Sunday, 15 March 2026

North Sea Oil: Climate, Economics, and the Failure of Long-Term Imagination

The argument over new North Sea oil and gas licences has become another of those strangely binary debates that now dominate British public life. One is invited to choose between climate responsibility or economic realism, between moral seriousness or jobs and energy security. Yet the truth, as so often, lies in the uncomfortable space between these poles — a space our politics has become increasingly reluctant to inhabit.

Part of the difficulty is that the present moment is not simply the product of policy choices but of accumulated shocks. The 2008 banking crisis hollowed out fiscal confidence; the pandemic exposed the fragility of global supply chains; and the rising urgency of climate change has created a moral pressure that politicians are understandably eager to be seen responding to. Empathy for the climate cause is genuine in many cases, but it is also electorally useful. The result is a political culture that gestures toward long-term transformation while remaining structurally addicted to short-term fixes.

Against this backdrop, the North Sea becomes a kind of mirror in which we see both our aspirations and our failures.

Climate Commitments and the Case Against New Fields

Ed Miliband and others argue that approving new oil and gas fields is incompatible with the UK’s commitment to reach net zero by 2050. Their case is not merely technical but moral: how can a country that claims climate leadership continue to invest in long-lived fossil infrastructure. New fields would operate for decades, potentially locking in emissions and weakening the UK’s credibility in international negotiations.

They also argue that more domestic production will not meaningfully reduce household bills, since oil and gas prices are set globally. Better, they say, to direct investment toward renewables — offshore wind, solar, and the grid infrastructure needed to support them. In this vision, the North Sea becomes a managed sunset industry: existing fields decline gracefully while new exploration is paused.

There is a moral clarity to this position, but perhaps also a certain impatience with the messy realities of transition.

The Counter-Argument: Demand, Security, and the Realities We Prefer Not to Face

Critics respond that the UK will continue to need oil and gas for decades, particularly for aviation, shipping, chemicals, and as backup for intermittent renewables. If domestic production falls faster than demand, the UK will simply import more — often from countries with weaker environmental standards. This is the uncomfortable truth behind the accusation of “outsourcing emissions”.

There is also the human dimension: thousands of jobs, regional economies, and the tax revenues that support public services. For communities in Scotland and the North East, the North Sea is not an abstraction but a livelihood.

Economists add another layer: the effect of restricting supply depends on the speed of global demand decline. If demand collapses quickly, new fields risk becoming stranded assets. If demand declines slowly, restricting domestic production merely shifts extraction abroad without reducing global emissions — the phenomenon known as carbon leakage.

Here again, the debate resists simple moral sorting.

The British Paradox: Producing Oil While Importing It

The UK’s position is further complicated by a structural paradox. We produce high-quality North Sea crude, yet we import large volumes of oil and refined fuels. This is partly because:

UK refineries are specialised and cannot efficiently process all domestic crude

Some crude is exported for refining abroad while different grades are imported

The UK’s refining capacity has declined over decades

This means that even if the UK increases production, the direct domestic benefit is limited. We remain tied to global markets, with all their volatility and geopolitical risk.

The Long Shadow of Thatcher and the Lost Opportunity

No discussion of the North Sea can avoid the historical comparison with Norway. The UK’s oil boom in the 1970s and 1980s provided a fiscal windfall that was largely spent rather than saved. Margaret Thatcher used the revenues to fund tax cuts, public spending, and the restructuring of the economy. Norway, by contrast, created a sovereign wealth fund that now exceeds a trillion dollars.

It is tempting to moralise this contrast, but the deeper lesson is about long-term imagination — or the lack of it. Britain consumed its inheritance; Norway invested it. Today, as the North Sea declines, we face the consequences of that choice.

Toward a Synthesis: Beyond the Binary

The present debate is framed as a choice between climate virtue and economic necessity, but this framing is itself a symptom of our political short-termism. The real challenge is to hold multiple truths at once:

The UK must decarbonise rapidly

The UK will still need oil and gas for some time

Domestic production has limited but real benefits

New fields risk undermining climate credibility

Abrupt withdrawal risks economic and social harm

The question is not whether to choose one side or the other, but how to design a transition that is morally serious, economically realistic, and historically aware.

This requires something British politics has struggled to cultivate: a capacity for long-term planning that survives electoral cycles and resists the temptation of symbolic gestures. The shocks of the past two decades — financial, epidemiological, environmental — have made this harder, but also more necessary.

If there is hope for a synthesis, it lies in recovering that lost habit of thinking beyond the next headline. The North Sea debate, for all its heat, could yet become an opportunity to do so.

Thursday, 12 March 2026

Virtue, Order, and the Confucian Imagination in an English Civil War Life

 

Here is a meditation around the role of Thomas Fairfax as a model of authority in a moment when England was searching for order. It is written following a talk at a recent meeting of my Local History Society.

