• Donate
  • Login
Saturday, December 6, 2025
  • Login
  • Register
Canary
Cart / £0.00

No products in the basket.

MEDIA THAT DISRUPTS
  • UK
  • Global
  • Opinion
  • Skwawkbox
  • Manage Subscription
  • Support
  • Features
    • Health
    • Environment
    • Science
    • Feature
    • Sport & Gaming
    • Lifestyle
    • Tech
    • Business
    • Money
    • Travel
    • Property
    • Food
    • Media
No Result
View All Result
MANAGE SUBSCRIPTION
SUPPORT
  • UK
  • Global
  • Opinion
  • Skwawkbox
  • Manage Subscription
  • Support
  • Features
    • Health
    • Environment
    • Science
    • Feature
    • Sport & Gaming
    • Lifestyle
    • Tech
    • Business
    • Money
    • Travel
    • Property
    • Food
    • Media
No Result
View All Result
Canary
No Result
View All Result

The Green Party’s Jenny Jones leads protests over yet another disastrous Tory policy

Climate scam

The Canary by The Canary
6 March 2024
in Analysis
Reading Time: 4 mins read
197 13
A A
0
Home Global Analysis
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on BlueskyShare via WhatsAppShare via TelegramShare on Threads

Climate justice campaigners from across the UK climate crisis movement – including Green Party peer Jenny Jones – gathered outside the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ) in London on Tuesday 5 March. The protest was calling on the government not to renew subsidies for burning wood in Drax Power Station in Yorkshire and Lynemouth Power Station in Northumberland.

Drax: stop burning trees

Campaigners from groups including Biofuelwatch, Stop Burning Trees, Friends of the Earth, Extinction Rebellion, Money Rebellion, Fossil Free London, Campaign Against Climate Change, Stop Rosebank, and Greenpeace joined together to say a loud ‘NO’ to government proposals to grant new subsidies from UK energy bills to companies that burn trees for electricity:

Drax protest

Speakers included Jones and Doug Parr, policy director for Greenpeace:

Doug Parr Greenpeace

Banners reading ‘DESNZ: Stop Funding Forest Destruction’ and ‘Stop Burning Trees’ were hung up outside DESNZ:

Tories propping Drax up with public money

In January, the UK government launched a consultation on extending subsidies for burning wood. Its Impact Assessment suggested that the highest likely amount of subsidies could be up to £2.5bn per year for Drax and Lynemouth (the only two generators eligible). There was no clear end date mentioned in the consultation for the proposed new subsidies.

There has been strong opposition to the government’s proposals for new wood-burning subsidies from NGOs, MPs, scientists, and the general public.

Campaigners argue that if these subsidies are approved, the UK could be locked into many years of tree burning, at huge cost to forests, wildlife, communities, and the climate. As the Canary previously reported, a BBC investigation exposed Drax for continuing to source wood from rare primary forests in British Columbia.

A “disgrace”

Katy Brown, bioenergy campaigner for Biofuelwatch, said:

It’s a disgrace this government is even considering giving more of our money to Drax, the UK’s single biggest carbon emitter and the world’s biggest tree burner. If they go ahead after these new revelations about Drax yet again being caught out sourcing from primary old-growth forest in Canada, they are making it clear they do not care about forests, communities or the planet.

Wherever Drax sources its wood animals, wildlife, biodiversity and local communities are harmed. To have any hope of reducing harmful climate change we need to stop emissions from burning things now. There should be absolutely no more subsidies for tree burning in power stations. We need investment in genuine renewables and climate action, not corporate scams.

Drax, the larger of the two power stations set to benefit, is the UK’s single largest carbon emitter, and world’s biggest tree burner. The company currently receives around £1.7 million per day in renewable subsidies from UK energy bills to burn wood.

Stop burning things

Dr Doug Parr, policy director for Greenpeace UK, said:

Clear cutting forests in order to burn them has never been seen as environmentally friendly, for all of the obvious reasons. When you add on the impacts of pellet processing, which disproportionately exposes communities of colour to toxic air pollution, there’s very little green about the UK’s biomass programme.

