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Why Bother With Cop 29 Or Indeed Cop Anything?

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ToraToraTora | 16:33 Tue 12th Nov 2024 | News
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If USA, India and China aren't going then it's pointless. It's just a beano for the leaders to try and see who can pointlessly bankrupt their country the quickest.

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Starmer & Co might bankrupt this country but the rest won't push the self-destruct button. They'll look after number one. 

We will not go bankrupt with Keir in charge. 2 x reductions in interest rates so far this year. 

Aug down to 5% from 5.25%.

Nov down to 4.25% from 5%.

^I really think he's serious.

Well lets face it, good news is not too welcome on AB of late.

4.48pm - he is serious, and he's blind to Labour's many shortcomings.

 

Plus the interest rate is 4.75% - not 4.25%. Doesn't sound a lot, but a whole half percentage point makes a big difference. 

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16:46 ....wait for the massive PS pay rises to kick in sunshine, they'll be going up again.

^^ Yes it does make a big difference, but it appears not very wecome or worthy of talking about :○)

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why don't you have a go at the actual question nicebloke?

You almost cant wait TTT by the sound of it for something nasty to happen, how strange? I'll enjoy the present sunshine for the time being.

He's trying to talk the government up.  No easy task!  

Maybe it was done to death when the cons were in, no change.

You can go on about China untill the cows come home, but if they cut back as much as you or anyone else wanted, 40% of businesses would go out of business in this country alone. There I've had a go at your question, again. Happy?

starmer has already commited us to net zero and intends to go further

“Nov down to 4.25% from 5%”

Down to 4.75% actually, but I’ll not quibble.

More importantly, leaving aside that the rates are set by the (supposedly) independent Monetary Policy Committee, do you honestly believe that those changes were as a result of anything the current government has done? The first of the two was announced when they had been in power for just 27 days?

A second question is that do you believe these reductions will continue, bearing in mind the recent budget is liable to lead to considerable price rises and government borrowing?

“It's just a beano for the leaders…”

Not just for the leaders, Tora. More than 66,000 people have registered to attend this jamboree. This includes over 1,300 “observers” from the UN and 3,500 media representatives.

Meanwhile, Mr Starmer has this afternoon committed the UK to an astonishing 81% reduction in carbon emissions by 2035 but has added that he will not “be telling people how o live” in order to achieve that target. Stand by for us to be told precisely how he aims to achieve it.

In other news, the following leaders have all decided to give the meeting a miss:

Ursula von der Leyen’s has sent her apologies for absence, raising questions about Europe’s commitment to the climate crisis. The EU confirmed that its president would not attend saying “The commission is in a transition phase and the president will therefore focus on her institutional duties,” 

French President Emmanuel Macron is also due to miss the climate summit because he doesn’t like  Azerbaijan. 

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has announced that he won’t travel to COP29 since his coalition government collapsed last week.

With COP29 taking place just a few days after the US election, President Joe Biden will not be attending. It is the second year in a row that he has skipped the global climate talks. 

Following a head injury last month, Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has cancelled his trip to Baku. The country is due to host COP30 in Belem next year. 

Russian President Vladimir Putin is not going. Ukraine’s EU ambassador, Vsevolod Chentsov said that the international community should shun the talks if he did attend. 

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, China’s President Xi Jinping, South Africa’s Cyril Ramaphosa, Japan’s Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba and Australia’s Prime Minister Anthony Albanese are all among the missing.  

Papua New Guinea’s Prime Minister James Marape announced that the country would not attend COP29, declaring it a “total waste of time”. 

A tiny note of realism was injected into the fanfare by Ilham Aliyev, President of Azerbaijan. He hit back at western criticism of his nation's hosting of the event, saying that oil and gas are a “gift from God” needed by the global market.

The good news is that all those absentees mean the number of private jets flying to Baku have been somewhat reduced. His should free up a few “carbon credits” for those of us wanting a week in Benidorm next summer.

Yes NJ i made a mistake.

Will these reductions continue ? If I knew what was going to happen on the money markets NJ I would no doubt become a very rich man. :○)

jolly outing for the pen pushers and those making side deals and the third world beggars.. could have been done with video conferencing, no carbon footprint ehh but why quibble.

"...but if they [China] cut back as much as you or anyone else wanted, 40% of businesses would go out of business in this country alone."

So why is it OK for them (33% of global emissions) to carry on but not for the UK (1%)? Far more businesses will suffer in the UK as a result of this country's manic obsession with net zero.

Is it OK for the UK to "offshore" its emissions (and in other news, is it OK to pee in the shallow end of a swimming pool?).

"A second question is that do you believe these reductions will continue, bearing in mind the recent budget is liable to lead to considerable price rises and government borrowing?"

My second question seems already to have been answered:

https://news.sky.com/story/money-blog-big-banks-announce-interest-rate-hikes-one-after-other-and-theyre-not-small-13040934

"A string of big lenders have announced interest rate hikes one after the other - as the mortgage market takes a turn for the worse.

HSBC, Santander, Nationwide, TSB and Virgin have all announced hikes today and in recent days.

It follows a budget that analysts fear could prove to be inflationary."

It's no longer about the climate. It's about energy. We don't have coal, oil or gas.

We need to ramp up all the other stuff. Wind, nuclear, whatever, because we can't be dependant on Russia or Saudi.

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