There are moments in history when the fate of a nation seems to hinge not on constitutions or armies but on the character of a few individuals who, without seeking it, become the custodians of order. Thomas Fairfax belongs to that small company. He was a general of rare ability, yet his life after the Civil War suggests something deeper than military competence. It suggests a man who believed—instinctively, quietly, without philosophical flourish—that authority must rest on virtue if it is to endure.

This is not the language of seventeenth‑century England. It is, however, the language of Confucius, who taught that harmony begins with right relationships: ruler and subject, parent and child, word and meaning. A society is not held together by force or cleverness but by the moral coherence of those who lead it. When that coherence fails, disorder follows, no matter how elaborate the machinery of the state.

Fairfax lived through precisely such a failure.

I. The Aftermath of Regicide: Power Without Moral Centre

The execution of Charles I in 1649 was, for many Parliamentarians, the necessary climax of a long struggle. For Fairfax, it was something else: a rupture in the moral fabric of the kingdom. He had fought the King’s armies, but he had not fought for the King’s death. When summoned to sit as a judge, he refused. Lady Anne’s cry from the gallery—“He is not here, and he will never be here”—was the public expression of a private conviction: that authority cannot be built on an act that violates the deeper order of things.

Confucius would have recognised the moment. When the ruler loses virtue, the state becomes a theatre of confusion. Ritual becomes empty form; words lose their meaning; power becomes self‑justifying. The Commonwealth, for all its talk of liberty, soon displayed these symptoms. Parliament dissolved and reassembled in bewildering combinations. Financial abstractions multiplied. Ideological noise drowned out the quieter claims of justice and moderation.

Fairfax watched this with a kind of sorrow. He had fought to restrain arbitrary power, not to replace it with a republic of abstractions. The regicides had removed the monarch but failed to cultivate the moral order that might have replaced him. They had, in Confucian terms, lost the Mandate of Heaven—not because they lacked legal right, but because they lacked moral right.

II. Fairfax and Cromwell: Two Models of Authority

The contrast with Oliver Cromwell is instructive. Cromwell was a man of immense gifts—decisive, visionary, unafraid of power. But his authority, for all its religious fervour, rested ultimately on force: the Army, the Protectorate, the machinery of the state. He governed through a kind of English Legalism, believing that order could be imposed if only the right structures were in place and the right men held the reins.

Fairfax’s authority was of a different kind. He governed by example, not decree. He listened more than he commanded. He refused to act when conscience forbade it. He stepped aside when power demanded what virtue could not supply. Cromwell believed in the transformative power of institutions; Fairfax believed in the transformative power of character.

The final break came in 1650, when Cromwell urged a pre‑emptive strike against the Scots. Fairfax could not bring himself to wage war on a nation that had once been an ally in the struggle for liberty. Rather than lead a campaign he believed unjust, he resigned his commission. It was a gesture Confucius would have recognised: the withdrawal of the junzi—the exemplary man—when the ruler no longer heeds the Way.

III. The Collapse of the Protectorate: A Nation Without a Centre

When Cromwell died in 1658, the Protectorate began to crumble almost at once. Richard Cromwell lacked his father’s authority; the Army fractured; Parliament bickered. England drifted, weary of experiment and hungry for stability. It was a moment when the nation seemed to have lost not only its institutions but its moral grammar.

Into this vacuum stepped General George Monck, the military governor of Scotland. Monck was no ideologue. He understood power, but he also understood its limits. His instinct was for order, not upheaval. He marched south not as a conqueror but as a man attempting to restore coherence to a country that had forgotten how to govern itself.

Fairfax, watching from Yorkshire, recognised the moment. A rising in the north threatened to ignite wider disorder. He mounted his horse once more. The sight of him—this modest, battle‑worn figure—was enough to steady the county. Men followed him not because he commanded them, but because they trusted him.

This is the Confucian ideal of authority: not the authority of force, but the authority of character.

IV. The Restoration as a Work of Moral Repair

Monck, recognising Fairfax’s influence, consulted him closely. Fairfax did not dictate terms; he did not seek office. Instead, he lent his name—still one of the most trusted in England—to the one solution that could end the cycle of coups, dissolutions, and military interventions: the Restoration of Charles II under conditions that would protect the liberties for which the Civil War had been fought.

Fairfax’s support reassured former Parliamentarians that the Restoration need not mean revenge, and reassured Royalists that reconciliation was possible. It was a gesture of national healing from a man who had once commanded the army that defeated the monarchy.

V. Virtue as the Ground of Authority

How far, then, can we say that Fairfax embodied the Confucian idea of authority grounded in virtue rather than power?

  • He subordinated ambition to conscience.
  • He refused to participate in acts he believed morally corrosive.
  • He exercised power lightly and relinquished it easily.
  • He believed that right relationships—between ruler and subject, army and Parliament, victory and mercy—were the true foundations of harmony.
  • He acted not to dominate events but to steady them.

