Steven Lochiel Brown

132 posts

Steven Lochiel Brown

Steven Lochiel Brown

@steven_l_b

Polymer Development Manager at Scott Bader - a UK headquartered specialty chemicals company.

Katılım Eylül 2012
91 Takip Edilen31 Takipçiler
cez
cez@cezthesocialist·
@Kerrydale67 @oldeborg Are you saying the market that you love doesn’t work? Because according to your ideology, another business will fill the gap in the market, probably a bigger one that can pay proper wages.
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cez
cez@cezthesocialist·
Your employees’ living costs are a business cost. If you can’t afford them, your business is unviable and should not exist.
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Steven Lochiel Brown
Steven Lochiel Brown@steven_l_b·
@Arbeitologist Exactly, right? If your business can't afford to run on minimum wage you need to increase your incomings (higher prices, increased footfall etc) or reduce your outgoings (better procurement, lower salaries, reduced headcount) or just make way for the corporations.
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Arbeitology
Arbeitology@Arbeitologist·
i love how these people think they have some god given right to have their small business - even if they demonstrably can't afford it
Peter McCormack 🏴‍☠️🇬🇧🇮🇪@PeterMcCormack

A minimum wage of £15 would end my coffee shop, it would have to close, as would many other businesses. I’ll explain for the economically illiterate. Staff costs are currently half our costs, a £15 minimum wage is actually more than £15 an hour for the company, because you have to add: - 12.07% holiday - Sick pay - Maternity pay if and when required - National insurance - Pension contributions These costs would mean the shop loses money because remember, energy costs are up, rates are up, regulations are up. Now you can pass these costs onto the consumer - that would mean charging a lot more for coffee, people won’t pay it. The likes of Starbucks and Costa can, because they have economies of scale. The independent doesn’t. Now the little socialist will say well this is your fault, if you can’t run a business that can afford to pay its staff properly, but the little socialist has never run a business and does not understand the dynamics. Now I could pay some staff off and fill those hours myself or reduce us to one staff member during certain periods - but this proves the point that a minimum wage costs jobs. There was a time when these jobs were done by kids, perhaps on the weekend, paid a lower wage, no holiday and no silly employment rights. Perhaps they were even paid cash. The dynamic worked and small businesses like this could operate. It was also a great first job. Sadly now it isn’t worth employing entitlement youngsters at this level of pay. So alas, I don’t need the stress, the business would close, a number of jobs would be lost. Economics is about understanding these dynamics, no vibes. The cost of living is not solved through passing on inflation to the business, it is solved by ending high inflation and creating prosperity. This is what socialists don’t understand, they can’t create prosperity, they can only destroy it.

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Mhairi Hunter 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 🇺🇦 🇵🇸
@arrodger The UK currently has one of the lowest minimum wages in Europe. Obviously you couldn't jump straight from that to paying a living wage but the argument that having a low minimum wage makes the UK economy competitive is not really borne out by the state of the UK economy.
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Mhairi Hunter 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 🇺🇦 🇵🇸
Just read that coffee shop owner tweet doing the rounds where he says he can't afford to pay £15 an hour to staff but, also, he's a multi-millionaire. "Why don't people understand economics." They do, mate, that's your problem.
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Steven Lochiel Brown
Steven Lochiel Brown@steven_l_b·
@cmwrawcliffe I think the best solution is automation or self service to reduce staff costs. High upfront investment but no need to worry about NI, holiday pay, sick pay etc. Less revenue for the government though.
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Catherine Rawcliffe
Catherine Rawcliffe@cmwrawcliffe·
If you can't pay people a wage they can live on, your business is subsidised by the state. And that's NOT a sound business model. The economically illiterate person is you, pretending to be a good businessman while expecting others to support you through their taxes .
Peter McCormack 🏴‍☠️🇬🇧🇮🇪@PeterMcCormack

