I'm not so sure about that, I think the timing could well have been deliberate, sending a blunt message.you don't have to. It has nothing to do with brexit, Honda just want out of UK after brexit, the timing is purely coincidental.
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I'm not so sure about that, I think the timing could well have been deliberate, sending a blunt message.you don't have to. It has nothing to do with brexit, Honda just want out of UK after brexit, the timing is purely coincidental.
Sorry but the real issue is Brexit !It’s called negotiating. We say to Germany, Spain, Italy, France. You can sell your cars here tariff free. In return we would like to export our foreign cars to you.
The real issue here isn’t Brexit. It’s our reliance on foreign companies providing us jobs.
Take them with you when you goNO
Brexit has become the same old same old....there are a lot of more interesting and refreshing diversions and side issues
you have flow batteries on the near term then maybe nuclear batteries in the future.Answered Danidl on other thread but basically a battery exchange system will never work on a country wide scale for two reasons.
A)The sheer number of batteries required and resultant volume taken up. (batteries in storage are still ageing)
B)Historically buyers have always demanded a range of sizes, qualities, prices etc. (pedelecs cant even settle on one battery type, connection etc) How many Lexus against Leaf batteries would be stored...
Problems combined would create a logistic nightmare.
We are as a nation held hostage by the ERG and DUPYeah it's not good. But then again being held hostage to an organisation isn't either.
Afraid not. If we offer terms to get them here rather than the EU getting them, the EU will just tariff block their import. Just another reality cost of Brexit, the EU gaining the ability to discriminate against us.We can offer better terms
End of the day we can offer zero tax to them if they guarantee jobs.
It's a bit grubby but it's true.
Don't want to go too far off track with this but your true comment of leaf versus lexus, is exactly the same as VHS v Betamax or phone chargers in the early days. There are two ways to resolve this and EU regulation and ISO standards the best. ..The EU could mandate that all battery packs adhered to specific dimensions,and then all EU countries could put that into law . Individual companies would grumble ,but would acknowledge the sense.Fair point Danid.
However, the logistics for your solution are almost impossible.
The recharge time is as salient as the range, as you correctly alluded to,its probably more important. Under your scheme the big problemwould be the number of batteries required their distribution, their ownership, their storage and their impact on the environment. You would need treble the number of batteries to vehicles. Imagine the storage issues on motorway service areas. I dont think it could work and thats before we examine the range of batteries required. (,eg a Leaf versus a a Lexus)
IMHO battery exchange is a none starter.
I suspect running our present cars on hydrogen is much more feasible but the prpblem is nobody actually knows.
We all have theoretical solutions. Reality will be different. Its the unknown the idustry cant cope with.
I'm not so sure about that, I think the timing could well have been deliberate, sending a blunt message.
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Oh go on....your debris issue at your French country chateau is of more interest.Don't want to go too far off track with this....
Good post. Well said.Michael Tomlinson writing in the Times today:
Above the chamber of the House of Commons, along the winding corridors of the Palace of Westminster, sits the European scrutiny committee, or ESC. It performs a vital function, not least as a persistent reminder of why so many voted to leave: sovereignty over our laws.
The committee assesses the importance of draft EU legislation and then decides whether to ask questions of the government or refer it for a debate. And it is sitting on hundreds of EU legislative instruments which I and many of my colleagues don’t believe are in our national interest.
But we don’t have the power to block legislation forever. In January 2017, the EU’s ports regulations became UK law even though they weren’t wanted by any British ports. The unions did not want them. Parliament did not want them.
And yet they were pushed through by the EU and now sit on our statute book. Sir Bill Cash, the ESC chairman, is fond of reminding us that in his 34 years on the committee, he has never known a single EU law to have been overturned in parliament.
It really is quite simple for me. I believe that our laws should be made in Westminster, and not in Brussels. As Sir Bill puts it, these laws are made in a council of ministers behind closed doors, by consensus, without a transcript, and the proposals are initiated by the European Commission, whose members are unelected.
Let me give another concrete example: daylight saving. I had the pleasure of leading what is likely to be the last EU scrutiny debate of its kind in the House of Commons. This particular EU proposal would end the twice-yearly clock changes and require each country to observe summer time or standard time all year round.
In his state of the union speech in September, Jean-Claude Juncker announced: “Clock-changing must stop. Member states should themselves decide whether their citizens live in summer or winter time. It is a question of subsidiarity.”
However, in reality the proposed directive gives member states little more than a stark and binary choice between permanent summer time or winter time all year round.
