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Miliband hits back at Farage over ‘nonsense and lies’ about net zero

19 Apr 2025 4 minute read
Nigel Farage smoking outside the Westminster Arms pub in Westminster, London. Image: Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire

Ed Miliband has accused Nigel Farage of peddling “nonsense and lies” by appearing to blame the UK Government’s commitment to net zero for the crisis in the UK steel industry.

The Energy Secretary said both Reform UK and the Tories were prepared to concoct falsehoods to “pursue their ideological agenda” in a strident attack on political opponents as next month’s local elections loom.

The senior Cabinet minister and former Labour leader also warned that if an anti-net zero agenda was followed, it would not only risk “climate breakdown” but “forfeit the clean energy jobs of the future” in Britain.

Price rises

In an article for The Observer newspaper referring to price rises that began in 2022, he wrote: “Our exposure to fossil fuels meant that, as those markets went into meltdown and prices rocketed, family, business and public finances were devastated.

“The cost of living impacts caused back then still stalk families today.”

Responding to the piece, Mr Farage said: “We alone cannot cause climate breakdown.”

Following Government action to take control of British Steel from its Chinese owners earlier this month, Reform leader Mr Farage accused Mr Miliband, whom he has repeatedly referred to as “Red Ed”, of pursuing “net-zero lunacy”.

He said that efforts to cut carbon emissions have made it harder to source coal required to keep blast furnaces at the company’s crisis-hit Scunthorpe plant running after supplies were shipped from abroad last week.

The Government has said that a Cumbrian coal mine, which critics claim it could have used as a domestic source, would not have produced the kind of material that would have been suited to British Steel.

“We’re living through a period of net-zero lunacy, something that the Conservatives signed us up to, wrote into law and believed in, as if somehow it was their new religion,” Mr Farage told a campaign event last week.

“And this, of course, is now being followed by Red Ed, who is the high priest of this who was determined to cover our agricultural land in Chinese slave-labour made farms, solar farms, and to despoil as much of our coastline as he possibly can.”

He has also said the UK should be “self-sufficient in oil” and gas.

Climate groups have argued that the North Sea is an aging basin, meaning its reserves will decline regardless of Government policy as well as being expensive to extract.

‘Nonsense’

Mr Miliband said that both Reform and the Conservatives would “make up any old nonsense and lies to pursue their ideological agenda” and that breaking free of reliance on overseas supplies is also a matter of “national security”.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer is expected to double down on his Government’s commitment to clean power at an International Energy Agency conference this week in London.

Meanwhile, Mr Farage, who wants to abandon the commitment to achieving net zero by 2050, told The Sun on Sunday newspaper that the policy could become “the new Brexit”.

“This could be the next Brexit – where Parliament is so hopelessly out of touch with the country,” he said.

Since becoming Tory leader, Kemi Badenoch has also cast doubt on the 2050 target previously passed by her own party, saying she believes it is “impossible” without a “serious drop in living standards or by bankrupting us”.

MPs passed an emergency law last week allowing ministers to take control of British Steel to prevent the closure of its blast furnaces and potential widespread job losses after talks with its owners, Jingye, broke down.

Labour has stepped up its attacks on Reform in the run-up to the local elections amid opinion poll momentum for the right-wing party, which returned just five MPs at the general election last year and now has four.

Votes for a total of 1,641 council seats across 23 authorities in England will take place on May 1.


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John Ellis
John Ellis
13 days ago

‘Virgin’ steel-making is clearly an issue in respect of achieving ‘net zero’, simply because of the huge carbon emissions which the process has been shown to create. The reality, though, is that if we don’t find a way of reducing such emissions, those who understand such things warn that sea levels will rise, areas of Britain will be submerged, and large quantities of folk impacted by even more severe climate change than we in the British Isles will experience will start to move to places where they think a better life will be possible. Like here. An argument can well… Read more »

Jonathan Dean
Jonathan Dean
12 days ago

“This could be the next Brexit”?

