- “‘We won’t stop pro-trans plotters’” – Keir Starmer has refused to stop a plot by ministers to thwart last week’s Supreme Court ruling that trans women are not legally women, reports the Telegraph.
- “Labour must not undermine the Supreme Court’s trans judgment” – Trans people who want to get on quietly with their lives must be appalled by the poison being spread in their name, says the Telegraph in a leading article.
- “A trans-activist temper tantrum” – Saturday’s London trans demo was a carnival of misogyny and public urination, writes Jo Bartosch in Spiked.
- “Trans NHS patients can access every women-only space in London” – All NHS hospitals in London are refusing to comply with single-sex laws to stop transgender people using women-only spaces, reveals the Telegraph.
- “The tide has not turned against woke. The backlash is the mirror of what it dislikes” – The kind of people who make a point of calling the Tory leader Olukemi Olufunto Adegoke are louder and more visible than ever, warns Daniel Hannan in the Telegraph, taking aim at the woke Right.
- “Reform would now beat Labour to be largest party” – A new poll suggests that if an election were to be held today, Reform UK would be on track to win the most seats, with no party achieving a clear majority, according to Wales Online.
- “It’s going wrong for the Right in the Anglosphere” – What is it about English speaking Conservatives in Britain, Canada and Australia that appears to render them incapable of running competent election campaigns? wonders Iain Dale in the Telegraph.
- “Over £10 million handed to prison guards after violent inmate attacks” – Around 202 injured prison officers have received payouts from the Ministry of Justice since 2019/20, averaging £51,000 per person, reports the Mail.
- “Shameless Chinese firms advertise ‘inflatable boats for refugees’” – Chinese companies have been openly selling “inflatable boats for refugees” online and advertising them directly to people smugglers, says GB News.
- “Thug who beat man with cricket stump cannot be deported as he’s ‘not a threat’” – A thug who drove 100 miles to beat a man with a cricket stump cannot be deported as a judge ruled he is not a threat to the public, reports the Sun.
- “ECHR has veered into politics, warns leading UK judge” – Lord Burnett warns that the European Court of Human Rights is overstepping its role, with human rights laws increasingly used to block UK deportations, according to the Telegraph.
- “We don’t know if non-crime hate incidents help fight crime, police admit” – Police forces admit that they don’t know if non-crime hate incidents (NCHIs) help tackle crime, reveals the Telegraph, having done little or no research on the subject.
- “Two-tier policing row over Palestine march during Passover” – Essex Police has been accused of a “disastrous failure” and “two-tier policing” after allowing a pro-Palestinian march to proceed through a Jewish area in Southend during Passover, reports the Telegraph.
- “On Israel, the BBC seems incapable of getting the simplest thing right” – The BBC has been mistranslating Yahud – the Arabic word for Jew – as Israeli for many years, writes Danny Cohen in the Telegraph.
- “BBC drama has become pure liberal-elite poison” – BBC television has ceased to be relevant to its customers, says Simon Heffer in the Telegraph. If the licence fee is abolished in 2027, it will not be a second too soon.
- “Labour seems to be forgetting Britain is still a Christian country” – Our liberal elites seem willing to celebrate every culture other than our own, writes Robert Jenrick in the Telegraph.
- “Don’t turn Renaud Camus into a martyr” – The British state’s ban on the ‘great replacement’ philosopher has backfired, says Fraser Myers in Spiked.
- “Miliband in blistering attack on Farage’s UK Net Zero ‘nonsense and lies’” – Ed Miliband has torn into Nigel Farage and the Tories for peddling dangerous “nonsense and lies” by suggesting the UK’s Net Zero target is responsible for destroying lots of Britain’s businesses, reports the Guardian.
- “The great Hornsea Project Three cover-up” – Hornsea Project Three, an offshore windfarm, has been awarded extra contracts at higher prices than allowed under AR6, prompting serious concerns over transparency and accountability, warns David Turver on his Eigen Values Substack.
- ‘Analysis of ‘renewable’ power Germany – the UK – France in the European context: 2024’ – Europe’s push for weather-dependent ‘renewables’ is a costly and inefficient gamble, with productivity plummeting and costs soaring, writes Ed Hoskins on his blog.
- “Analysis of the approved raft of the Pandemic Treaty” – The WHO’s Pandemic Treaty is vague, non-binding and leaves little of substance for nations to object to, says Dr Meryl Nass on her Substack – what a relief!