Surely we in the UK should decide for ourselves what is in our own national interest and, for example, whether we change our clocks. It should not be dictated by the EU. This goes to the very essence of sovereignty.
During the course of the daylight saving debate, the minister confirmed that we have no plans to change daylight saving time and that we are working with other member states to oppose the proposal.
But as we have seen before, once the EU has set its course our parliament will not be able to prevent it, as long as we remain members.
Thankfully, in just under fifty days, this will all change.
The sheer volume of legislation from the EU takes the biscuit. It amounts to us having to scrutinise more than 1,000 documents per parliamentary session on average, and in this longer session we have already considered more than 2,000 and counting. It is hardly surprising that the work of the ESC makes many of its members more Eurosceptic.
Our chairman could never be accused of being a Europhile, but in an exchange with Ken Clarke on the floor of the House of Commons, he confirmed that in the 1975 referendum he voted “yes” to the EEC. It was only when he was put on to the select committee on European legislation that he began to see the light. I wonder whether the whips look back now and rue the day they put him on to that committee.
The battle for Brexit continues, and the work of the European scrutiny committee serves as a constant reminder to all of us that we must get out of the European Union so that we take back control of our own laws and become a self-governing, independent and free-trading nation once again.
Michael Tomlinson is the Conservative MP for Mid Dorset and Poole
"The people didn't want the EU".. well 52% v 48% of the voting population did form that view. However was it a flawed poll?.Yeah it's not good. But then again being held hostage to an organisation isn't either.
Thatcher sold the dream to the Japanese that we could export the cars to the EU mainland.
We still can. It will just have to be structured differently.
The people didn't want the EU. The politicians did. Change can be good the politicians always say. Until its not the change they want.
Too much is at stake not to make this work. It will work. Its just been a terrible start to the start
"The people didn't want the EU".. well 52% v 48% of the voting population did form that view. However was it a flawed poll?.
It is nice to see that this MP can at least construct sentences. It is a pity that his competence does not rise to constructing a logical argument.Michael Tomlinson writing in the Times today:
Above the chamber of the House of Commons, along the winding corridors of the Palace of Westminster, sits the European scrutiny committee, or ESC. It performs a vital function, not least as a persistent reminder of why so many voted to leave: sovereignty over our laws.
The committee assesses the importance of draft EU legislation and then decides whether to ask questions of the government or refer it for a debate. And it is sitting on hundreds of EU legislative instruments which I and many of my colleagues don’t believe are in our national interest.
But we don’t have the power to block legislation forever. In January 2017, the EU’s ports regulations became UK law even though they weren’t wanted by any British ports. The unions did not want them. Parliament did not want them.
And yet they were pushed through by the EU and now sit on our statute book. Sir Bill Cash, the ESC chairman, is fond of reminding us that in his 34 years on the committee, he has never known a single EU law to have been overturned in parliament.
It really is quite simple for me. I believe that our laws should be made in Westminster, and not in Brussels. As Sir Bill puts it, these laws are made in a council of ministers behind closed doors, by consensus, without a transcript, and the proposals are initiated by the European Commission, whose members are unelected.
Let me give another concrete example: daylight saving. I had the pleasure of leading what is likely to be the last EU scrutiny debate of its kind in the House of Commons. This particular EU proposal would end the twice-yearly clock changes and require each country to observe summer time or standard time all year round.
In his state of the union speech in September, Jean-Claude Juncker announced: “Clock-changing must stop. Member states should themselves decide whether their citizens live in summer or winter time. It is a question of subsidiarity.”
However, in reality the proposed directive gives member states little more than a stark and binary choice between permanent summer time or winter time all year round.
Surely we in the UK should decide for ourselves what is in our own national interest and, for example, whether we change our clocks. It should not be dictated by the EU. This goes to the very essence of sovereignty.
During the course of the daylight saving debate, the minister confirmed that we have no plans to change daylight saving time and that we are working with other member states to oppose the proposal.
But as we have seen before, once the EU has set its course our parliament will not be able to prevent it, as long as we remain members.
Thankfully, in just under fifty days, this will all change.
The sheer volume of legislation from the EU takes the biscuit. It amounts to us having to scrutinise more than 1,000 documents per parliamentary session on average, and in this longer session we have already considered more than 2,000 and counting. It is hardly surprising that the work of the ESC makes many of its members more Eurosceptic.
