Saturday, October 7, 2023

Rogue banks are not waiting for the UK Energy Bill to be enacted to use it to deny us being able to buy or sell property

Rogue banks are not waiting for the UK Energy Bill to be enacted to use it to deny us being able to buy or sell property




The Telegraph published an article yesterday which described how banks will not be allowing mortgages on “energy inefficient” homes.

The Telegraph also notes how this policy is despite Installed Prime Minister Rishi Sunak saying the public should  not be burdened with the cost of “net zero.”  The implication is that it is only the commercial lenders who are attempting to impose draconian “net zero” policies.

However, as we noted in a previous article, The UK Energy Bill, which is in its final stages before receiving Royal Assent, will be used by the Government of the day to take our homes away from us.


Do not be fooled by Sunak’s smooth talking or by any other Member of Parliament, regardless of party affiliation, who voted in favour of the UK Energy Bill and is now claiming that they do not agree with the rollout of financial institutions’ “net zero” policies.

They may disagree with the power and control being in the hands of the large multi-national lenders rather than the Government, but they do not disagree with the principles of “net zero.”  

As has become glaringly obvious, “net zero” policies, regardless of who is attempting to implement them, do not recognise and, in fact, are a blatant attempt to strip us of our human rights while ignoring our inalienable rights.

For the sake of public interest, we have reproduced The Telegraph’s article below.  The two rogue financial institutions named in the article are Natwest, the largest business and commercial bank in the UK, and Nationwide Building Society, the UK’s second-largest mortgage provider and the largest building society in the world with over 16 million members.

The UK government owns approximately 39% of the shares in Natwest.


...mortgage customers whose homes do not meet the standard face spending thousands on upgrades such as insulation, double glazing and heat pumps. 

According to the Department for Levelling up, Housing and Communities English Housing Survey, published last year, 18pc of private rental properties would require more than £10,000 to bring up their homes to an EPC rating of C. Those who do not meet these standards, face being turned down for loans. 


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