Corbyn pledges five-fold increase in offshore wind, creating nearly 70,000 good jobs
As Extinction Rebellion enters the third day (Wednesday) of its
October rebellion, Labour Leader Jeremy Corbyn will visit a
state-of-the-art wind turbine facility to discuss Labour’s 10 year
plan for clean energy to reduce emissions to net zero and keep
global temperature rises to 1.5 degrees. Corbyn will lay out
Labour’s 10 year plan to radically expand offshore wind to help
tackle the climate emergency, create new, good unionised jobs and
invest in coastal...Request free trial
As Extinction Rebellion enters the third day (Wednesday) of its
October rebellion, Labour Leader Jeremy Corbyn will visit a state-of-the-art
wind turbine facility to discuss Labour’s 10 year plan for clean
energy to reduce emissions to net zero and keep global
temperature rises to 1.5 degrees.
Corbyn will lay out Labour’s 10 year plan to radically
expand offshore wind to help tackle the climate emergency, create
new, good unionised jobs and invest in coastal
communities.
Labour’s 10 year plan will cause a dramatic fivefold
increase in the UK’s offshore wind capacity, with 37 new wind
farms, as part of a Green Industrial Revolution.
This new investment – drawn from a combination of public
and private sources and worth £83 billion over 10 years – is
estimated to create more than 67,000 new good, unionised jobs
across the country and provide enough electricity for 57 million
households, replacing the need for 38 coal power stations.
As well creating new jobs and clean energy, the investment
will further directly benefit the public, with a 51% public stake
in all new offshore wind farms. 20% of the public’s profits from
new offshore wind, estimated between £0.6 and £1 billion per
year, will be invested directly into held-back coastal
communities to create a new generation of harbour fronts, parks,
leisure centres and libraries.
The remaining 80 per cent of public profits will be
reinvested into decarbonising the economy, tackling the climate
emergency head on.
Labour’s commitment to dramatic expansion of clean energy
stands in stark contrast to the government’s record of falling
investment in clean energy three years running.
Jeremy Corbyn MP, Leader of the Labour Party, said:
“The full scale of the environment and climate emergency
cannot be ignored.
“As scientists and activists have made clear, we need
immediate and radical action to have any hope of keeping
temperature rises to a manageable level.
“We know the big polluters and banks won’t take the
necessary action. So the next Labour government will kick-start a
Green Industrial Revolution, protecting our planet and creating
hundreds of thousands of high-wage, high-skill unionised jobs
across the country and delivering investment for communities that
have been held back for decades.
“Labour’s 10 year plan will provide the massive public
investment needed to radically reduce our emissions and secure a
future for our planet.”
Shadow Energy Secretary Rebecca Long Bailey MP
said:
"Tackling the climate emergency is not only the biggest
challenge of our generation – it’s also a huge opportunity to
invest in British manufacturing and our industrial communities
that have been held back under the Tories.
"Labour will increase offshore wind generation sevenfold,
delivering 52 gigawatts of wind power through £83 billion in
combined public and private investment creating 67,000 good,
unionised jobs. That’s four times the investment and three times
the jobs brought in by the enormous Hinkley Point C nuclear power
project. And our wind power revolution will be built in Britain:
instead of jackets for wind farms located in Scotland being made
in Indonesia, we’ll bring those jobs back to Fife.
"The Tories want to present this as a binary choice between
economic growth and climate justice, but it’s not. Our Green
Industrial Revolution will ensure that the costs of the tackling
the climate emergency are borne by the richest in our society,
not the majority, decarbonising the economy while delivering good
jobs for the many."
Ends
Notes to editors
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