An Inspector Calls wrote:
RalphW
think this level of CO2 reduction by the UK is more or less a given. We will not be in the market to import fossil fuels.
Why ever not?
Because the UK fiscal policy is to keep interest rates low, and keeping domestic inflation low by cutting spending and raising unemployment and limiting bank lending. However, at the same time quietly printing money to devalue Stirling resulting in ever rising import costs, particularly fossil fuels. UK Oil will be more or less history, we will not have much coal, and I very much doubt we will be producing as much gas as we are now.
We are heading into steady economic decline with debts being written off by inflation. We are all (except the banking classes) getting poorer, and we will not be able to afford to spend so much on energy, directly or indirectly.
Apart from the banking classes, it is not a bad policy given the future global energy supply, but I don't expect you to agree with that.
So, our options are renewables, nuclear, or freeze in the dark.
However, I don't think we will be able to build nuclear or run it safely in the timescales open to us.