In a century of ideological noise, Fairfax’s life reads almost like a counterpoint: a reminder that the stability of a nation depends less on the brilliance of its institutions than on the character of the people who inhabit them. He was, in that sense, a kind of English junzi—an exemplary man whose authority flowed not from office or force but from the quiet coherence of his own conduct.

His memorial says it plainly:

“He might have been a King but that he understood
How much it is a meaner thing to be unjustly great
Than honourably good.”

In the end, Fairfax matters because he shows us that virtue, even when it refuses the stage, can still shape the fate of a nation.

Sunday, 1 March 2026

More Ezra Pound Reflections

 I’ve been thinking about Ezra Pound again, and to that curious, lifelong entanglement he had with Confucius. It’s odd how these things resurface. Perhaps it’s the general unease in the air — today’s grim exchange between the USA and Iran being only the latest reminder that the world seems to be running on frayed nerves and brittle certainties. It has put me in mind of Pound’s own restlessness, and of those extraordinary wartime broadcasts from Rome in which he poured out his fury at America, convinced that the country of his birth had abandoned every civilisational principle he believed in. They make for uncomfortable listening now, but they also reveal a man who felt himself standing in the ruins of something he could no longer name.

And in all this, Pound’s fascination with Confucius feels strangely contemporary. China, having once tossed Confucius aside in the fervour of Maoist purification, now retrieves him selectively, polishing those aspects of his teaching that align with its own political ambitions. A civilisation reclaiming its ancient guide just as it asserts itself as the world’s manufacturing centre, promises a carefully managed glide toward Net Zero by the 2060s, and continues to refine its own brand of autocratic governance. One can almost imagine Pound peering across the decades, muttering that at last someone has restored order — though of course the reality is far more complicated, and far less benign, than his romantic imagination allowed.

What has always struck me is how Pound believed poetry might serve as a kind of moral architecture. In The Cantos, especially, he treats verse not as ornament but as scaffolding — fragments of governance, ethics, and historical example woven into a tapestry of cultural memory. He read Confucius not as a relic but as a physician diagnosing the ailments of societies adrift. There is something touching in that ambition, even if it carried him into places where clarity and delusion became difficult to separate.

For Pound, Confucius offered a world in which order begins with right relationships: ruler and subject, parent and child, word and meaning. Harmony is not negotiated through democratic contest but cultivated through ritual, hierarchy, and moral authority.

To a man watching the West flounder in parliamentary bickering, financial abstraction, and ideological noise, this must have seemed like a lifeline. And so he drifted toward authoritarian politics, imagining in Mussolini a modern vessel for ancient virtues. The tragedy — if that is the word — lies in the way he blurred distinctions: the Confucian idea of authority grounded in virtue, and the modern reality of authority grounded in power, myth, and the machinery of the state.

And now, as we watch the USA and Iran exchange blows — each convinced of its own righteousness, each locked into its own narrative of grievance and destiny — I find myself thinking of Pound’s broadcasts again. Not because the situations are comparable, but because the same unease runs beneath them: the sense that nations, like individuals, can lose their bearings, and that once lost, the search for coherence can take them down unpredictable paths.

Western societies still wrestle with fragmentation, economic opacity, and the erosion of shared narratives. The fear — sometimes whispered, sometimes shouted — is that liberal democracies may be losing the capacity to sustain order. And at the same time, China’s rise, with its mixture of centralised authority, long‑term planning, and civilisational self‑confidence, has revived interest in alternative models of governance. Some see in China’s trajectory a faint echo of Confucian ideals: disciplined leadership, cultural continuity, and the belief that stability flows from moral structure rather than procedural freedom. Whether this is accurate or merely convenient is another matter, but the comparison persists.

Pound’s legacy, then, is not a moral lesson neatly packaged for our reassurance. It is a reminder of how easily the longing for order can become entangled with the politics of control, and how difficult it is — in any age — to distinguish between the two. His Confucianism survives not as a prescription but as a provocation: a way of asking what holds a civilisation together, and what happens when the threads begin to loosen.

You see this most clearly in the poems themselves. In Canto XIII, Confucius speaks directly, offering fragments of counsel on governance, conduct, and virtue. The China Cantos present history as a series of moral exempla — rulers rising or falling according to their adherence to ritual and justice. Even Cathay, though not explicitly Confucian, hints at Pound’s admiration for a civilisation he perceived as ceremonious, restrained, and ethically grounded. Taken together, these works reveal his belief that poetry might do more than describe the world: it might shape it. Through Confucius, he imagined verse as a tool of memory, discipline, and order — a cultural instrument capable of restoring coherence to a fractured age.

I suppose what lingers for me is not Pound’s politics but his longing — that restless desire for a world in which words and actions, rulers and responsibilities, culture and conduct, all align. A longing that can lead toward wisdom or toward catastrophe, depending on the hands that hold it. And as today’s headlines remind us, the world is still very much in the grip of that same search for coherence, though the paths we choose may be no less fraught than his, even if they unfold in different landscapes.