A minimum wage of £15 would end my coffee shop, it would have to close, as would many other businesses. I’ll explain for the economically illiterate. Staff costs are currently half our costs, a £15 minimum wage is actually more than £15 an hour for the company, because you have to add: - 12.07% holiday - Sick pay - Maternity pay if and when required - National insurance - Pension contributions These costs would mean the shop loses money because remember, energy costs are up, rates are up, regulations are up. Now you can pass these costs onto the consumer - that would mean charging a lot more for coffee, people won’t pay it. The likes of Starbucks and Costa can, because they have economies of scale. The independent doesn’t. Now the little socialist will say well this is your fault, if you can’t run a business that can afford to pay its staff properly, but the little socialist has never run a business and does not understand the dynamics. Now I could pay some staff off and fill those hours myself or reduce us to one staff member during certain periods - but this proves the point that a minimum wage costs jobs. There was a time when these jobs were done by kids, perhaps on the weekend, paid a lower wage, no holiday and no silly employment rights. Perhaps they were even paid cash. The dynamic worked and small businesses like this could operate. It was also a great first job. Sadly now it isn’t worth employing entitlement youngsters at this level of pay. So alas, I don’t need the stress, the business would close, a number of jobs would be lost. Economics is about understanding these dynamics, no vibes. The cost of living is not solved through passing on inflation to the business, it is solved by ending high inflation and creating prosperity. This is what socialists don’t understand, they can’t create prosperity, they can only destroy it.

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Steven Lochiel Brown
Steven Lochiel Brown@steven_l_b·
@ZackPolanski I hope the Green Party mandates a minimum number of under 25 year old workers for every company for this to be successful.
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Zack Polanski
Zack Polanski@ZackPolanski·
The Mail doesn't think seem to think workers, of all ages, are worth £15 an hour. That's fair pay for a fair day's work, with money workers will put back into the economy. We are the party for workers. Vote Green on 7th May.
Zack Polanski tweet media
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Steven Lochiel Brown
Steven Lochiel Brown@steven_l_b·
@BuckCllr That is only about 45 PV panels to generate that much! Every new house in the UK should have this many panels installed. Inspiring!
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🇬🇧Cllr Kevin Buck 🇬🇧
RENEWABLES WORK: After washing the panels today (see the difference from yesterday), production peaks at just over 70kWh for the first time this year and the perfect bell curve. 2.8MWh’s so far this year. That’s £754 of FREE electricity in the first 4 months (as PV fully amortised). I’ll let some in to a little secret though, as an urban family house that’s 100% electric with 5 adults and EV’s on the drive, when the solar can do it all, we use the grid. 😱 Where we can, we should and home renewables and personal transport is absolutely one of those areas that we can!
🇬🇧Cllr Kevin Buck 🇬🇧 tweet media🇬🇧Cllr Kevin Buck 🇬🇧 tweet media🇬🇧Cllr Kevin Buck 🇬🇧 tweet media
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Steven Lochiel Brown
Steven Lochiel Brown@steven_l_b·
@patrickjreddy @KateFantom Only a fraction of oil is used for electricity generation. The impact on the chemicals sector (fertiliser/agriculture, health, building and construction, industry) will show us what Just Stop Oil looks like, and it won't be pretty.
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Patrick Reddy
Patrick Reddy@patrickjreddy·
@KateFantom This is the bit that is most interesting. I wonder how damaging the Iran war would have been 10 years ago. The fact that there is so much renewables and EV transport now means while it is an economic mess, the lights are still on and the world keeps spinning mostly normally
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Kate, Florence and James
So far today, renewable energy has produced over 70% of our grid energy. Fossil fuels have produced only 6% Imagine all that gas that hasn’t been burnt that we can use another day.
Kate, Florence and James tweet media
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George
George@GeorgeattheBay·
@AvonandsomerRob When I go to Cornwall tomorrow I don’t want to be looking for charging points plus I love my diesel Mercedes!😎
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Rob Boyd, Esq
Rob Boyd, Esq@AvonandsomerRob·
Apart from the rubbish you read in the Daily Mail, what's stopping you from getting an EV?
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Driftoy uk
Driftoy uk@driftoy3641·
@LeonardBriscoe3 During the height of covid lockdown, when only freight was transported and billions were self isolating, the global reduction was 5%. To get to zero, those same billions of human carbon based life forms would have to be done away with. That's 'net zero'
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Steven Lochiel Brown
Steven Lochiel Brown@steven_l_b·
@John61926629 @lasee_frank @tveitdal I think it's an expensive device for storing small amounts of energy and made using materials that are refined mainly in China and cause lots of pollution. They're great - I've got an 11.5 kWh one
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Steven Lochiel Brown
Steven Lochiel Brown@steven_l_b·
@BuckCllr How many solar panels do your have? I've got 16 x 475 w panels on a south facing roof in the Midlands and I'm 50% of your PV yield month to date
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🇬🇧Cllr Kevin Buck 🇬🇧
A regular reminder of how renewables actually work in the real world and not in the minds of the FF disciples. Been off grid for 2 days now. A 4 bed 100% electric house (no FF’s for anything), with 5 adults AND 4 EV’s. 1 of the EV’s currently charging. Through electrification and its energy efficiency, with installed home renewables and driving EV’s, we have reduced our external energy demand by 20MHh’s. Can one average family house do this all year round? No of course not. But it can produce around 35% of the whole families energy needs, including driving 4 EV cars. Yes, we will need FF’s for years to come and still draw from grid, but where we can, we should decarbonise and produce as much of our own energy as we can. Whatever rhetoric you’ll hear, renewables in the UK work!
🇬🇧Cllr Kevin Buck 🇬🇧 tweet media🇬🇧Cllr Kevin Buck 🇬🇧 tweet media🇬🇧Cllr Kevin Buck 🇬🇧 tweet media🇬🇧Cllr Kevin Buck 🇬🇧 tweet media
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Handenhalla
Handenhalla@Handenhalla2·
@Entombdmachine @KPrivacy @FalconryFinance It's called toxic because it can be absorbed through the skin. Your common parlance aside, the word has a specific definition for a reason. Perhaps if you spent less time on reddit or speaking colloquially you wouldn't be giving out wrong information.
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Tris Osborne MP
Tris Osborne MP@TrisOsborneMP·
Energy security 💪 Every kWh generated by renewables is less use of oil / gas that means we can conserve use during a time of oil / gas instability.
National Energy System Operator@neso_energy

