth AND Muswell Hill and Highgate Pensioners Action Group. Such was the rampant show of democracy, they even ran out of cups.

LibDem lovely #4

In front of us were five hopefuls in the Hornsey and Wood Green constituency courting our vote: three suspects from the usual parties, Green Pete McKaskie and quixotic independent Stephane Michel De Roche (apparently foreign). The other candidate Rohen Kapur is obviously so confident of storming to victory on his feng shui, pro-NHS ticket that he did not bother to turn up. The focus was on environmental issues, and most of the candidates were a little shaky on numbers, details and ideas (although Monsieur de Roche did claim to have invented an electric car that could drive 500 miles on a single charge — sadly, he said his idea appeared to have been stolen by London Transport).

The seat was won on a large anti-Labour swing in 2005 by Lynne Featherstone, who runs a very impressive blog and was also decreed one of the ‘Lib Dem Lovelies‘ by the Sun. Before the recent Clegg-inspired transformation of Britain into a yellow-loving nation, one of the issues the party did get some attention (more…)

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