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Labour's shameful failure

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Published Date: 20 June 2008
It was inevitable that this government's weak, cynical and inadequate approach to transport, environment and energy issues should come under harsh scrutiny from the Tory leader, David Cameron (Focus, 17 June).
New Labour's rudderless inability to promote a coherent and sustainable transport policy worth the name is dismally obvious, particularly its wilful abdication of responsibility to invest in an expanded passenger/freight system offering tangible be
nefits for sustainable transport in a post-oil society.

Rather than invest adequately in rail improvement, New Labour has sought to discourage rail usage by imposing punitive fare increases for the next three years – in a country already burdened with Europe's highest fares.

And, despite its understanding of how domestic airlines' climate-wrecking emissions could be radically cut by a fast, competitive TGV-style Scotland-London rail link, Gordon Brown's government won't even plan for this before 2012. Yet the increased tax "windfall" generated by rising oil prices represents a unique opportunity to inject major capital modernisation, improvement and expansion into a rail network that has been weakened by decades of investment denial and senseless closures.

Time is running out for this government to implement well-researched strategies embracing more focused taxation and meaningful incentives to reduce our spiralling oil thirst and climate degradation arising from Europe's highest levels of car dependence and over-reliance on heavy road haulage.

K A SUTHERLAND
Dirleton Gate
Glasgow








The full article contains 233 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 19 June 2008 8:53 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

The Ghost of Sir William Arrol,

The Forthy Bridge 22/06/2008 00:17:51
Good comments. Not so much 'green' government, more yellow in colour. Afraid to do anything, afraid to deal with peak oil. Heads stuck in the sand and in the past.

With a stream of oil revenues coming in from the North Sea it is Britain that should have built sustainable TGV routes to get passengers out of planes and onto the rails and freight off the roads. Instead they've built roads and airports that all depend on yet more oil.

We've gone to war for that oil in Iraq, a costly misadventure in terms of lives (hundreds of thousands) and unending financial commitment. All for silly political vanity. The amount spent on the war could have paid for a new railway between London and Edinburgh.

Such investment would reduce the amount of domestic flying, saving energy. It would free up the classic railways for freight, saving energy in comparison to road haulage, and this in turn would reduce road congestion, all reducing our requirement for oil. Food transport costs would be less than they currently are!

Instead Gordon is going begging to the arabs, what a humiliation, and no wonder the Iranians want nuclear weapons. How else are they to keep the Americans from invading for the oil reserves?

 

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