The energy sector needs to move on from burning things and embrace the incredibly efficient and versatile renewable technologies that just get cheaper and cheaper, wind and solar.

Now that energy storage has joined renewables on their plunging price trajectory, there are few arguments left for thermal power plants burning fossil fuels or uranium, and certainly not when they burn protected ecosystems.

Drax: driving “environmental racism”

In the southern US, Drax has been accused of ‘driving environmental racism’ due to the harmful air pollution emitted by its pellet production.

Katherine Egland, deputy director of the Education, Economics, Environmental, Climate and Health Organization and chair of the Environmental and Climate Justice Committee for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) National Board, said of Drax’s US operations:

Our US government must end the sacrifice of the vulnerable Black communities in the Southeast who’re being exposed to deadly levels of chemicals to manufacture wood pellets to be burned for energy in other countries. Our own government must not be complicit in aiding and abetting the environmentally racist assaults committed by UK-based Drax.

What Drax is doing to our communities would be illegal in the UK. Why are we allowing Drax’s greed driven annihilation of communities of color here in the US? Burning forests for fuel is not only foolish, but dangerous to people and planet. We need to transition to clean, safe carbon-free renewable energy.

Climate wrecking

Drax and Lynemouth are both supplied by Enviva, which regularly obtains wood from the clearing of extremely biodiverse coastal hardwood forests. Campaigners argue that extending the subsidies would continue the harm caused to forests, communities and the planet by the wood biomass industry.

Featured image and additional images via Biofuelwatch/Tom Dulat/Crispin Hughes

Tags: climate crisisfossil fuelsGreen party
Share156Tweet97ShareSendShareShare
Previous Post

The Spring Budget can’t mask new analysis showing 20-year low for public sector pay

Next Post

The Top Football Nations in Africa according to FIFA

Next Post
The Top Football Nations in Africa according to FIFA

The Top Football Nations in Africa according to FIFA

Hunt during the budget

Even Jeremy Hunt couldn't keep up the facade in his budget, stating that Labour are really "Tory"

br-319 from the air lucas ferrante

The BR-319 highway: a scientist's call to action for the Amazon and beyond

Elon Musk at a press conference Tesla

Activists may have sabotaged the Tesla factory, but Elon Musk is the true criminal

Netanyahu Israel Iran

Israel just sent a massive 'screw you' to the rest of the world - not that the world will do anything

Please login to join discussion
Israel
Analysis

Israel executes two unarmed Palestinians after they surrendered

by Charlie Jaay
28 November 2025
Palestine Action
Analysis

Disabled arrestee refuses to be silent, saying “freedom is not to be taken from us without a fight”

by Ed Sykes
28 November 2025
Syria
Analysis

Syria: Fragile peace after Bedouin murders ignite sectarian tensions

by Alex/Rose Cocker
28 November 2025
Barghouti
Skwawkbox

Video: Barghouti honoured with new mural after 24 years as Israel’s political prisoner

by Skwawkbox
28 November 2025
palestine action
Analysis

Shocking new report reveals what really drove the government’s crackdown on Palestine Action

by The Canary
28 November 2025
  • Get our Daily News Email

The Canary
PO Box 71199
LONDON
SE20 9EX

Canary Media Ltd – registered in England. Company registration number 09788095.

For guest posting, contact ben@thecanary.co

For other enquiries, contact: hello@thecanary.co

Sign up for the Canary's free newsletter and get disruptive journalism in your inbox twice a day. Join us here.

© Canary Media Ltd 2024, all rights reserved | Website by Monster | Hosted by Krystal | Privacy Settings

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
  • UK
  • Global
  • Opinion
  • Skwawkbox
  • Manage Subscription
  • Support
  • Features
    • Health
    • Environment
    • Science
    • Feature
    • Sport & Gaming
    • Lifestyle
    • Tech
    • Business
    • Money
    • Travel
    • Property
    • Food
    • Media
  • Login
  • Sign Up
  • Cart