Carbon Free Future

Spread the Word

Carbon Free Future only becomes reality if enough people demand it. Below are ready-to-use templates — letters, social posts, and emails — that you can copy, personalise, and send in minutes. Every voice counts.

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Write to Your MP

Your MP works for you. A well-written letter from a constituent gets read, logged, and often replied to. This template covers the key points — personalise it with your own words for maximum impact.

Dear [Your MP's Name],

I am writing as your constituent in [your constituency] to bring to your attention a proposal called Carbon Free Future (CFF) — a comprehensive UK energy sovereignty programme that I believe deserves serious parliamentary consideration.

CFF proposes 28 state-owned mega-sites across the UK, each combining High-Temperature Gas-Cooled Reactors (HTGRs) with hydrogen production, desalination, district heating, and aquaponics — creating an integrated industrial ecosystem that produces not just electricity, but hydrogen, heat, fresh water, and food.

The key figures:
• 28 sites, each producing 3.6 GWe of electricity and 2,072 tonnes of hydrogen per day
• £15 billion per site (First-Of-A-Kind cost) — compared to £48 billion for Hinkley Point C which only produces electricity
• ~500,000 jobs across the programme — with a direct skills bridge for North Sea oil and gas workers
• £500/year unlimited district heating for surrounding homes (the "Heat Halo")
• 100% publicly owned — no foreign equity, no private profit extraction
• Minimum 200-year operational life per site

The programme is self-funding after the first few sites through hydrogen sales, grid electricity, heating subscriptions, and desalinated water. Every claim on the website is backed by credible sources — government publications, peer-reviewed studies, and established scientific data.

I would be grateful if you could:
1. Review the proposal at https://carbonfreefuture.co.uk
2. Raise the concept in parliamentary questions or energy debates
3. Consider requesting a briefing from the programme's creator, DJ Waugh

This is not a party political issue — it is an engineering and economic proposition for UK energy independence, job creation, and industrial regeneration. Whether you sit on the left or the right, the maths deserves scrutiny.

I look forward to your response.

Yours sincerely,
[Your full name]
[Your address]
[Your postcode]
🔍 Find Your MP on WriteToThem.com →

Tip: WriteToThem.com lets you find your MP by postcode and send them a message directly. Paste the letter above, add your personal details, and hit send. Physical letters (posted to the House of Commons, London SW1A 0AA) carry even more weight.

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Write to Your Local Newspaper

Letters to the editor are read by thousands of people in your area — including local councillors and business leaders. Keep it under 300 words for the best chance of publication.

Dear Editor,

With energy bills rising, North Sea oil declining, and the UK increasingly dependent on imported gas, I'd like to draw your readers' attention to an ambitious proposal called Carbon Free Future (CFF).

Conceived by retired engineer DJ Waugh from the North East, CFF proposes 28 state-owned mega-sites across the UK that would produce hydrogen, electricity, district heating, desalinated water, and even food — all from a single integrated complex.

Unlike Hinkley Point C (£48 billion for one power station that only makes electricity), each CFF site costs £15 billion but delivers six different outputs. The sites create approximately 18,000 jobs each, provide £500/year unlimited heating to surrounding homes, and are designed to last 200 years.

Every claim is fully referenced with government data and peer-reviewed science at https://carbonfreefuture.co.uk/sources

Whether you agree with the proposal or not, the engineering logic and the economic argument deserve public debate. When was the last time anyone proposed something this ambitious for Britain?

I'd encourage readers to visit https://carbonfreefuture.co.uk, read the plan, and challenge the maths. If it stacks up — demand it.

Yours faithfully,
[Your name]
[Your town]

Tip: Search for “[your local paper name] letters to the editor email” to find where to send it. Most papers accept letters by email. Include your full name, town, and a daytime phone number (they may call to verify).

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Share on Social Media

One post can reach hundreds of people who’ve never heard of CFF. Pick a platform, copy the text or click the share button, and add your own thoughts.

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X / Twitter

Fits within a single tweet thread. Copy the text or click to post directly.

🇬🇧 Carbon Free Future: 28 state-owned mega-sites producing hydrogen, electricity, heating, water & food.

£15B per site vs £48B for Hinkley (which only makes electricity).
~500,000 jobs. 200-year design life.

Every claim sourced: https://carbonfreefuture.co.uk/sources

Challenge the maths 👇
https://carbonfreefuture.co.uk
𝕏 Post on X / Twitter
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Facebook

A longer-form post for friends and family. Copy or share directly.

I've just read something that deserves way more attention.

Carbon Free Future is a proposal for 28 state-owned mega-sites across the UK — each producing hydrogen, electricity, district heating, desalinated water, and food from a single integrated complex.

The numbers:
🔹 £15 billion per site (vs £48 billion for Hinkley Point C, which only makes electricity)
🔹 ~500,000 jobs across the programme
🔹 £500/year unlimited heating for surrounding homes
🔹 100% publicly owned — no foreign equity
🔹 Designed to last 200+ years

Every single claim is backed by government data and peer-reviewed science: https://carbonfreefuture.co.uk/sources

Whether you agree with it or not — the engineering argument deserves public debate. Have a look: https://carbonfreefuture.co.uk
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LinkedIn

For your professional network — engineers, policymakers, and industry contacts.

Worth 10 minutes of your time if you work in energy, engineering, or infrastructure policy.

Carbon Free Future (CFF) is a proposal for 28 state-owned, integrated energy mega-sites across the UK. Each site combines:

• High-Temperature Gas-Cooled Reactors (HTGRs) — 3.6 GWe per site
• High-Temperature Steam Electrolysis — 2,072 tonnes H₂/day
• Desalination, district heating (£500/yr unlimited), and aquaponics

The economics: £15B per site (FOAK) vs £48B for Hinkley Point C (electricity only). ~500,000 jobs. Self-funding after first few sites. 200-year design life.

Full programme details: https://carbonfreefuture.co.uk
Sources & references: https://carbonfreefuture.co.uk/sources

Created by DJ Waugh, a retired engineer from the North East. Whether you think it's viable or not, the engineering logic deserves professional scrutiny.

#Energy #Hydrogen #Nuclear #Infrastructure #UK #Engineering
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Email a Friend

Sometimes the most effective advocacy is a personal recommendation. Send this to someone you think would be interested.

Subject: Have you seen this? Carbon Free Future

Hi,

I came across something genuinely interesting and wanted to share it with you.

It's called Carbon Free Future — a proposal by a retired engineer from the North East for 28 state-owned mega-sites across the UK. Each one produces hydrogen, electricity, heating, fresh water, and food from a single complex. The whole programme creates ~500,000 jobs and is designed to last 200+ years.

The thing that got me is the comparison: Hinkley Point C costs £48 billion and only makes electricity. A CFF site costs £15 billion and produces six different things.

Every claim is backed up with proper sources — government data, peer-reviewed papers. You can check them all here: https://carbonfreefuture.co.uk/sources

Have a look when you get a chance: https://carbonfreefuture.co.uk

Whether you think it's brilliant or bonkers, it's worth 10 minutes of your time. And if you think it stacks up — share it.

Cheers,
[Your name]
✉️ Open in Email Client

Every Contact Matters

MPs respond to constituents. Editors publish letters from local readers. Social posts reach people who’ve never heard of CFF. You don’t need to be an expert — you just need to share the idea.

← Contact DJ WaughChallenge the Maths →