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Why the media silence on devastating consequences of gas supply shutdown?

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Published Date: 29 April 2008
Little has been said about the consequences of the cessation of a third of the UK's gas supply caused by the Grangemouth refinery shutdown (your report, 26 April). These include additional costs to industry and commerce as users on interruptible supply contracts have to turn to more expensive fuels. If, after these customers are turned off, there is still a shortfall in supply, other large users, including gas-fired power stations, may have to have their supplies restricted, again a
Were it found necessary to cut supplies to an urban area, the consequences could be severe, for service engineers would have to visit all customers in the area to ensure that when supplies were again available, the dangers arising from unrestricted g
as flows were avoided. Gas mains might have to be purged with nitrogen before supplies could be restored.

There is widespread ignorance of the hazards of cutting off gas supplies as the silence on this topic in the media testifies.

As panic spreads through the corridors of power, the consequences of delay in ensuring the independence and autonomy of the UK's energy supplies are beginning to be felt. It is scandalous that the country should be so vulnerable at the present time that a few strikers at a refinery could bring the country to its knees.

Even more outrageous will be the situation when the energy gap widens, when indigenous oil and gas supplies dwindle, when old coal and nuclear power stations reach the end of their lives and the country will become ever more dependent on imports from politically unstable areas of the world.

(PROF) FENTON F ROBB

North Street

Eyemouth, Berwickshire


The Grangemouth oil refinery management is too soft. The proposed changes to pensions apparently affect not one worker and it is reported that oil refinery staff earn £40,000 a year.

This 48-hour strike has paralysed the refinery and lost the company, North Sea oil companies, the government and taxpayers billions.

OK, the company and the country have suffered. Let us tighten our belts and suffer some more. Let this one pass, but if the workers threaten another such paralysing and costly strike and carry out their threat, the management should lock them out or sack them.

It is perfectly reasonable for a company in the present economic climate and in the wake of government interference with pension tax allowances to ask well-paid and well-pensioned workers to pay their share. If prospective employees do not like the new pension arrangements, they need only turn the job offer down.

Better that than return to the bad old days of union dominance, strike-ridden years and economic decline.

GEORGE K McMILLAN

Mount Tabor Avenue

Perth


Jim Walker's promotion of biofuels is, like wind farms, a dangerous distraction from durable, clean solutions to future energy sources (Platform, 26 April).

The only transport system for a predicted world population of nine billions will not be mechanised; resources will only permit a short-range economic model based on largely regional materials.

Wasting land on biofuels for the privileged only continues our reliance on the internal combustion engine and oil, instead of redesigning society around walking or cycling, which are the methods used by most of humanity.

JOHN ROGERSON

Livingstone Place

Lockerbie, Dumfriesshire




The full article contains 555 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 28 April 2008 8:55 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

A Better Way,

Edinburgh 29/04/2008 05:13:48
Its seems very obvious to many that any concerted attention on this minor problem simply emphasizes the Independance point of view through the potential realization of the Scottish Nation, that they are in fact a people who control massive incomes and power similar to the other major Oil producers. The further expansion of Oil resources out near Rockall and the Oil reserves as yet untapped in closer waters makes us a major player and generator of wealth.

It is up to the members of the SNP Cybernats to push these facts into the fore through the untruths that have been pushed onto the Scottish People since the late sixties.

To not declare an Independant Scottish State is pure madness by the average Scot. They are reducing our wealth on a day to day basis, whilst they manipulate the people through diversional tactics.
2

Tynietiger,

29/04/2008 08:53:19
Gas prices and high oil prices confirm yet again it is Scotland which is subsidising the rest of the UK.

Despite this we have the worst economic, employment and health statistics over the past 50 years.
3

Amanda Huginkiss,

29/04/2008 09:10:44
1# What you are declaring is selfish greed while the SNP, on the other hand, would share oil revenues with the EU. How kind of them.
4

Upbeat,

29/04/2008 09:15:08
Forget about the problems of transport... bicycles and walking... if world population is ever allowed to reach 9 billion. In the most inhabited regions around the earth it will only be possible to pass things to each other. !!
5

,

29/04/2008 10:45:54
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
6

Upbeat,

29/04/2008 14:56:49
5


You are not being lied to. All that has been happening is that the full details are not always as easy for the layman to understand as they might be.

Anyway it makes no difference . You pay VAT and income tax to the Exchequer of the United KLingdom. You receive social benefits, and tax rebates, unemployments and other benefits from the exchequer of the United Kingdom. You are a citizen of the United Kindom . There are many reasonable explanations as to why you should not be shouting "foul".

When you get your gas from the mains supply , you do perhaps realise that what is coming out of the pipe is natural gas, which could be from virtually anywhere : Russia, The middle east, the Far east ... even from under the central north sea. ? Dutch gas fields, Norwegian gas fields, British gas fields etc ?

 

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