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Galina is based at the Oxford University s Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment, working at the intersection of energy transition, sustainable investment and machine learning.
Previously, Galina was based at the OECD in Paris, where she worked with both developed and developing countries on effective policy making, specialising in climate development finance and leading work on the decarbonisation of the extractive sector. Her experience also includes working as an economic adviser to the Minister and Permanent Secretary of Industrialisation in Namibia. She started her career as an economist at the UK Department for Communities and Local Government and in the Chief Economic Adviser s Office of the Scottish Government.
The debate over the planned Cumbrian coalmine creates a false dichotomy between prosperity and climate protection, writes
Tim Crosland, while
Whitehaven, Cumbria, near the site of the proposed Woodhouse Colliery. Photograph: incamerastock/Alamy
Whitehaven, Cumbria, near the site of the proposed Woodhouse Colliery. Photograph: incamerastock/Alamy
Letters
Sun 7 Feb 2021 12.56 EST
Last modified on Mon 8 Feb 2021 00.22 EST
Gaby Hinsliff’s piece (Plans for a Cumbrian coalmine illustrate the Tory dilemma: green policies or jobs?, 4 February), propagates an illusion advanced principally by vested fossil fuel interests: that we have to choose between green policies or jobs. In reality, no such dilemma exists.