Our chairman could never be accused of being a Europhile, but in an exchange with Ken Clarke on the floor of the House of Commons, he confirmed that in the 1975 referendum he voted “yes” to the EEC. It was only when he was put on to the select committee on European legislation that he began to see the light. I wonder whether the whips look back now and rue the day they put him on to that committee.
The battle for Brexit continues, and the work of the European scrutiny committee serves as a constant reminder to all of us that we must get out of the European Union so that we take back control of our own laws and become a self-governing, independent and free-trading nation once again.
Michael Tomlinson is the Conservative MP for Mid Dorset and Poole
Also completely wrong! they would end up penalised by the EUWe can offer better terms
End of the day we can offer zero tax to them if they guarantee jobs.
It's a bit grubby but it's true.
Like the ~ERG?What does that mean?
As I say. The real question should be do we want the euro.
In or out. A customs union I have no problem with. Freedom of movement I have no problem with.
Making our laws. Setting our own rules with other countries should be sovereign. Setting our own taxes etc.
Not governed by an unelected cabal whose real plans we will never know.
Much said to mislead and not unbiassedMichael Tomlinson writing in the Times today:
Above the chamber of the House of Commons, along the winding corridors of the Palace of Westminster, sits the European scrutiny committee, or ESC. It performs a vital function, not least as a persistent reminder of why so many voted to leave: sovereignty over our laws.
The committee assesses the importance of draft EU legislation and then decides whether to ask questions of the government or refer it for a debate. And it is sitting on hundreds of EU legislative instruments which I and many of my colleagues don’t believe are in our national interest.
But we don’t have the power to block legislation forever. In January 2017, the EU’s ports regulations became UK law even though they weren’t wanted by any British ports. The unions did not want them. Parliament did not want them.
And yet they were pushed through by the EU and now sit on our statute book. Sir Bill Cash, the ESC chairman, is fond of reminding us that in his 34 years on the committee, he has never known a single EU law to have been overturned in parliament.
It really is quite simple for me. I believe that our laws should be made in Westminster, and not in Brussels. As Sir Bill puts it, these laws are made in a council of ministers behind closed doors, by consensus, without a transcript, and the proposals are initiated by the European Commission, whose members are unelected.
Let me give another concrete example: daylight saving. I had the pleasure of leading what is likely to be the last EU scrutiny debate of its kind in the House of Commons. This particular EU proposal would end the twice-yearly clock changes and require each country to observe summer time or standard time all year round.
In his state of the union speech in September, Jean-Claude Juncker announced: “Clock-changing must stop. Member states should themselves decide whether their citizens live in summer or winter time. It is a question of subsidiarity.”
However, in reality the proposed directive gives member states little more than a stark and binary choice between permanent summer time or winter time all year round.
Surely we in the UK should decide for ourselves what is in our own national interest and, for example, whether we change our clocks. It should not be dictated by the EU. This goes to the very essence of sovereignty.
During the course of the daylight saving debate, the minister confirmed that we have no plans to change daylight saving time and that we are working with other member states to oppose the proposal.
But as we have seen before, once the EU has set its course our parliament will not be able to prevent it, as long as we remain members.
Thankfully, in just under fifty days, this will all change.
The sheer volume of legislation from the EU takes the biscuit. It amounts to us having to scrutinise more than 1,000 documents per parliamentary session on average, and in this longer session we have already considered more than 2,000 and counting. It is hardly surprising that the work of the ESC makes many of its members more Eurosceptic.
Our chairman could never be accused of being a Europhile, but in an exchange with Ken Clarke on the floor of the House of Commons, he confirmed that in the 1975 referendum he voted “yes” to the EEC. It was only when he was put on to the select committee on European legislation that he began to see the light. I wonder whether the whips look back now and rue the day they put him on to that committee.
The battle for Brexit continues, and the work of the European scrutiny committee serves as a constant reminder to all of us that we must get out of the European Union so that we take back control of our own laws and become a self-governing, independent and free-trading nation once again.
Michael Tomlinson is the Conservative MP for Mid Dorset and Poole
Hardly old friend.Like the ~ERG?
when it comes to practical things like the daylight saving example that Mr Tomlinson gave, these laws are better made by EU technocrats than our MPs at Westminster, the vast majority of them haven't got the specialist expertise.The sheer volume of legislation from the EU takes the biscuit. It amounts to us having to scrutinise more than 1,000 documents per parliamentary session on average, and in this longer session we have already considered more than 2,000 and counting. It is hardly surprising that the work of the ESC makes many of its members more Eurosceptic.