On Wednesday #wind generated 52.5% of GB electricity, more than gas 15.5%, nuclear 15.1%, biomass 6.7%, imports 5.2%, solar 5.0%, *excl. non-renewable distributed generation

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Rachel Reeves
Rachel Reeves@RachelReevesMP·
These growth figures show the Government has the right plan to build a stronger more resilient economy. But the war in Iran will come at a cost. That is why we are taking the right, fair and necessary action to protect families and businesses.
Office for National Statistics (ONS)@ONS

GDP grew 0.5% in the three months to February 2026. Services (+0.5%) and production (+1.2%) both increased, but construction (-2.0%) fell. Read the article ➡️ ons.gov.uk/economy/grossd…

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Steven Lochiel Brown
Steven Lochiel Brown@steven_l_b·
@Stephen_Mills85 @Malcolm744 @Richard75129359 @Brian70362077 £0.33 per kWh at 3.5 kWh per mile (worst case) = £0.094 / mile. At £1.55 and £1.90 per litre of petrol and diesel respectively, you'd need to get 74 mpg in their petrol car or 90 mpg in their diesel car. My EV is more like 5 miles per kWh. That's 105mpg & 130mpg respectively
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Brian
Brian@Brian70362077·
Gloucester services, 33p per kWh and lovely food.
Brian tweet media
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Steven Lochiel Brown
Steven Lochiel Brown@steven_l_b·
@RachelReevesMP @peterkyle If you make the energy 25 % OF current prices you will get parity with the US and China. 25 % OFF prices (next year) is still x3 more expensive than our competition to the West and the East.
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Rachel Reeves
Rachel Reeves@RachelReevesMP·
Manufacturers have faced uncompetitive energy prices for too long. So today @peterkyle and I are confirming the final design of the British Industry Competitiveness Scheme, helping 10,000+ businesses cut electricity bills by up to 25% from April 2027. gov.uk/government/new…
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🚴‍♀️🚴‍♀️ Jenny 🚴‍♀️🚴‍♀️
Can someone please explain, in very simply language, how chopping down trees in Canada, turning them into pellets, shipping them to Liverpool, then transporting them by train to Drax Power Station is environmentally friendly?????
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