Half of Britons think Cumbria coal mine would harm UK’s climate agenda
A controversial new coal mine planned for Cumbria is struggling for national support, with a new poll showing Britons want ministers to block it on climate grounds.The West Cumbria Mining proposal near Whitehaven would be the first deep coal mine in the UK for 30 years, with supporters saying it would create thousands of jobs.But activists warn it would be detrimental to the environment and Britain’s climate goals, as the UK prepares to host the Cop26 summit in Glasgow in November.A survey by YouGov found 47 per cent of people think the mine will have a negative impact on the UK – with just 9 per cent believing it will be positive.Ministers say the go-ahead of the mine is a local issue and are refusing to step in and overrule Cumbria County Council, which gave it the green light last year.John Sauven, executive director of Greenpeace UK, which commissioned the polling, said: “Greenlighting the UK’s first new deep coal mine in 30 years is the last thing you’d expect from the host government of the next major climate summit. “It’s like giving a tax break to Big Tobacco before hosting a global public health conference. ‘Do as we say not as we do’ can’t be the government slogan for the Glasgow summit. Britain really does need to lead by example or it won’t lead at all. “Ministers are still in time to call in the decision and block the mine before it buries the government’s climate credentials under a tonne of coal.”According to YouGov’s poll, 36 per cent of people are opposed to construction while just 24 per cent who support it. Additionally, a complete blanket ban on the construction of new coal mines has support from 33 per cent of voters, with while 25 per cent are against.
Ministers are still in time to call in the decision and block the mine before it buries the government’s climate credentials under a tonne of coal.John Sauven, GreenpeaceDefenders of the mine say its coal will be used exclusively for coking in the production of steel rather than power generation, and that alternative technologies are not yet mature enough.They argue that the mine will provide jobs locally and that coal will have to be imported to produce steel anyway for some time to come.Phil MacDonald, lead UK analyst at the clean energy think-tank Ember, told The Independent: “A new coal mine in the UK won’t provide the jobs it promises. The last use for the coal is in steel – but the transition to producing clean steel from hydrogen and renewables has already begun. In Sweden, commercial steel production from renewables is just 5 years away – and the UK won’t be far behind.”The UK can’t meet its climate targets if we keep allowing coal mining – and it sends a terrible signal to the rest of the world just as we are hosting the climate conference in Glasgow this December. The UK government needs to be backing green, stable jobs in renewables in the North West – not short-lived, dangerous jobs.” More