Sunny side of the street

Ambitious pan-continental energy project
The grid across the Med and beyond

(Disclaimer – this post was written on holidays and I’ve revived it now – could be a case of too much sun in every sense)
Finally another pan-European story that caught my eye this week (great thing about being on hols, having the international editions of papers like the Guardian and FT double bonus time to read them) concered some kind of cross-continental energy grid which would hook up everything from geo-thermal geyser power in Iceland to massive solar farms powered by the Saharan sun in North Africa. Apparently the proposal has been brought to the table quite recently by scientists and energy boffins and promises cheap, clean and renewable energy sources to supply all of Europes needs into the future. Brown and Sarkosy have given the thumbs up it seems and the next steps are an advanced pilot project. The grid idea is not particularly new but tapping into the Saharan solar potential would seem to be. I became a bit cynical reading the detail as it appears the European contributions to the project are really backup sources (such as the wind energy off UK and geo-thermal as mentioned) but that the Lions share comes from the dark continent. Just got me wondering was this some other new form of colonialism, our African friends “joining” the European community when they have something to give – a lot to give, in fact a lot more than the rest put together in this particular project, and I just hope they’re getting a decent quid pro quo out of it. Maybe I think too much..

Four by-elections and a funeral

I’ve been reflecting a lot on British politics over the past week or two, principally as english papers were far easier come by on my hols than any others. The Guardian is always excellent, particularly if time is available to read it properly.

So it got me thinking about a few things. Firstly Gordon Brown and the qausi leadership contest underway in the Labour party. I always liked Brown saw him as the cerebral force behind the throne, the substance behind the spin, and an antidote to the politics of instant gratification. But he does seem to have slipped up somehow along the way since he finally took the reins. One or two by-elections can be forgiven but four in a row is worrying. And now he has a whippersnapper chasing at his heels.

On face value I didn’t think much to David Milliband initially. A young pretender, and tagged a Blairite, I felt it bitter consequence that Brown would be taken out yet again by the other camp and he barely a wet week in the job. However as I read up on Miliband the more I learned the more I liked. Geniune green politics. A focus on education. A society more than an economy. Balanced devolution. Empowered local government. An authentic social democracy. And a copy of the ‘New Left Review’ tucked into his holiday suitcase apparently. Substance as well as style. Not so Blairite after all perhaps.

Having said that I don’t think it’s a good idea to chop and change leaders. The Tories learned that and are finally making headway under Cameron. Fine Gael finally got going with Enda Kenny after repeated bouts of regicide almost condemened them to oblivion. Even the controlling commies had one chaotic period with Brezhnev, Andropov, Chernenko swapping out in rapid succession and look how that worked out for them.

So I wouldn’t be lighting the funeral pyres at number 10 just yet.