I AM writing to The Press in the hope that readers might be able to help me reconnect with a dear old friend and classmate, Alan Wong (Wong Ka-kui), who emigrated from Hong Kong to York around 1991.
Alan and I were close friends during our school years at Ngau Tau Kok Catholic Primary School.
We lost touch shortly after he moved to North Yorkshire to start a new chapter over 30 years ago.
I often wonder how his life has unfolded in the beautiful city of York and would dearly love to catch up on the decades we have missed.
Alan would likely be in his 50s now. Given his distinctive Chinese name (shared with a famous Hong Kong musician), I hope he might be known to the local Chinese community or long-term residents in the area.
If Alan is reading this, or if anyone knows of his whereabouts or his family, I would be deeply grateful if you could contact me via email at swtcheng@gmail.com
Finding a friend after 35 years is no easy task, but I believe in the community spirit of York to help bridge this gap.
Thank you for your time and assistance.
Tony Cheng Wai-Tung
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‘We already get cheaper electricity from wind and solar’
REFORM and the Tories are doing a noisy sales job on new drilling for oil and gas in the North Sea.
In view of Trump’s war this would seem sensible – however, the facts point in the opposite direction.
The reality is that we already get cheaper electricity from wind and solar.
In March, we avoided the need for gas imports worth £1bn, thanks to record electricity generation from renewables.
Wind generation is growing year-on-year by 38 per cent – at the same time that electricity generation from gas falls annually by 25 per cent. And as a bonus, these clean sources avoid the environmental and health costs of burning fossil fuels.
Were the government to announce a fresh round of drilling licences, the impact on bills would be zero in the immediate term and minimal in the medium term.
Even if they sold straight away – which would be unlikely – it would take five to seven years for the wells to be productive.
And even if we could ringfence UK-produced energy for the UK market – which we couldn’t – it wouldn’t change the fundamental structure of that market, in which costs are predominantly set by international fossil fuel prices.
If the barrel cost of oil is surging worldwide, so is our unit price. It is ever more expensive to extract the ever smaller residual deposits from the North Sea. By the time they came onstream, electricity from renewables would be a third of the cost.
Peter Williams,
Newbiggin,
Malton
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Why I agree with Trump
DONALD Trump rarely speaks sense but his advice to Ed Miliband for the UK to “drill, baby drill” is spot on, particularly so considering the turmoil countries worldwide are currently encountering.
Will Miliband react positively? Not a chance, neither will Reeves nor Starmer, common sense to them no longer exists, it has been replaced by a rash of costly vanity projects achieving absolutely nothing other than making everyone collectively poorer (that is apart from millions who have decided living off state benefits is more lucrative than working 40 hours per week).
Peter Rickaby,
Moat Way,
Brayton
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