- ‘Trump proposes massive NIH budget cut and reorganisation’ – Will a Republican-led Congress really support Trump’s proposed 44% decrease for the world’s largest medical research funder? wonders Meredith Wadman in Science.
- “‘‘Woke’ is the best thing that has happened to me’” – In the Telegraph, Mick Brown talks to comedian and former king of prime-time Jim Davidson about racism, Russell Brand and how the woke culture that once ruined him became his salvation.
- ‘Panic glutton’ – In Takimag, Theodore Dalrymple considers the preparation required for various potential crises and disasters.
- ‘What really makes us British?’ – There is more to our national identity than warm beer and fish and chips, says Sam Bidwell in the Critic.
- “Does it not occur to them why sex is a protected characteristic?” – Connie Shaw on GB News expresses her astonishment at young women who describe themselves as feminists not understanding why it’s in their interests to champion the Supreme Court judgement on the Equality Act.
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My son was telling me that a lot of terraced houses near him in London would need planning permission for a heat pump as they are too close together to be allowed a heat pump under current permitted developments, this article explains the situation;
https://www.homebuilding.co.uk/news/why-terraced-homeowners-may-need-planning-permission-for-heat-pumps
In addition where heat pumps have been installed in terraced housing it has lead to environmental noise complaints.
There may be some electrical people on here who know more about this than I do? but I gather that installing a heat pump requires the electrician to get permission from the electric supplier? As heat pumps use a compressor motor, even though they may not have a very high consumption once in use, they have a high start up current draw such that some planned heat pump installations have been refused because the local electric supply infrastructure cannot handle the demands of heat pumps.
I can only say Steve, that the above tale reminds me of Spike Milligan’s superb book: ‘Adolf Hitler. My Part in His Downfall.’ In the prelude to his Army call up, he speaks to an uncle who fought in WW1, asking him, “What was it like?” His uncle replies, “Like? Like son? It was like one big fuck up.”
It might depend on the rating of the proposed pump, but if it’s around 10Kw (some seem to be), it could fall foul of the same issue with home charge EV battery chargers. That is, because they are more or less constant loads at around 43A, the BS 7671 won’t allow them to be counted as a “diverse load” (like other domestic heaters, cookers etc). The matter under discussion could be as to whether air source pumps behave like storage heaters, or more like EV chargers. I’d have thought that if air pumps tend to run continuously over several hours, they would refuse to treat them as diverse loads. I’m guessing, so we’ll see.
So they have to tot them all together, and for many groups of houses, it would exceed the rating of the distribution cable, local transformer etc. That would certainly be the case in my street – I know the cable’s rating, as it was only installed a couple of years ago to replace some older kit that had failed.
Thus its possible that the District Network Operator (DNO) would say no, unless they are prepared to upgrade their system (digging up the roads, installing larger cables, then higher capacity transformers etc). Someone has to pay for that, of course.
Now imagine the headache for the DNO if each of those terraces also want to run a 7.5kw ev charge point as well.
The focus has been on electricity generation and none of the idiots in charge have considered the huge grid upgrade and upgrade to power distribution in homes and buildings.
Worst case scenario is everyone’s heat pump starting at the same time after one of the power cuts that a recent electricity supplier leaflet told me to expect because of adverse weather events.
Now imagine they all have an EV charging point on the go as well.
Won’t they be powering the grid via their smart meters?
Managing it via “smart” meter equipment, maybe. Read the official bumf here: https://www.gov.uk/guidance/regulations-electric-vehicle-smart-charge-points They’re not advertising it, but it could be that customers might notice that they can’t actually charge their car when they want to, because someone else wants to (perhaps at a higher price) so as limit the total load. Regulations like that could be exploited to minimise installing upgraded distribution kit, e.g.
She’s made the fundamental error of not being friends with MTF.
And for those stupid enough to fall for the heat pump con what next? Oh, your exterior walls must be double insulated with all-weather treated kingspan to a depth of three foot and foam backed exterior doors. And while we are at it triple glazed windows.
On and on it will go until we are broke and broken.
Windows? Certainly not! Viewscreens showing a rural idyll (no cows, obvs) with government approved information channels.
Some older houses insulation in the walls causes more damp. Walls need to breathe.
I know. My first house was solid walls. British Gas called to offer advice on extra insulation. The young girl’s face was a picture when I explained that cavity wall insulation was not an option.
