01/06/2026
Scrap net zero to support our farmers!
A key part of Restore Britain energy policy is scrapping Net Zero.
For years, governments have put climate targets ahead of the country’s basic energy needs.
The Climate Change Act (2008), strengthened in 2019, should be repealed.
Countries that leaned hardest into renewables — Germany, Denmark, and the UK — now face some of the highest energy costs.
A Cairngorms tenant farmer says land that was £500 an acre is now £5,000. He’s being pushed off ground his family has worked for generations — priced out by corporations that won’t farm a single acre.
This is also “net zero.”
Companies keep polluting, buy a Scottish hillside, plant some trees, and claim to be carbon neutral. Emissions don’t drop — they just buy something to point at.
BrewDog did exactly that. Bought thousands of acres, promised “carbon negative,” then saw huge tree losses, had its claims ruled misleading, dropped the label — and sold the land to a carbon offset firm.
That’s the model:
Public money in.
Dead trees out.
Farmers gone.
Green claims, then silence.
Half of Scotland’s estates sold in a recent year went to investors, not farmers. Some sales are done in secret so locals can’t even bid.
On the ground, “net zero” looks like this:
Food production stops.
Communities are pushed out.
Emissions stay the same.
The food was real.
The farmer was real.
The “carbon saving” is just a line on a spreadsheet.
And somehow, the villain is still the man with the sheep.