As that’s exactly what he’s manufacturing it to be – simple slogans to sell to the gullible

A.Redman
A.Redman
12 days ago

Milliband doesn’t have an “Idealogical Agenda”? As long as the UK has to import oil, gas,coal etc.it will be giving control to outside forces.
Days of self sufficiency for the UK are disappearing at an alarming rate thanks to Milliband and his followers.
How can importing all the products that this country requires for energy etc.from thousands of miles away be cost effective ,let alone economically beneficial? Milliband needs to be brought under control before it is too late.

Baxter
Baxter
12 days ago
Reply to  A.Redman

Producing oil and gas domestically doesn’t stop the UK being controlled by outside forces because the price for these is set globally. Or are you suggesting the oil and gas companies should be nationalised so the UK can have what they extract at cost?

Adrian
Adrian
12 days ago
Reply to  Baxter

Neither does it reduce the planet’s CO2 output: it just moves it elsewhere. Politicians think we’re stupid.

Baxter
Baxter
12 days ago
Reply to  Adrian

That’s two good reasons to exploit domestic energy sources that can’t be traded globally.

Karl
Karl
12 days ago

The word is lies, stop giving the far right respect, when the will tell utter lies. Call their lies for what they are. Be blunt, that’s what people like,not pick around the edges of the word.

Jeff
Jeff
12 days ago

I have heard farages comments on climate. He is clueless. Thick as mince in that area Like all area’s he has an opinion on).

But he will trumpet what trump wants and you know that will be a lie. How is his best mate in the Whitehouse doing anyway. Opened up ocean nature reserves to fishing? Sent any more to the concentration camps? Cut any more health funding? Sent out RFK to spout eugenics? Chopped vital health research?

Such idea’s coming from a reform candidate near you very soon.

Adrian
Adrian
12 days ago
Reply to  Jeff

Farage seems to be the only politician with any grasp of reality regarding the Net Zero idiocy. Miliband is scientifically and factually illiterate on the matter.

Jeff
Jeff
12 days ago
Reply to  Adrian

How are his brexit predictions? He has no ability.

He does what he is told. Like the good little toady he is.

Tucker
Tucker
12 days ago
Reply to  Adrian

He also thinks chlorinated chicken is fine for the UK market too.

John
John
12 days ago

Insane how few politicians and journalists hold Farage to account. I wish people like Miliband would speak up more. In 2026, the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) will be introduced — basically a carbon tariff. Tata/BS/Liberty will have to pay for the carbon emissions embedded in those products, at a price aligned to the EU’s own Emissions Trading System (ETS). Right now, UK steelmakers benefit from free carbon allowances under the UK ETS,. But UK manfuacturers will soon have to pay for emissions at the border. Result? UK exports of steel to the EU become more expensive, and obviously less… Read more »

Llyn
Llyn
12 days ago

Reform UK’s climate denying anti-science policy is to end net-zero and invest in UK’s oil and gas industry. As Wales could be a green energy super power and we have no oil and gas energy their policy is to disinvest in Wales.

Where I agree with far-right toff Farage when he say Net Zero could be the next Brexit. Correct Net Zero would be an economic disaster

Adrian
Adrian
12 days ago
Reply to  Llyn

Reform doesn’t deny the climate Llyn, just the made-up climate catastrophe. Let me know when Port Talbot becomes that ‘green super power’ you speak of. We’ll need about 3000 ‘green’ jobs: how many so far?

Llyn
Llyn
12 days ago
Reply to  Adrian

Reform UK don’t deny climate change? I think they do. But if they , as you say, believe in man made climate change but aren’t going to do anything about I would say that’s even worse. https://news.sky.com/story/reform-uks-richard-tice-dismisses-man-made-climate-change-as-garbage-13311385

Baxter
Baxter
12 days ago

The lesson from Brexit is that the gloves need to come off. Trusting people to see through the shysterism was a disastrous plan.

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