I had the same when I was called up by my energy company to say that “my smart meter was ready for me”. ——-They were rather bemused when I told them that it isn’t my smart meter, it is theirs.
Your heat pump will keep you warm ————Except as usual the small print says “”It will keep you warm if you wear 5 pullovers and stuff every crevice in your house with foam”
“So you must also spend a fortune on sealing your house from all possible draughts. “
That is only useful for half the year. The other half a house needs to get rid of heat.
I am passing by two old houses every day which have been modernised and thoroughly insulated during the last 2 years.
They have mold all over their facades now. Inside, it’s even worse.
The advise of a friend who is in the profession is: a) don’t (over)insulate your old house b) do nothing if you can on the heating system side, just wait. Because if one must eventually go for a heat pump in a few years, the pumps then will be able to achieve 70-80 degrees and a moderately sensible and affordable heating can be achieved by just creating more heating surfaces in the house in conjunction with them.
Of course, nothing beats the current setup with efficient gas boilers.
The laws of thermodynamics says that there is a hard limit to how much heat you can efficiently extract with an air source heat pump. No technological improvement will ever change that.
“… the pumps then will be able to achieve 70-80 degrees…”
So the laws of physics will be changed?
Is there no-one in government who is literate in science, engineering or even plumbing?
Even if they were, they don’t care
No, the number of MPs from STEM backgrounds is tiny. Most are humanities graduates. And it shows!
The state has no business dictating how people heat their homes
The state has no business, full stop!!
Or if they smoke a fag!
If we had proper health insurance, a smoker could simply pay higher premiums. That way, the state keeps out of it!
Everything within the State, nothing outside the State, nothing against the State. Sig B Mussolini.
That is absolutely the way we are going and have already gone. It has been done gradually so most people have not noticed. We need a “great reset” – just not the one the WEF want…
Rather than muckraking about renewables, electric cars and heat pumps, how about some constructive stories about potential new sites for fracking, coal mines and North Sea oil and natural gas?
SHHHHHHH —-Or you will be dragged off to the climate change gulag, and you will never be heard off again. ——-If you think this is me making a little joke then think again. Reducing emissions of CO2 is enshrined in law. Breaking the can and will lead to imprisonment and fines. ——Green=Tyranny on a massive scale.
You would think that the Energy Security and Net Zero Minister would know something about heat pumps. After all him and his government want to coerce everyone into getting one and be rid of the 21 million gas boilers in this country. But alas he KNOWS NOTHING about them at all. The now former Minister Grant Schapps was asked on GB News “Are heat pumps any good” ——-He replied “I don’t know, but I am having one fitted in my house so I will soon find out”——-How totally absurd. He wants to force a heat pump on everyone without knowing or even caring if they are any good. It turns out they are heap of .s..t, but all that matters to these imbeciles is implementing pretend to save the planet mandates from the One World Government people at the UN.
Hydrogen? Why does this keep coming up as planet-saviour.
The atmospheric gas… about 2%, but variable across the globe… is the ‘greenhouse gas’ which keeps the Earth warm, unlike Mars with 93% C02 and no water vapour.
The Climatrons in fact say it is the indirect effect of CO2 attenuation of outgoing long wavelength I/R, which causes an increase in heat content of this water vapour, which in turn causes more water to evaporate and atmospheric content to increase. It is this feed back, or climate sensitivity/radiative forcing, that will lead to run away global warming and boiling planet.
Now. Hydrogen burnt in air ‘only’ produces… water vapour the very gas which mostly directly regulates the heat budget.
So to replace a gas that doesn’t actually directly regulate the heat budget, they favour one that does.
The madness of the climate change hoax.
£7,500 in grant money. 25 years from now, ten times that much in compensation money for people who fitted crap machinery to their homes.
The illustration at the top of this article apparently shows an air source heat pump, but it could just as well show an air conditioning unit. As I understand it an air source heat pump makes the inside of a house hotter. Meanwhile an air conditioning unit makes the inside of a house cooler. Thus air conditioning units are causing exterior warming, if the Second Law of Thermodynamics is still true. So vast numbers of such units as one finds in large glass faced office blocks, and more widely in hot countries on every house, must be contributing to urban warming. So to help achieve net zero they should be banned. This would have course reduce the electricity grid load, allowing people to use electricity to charge their explosive cars. Would someone please put me out of my misery and explain why I am wrong?