19 Nov 2021 | Full Fact's weekly news
 FACT CHECK 
Scotland’s electricity consumption isn’t 100% renewable
SNP Leader Nicola Sturgeon claimed that “just short of 100% of all the electricity [Scotland uses] is from renewable sources.” But this isn’t correct.

Estimates suggest Scotland produced 32,000 gigawatt hours of renewable electricity in 2020, equivalent to around 97% of its entire electricity consumption. But it exports a lot of this, relying on non-renewable electricity sources to make up the difference.

The Scottish government estimates that last year 56% of the electricity consumed in Scotland came from renewable sources, 30% from nuclear and 13% from fossil fuels.

Renewables account for far more of Scotland’s electricity consumption than in England and Wales - but to suggest it's almost 100% is misleading.

A spokesperson from the Scottish Government told us that the First Minister was referring to Scotland’s gross electricity consumption and it was not her intention to suggest otherwise.
How Scotland stacks up on renewables
Accuracy matters...

It’s the support of individuals that helps keep up scrutiny on our public figures and call out the mistakes that others are willing to overlook. 

Friend, can you help us spot the next false claim? 
Yes, I'll donate to support honesty
Yes, I'll set up a monthly donation
FACT CHECK
Japan is not using ivermectin instead of vaccines to treat Covid

A website for a US radio show makes a bold (and false) claim about the pandemic: “Japan drops vax rollout, goes to Ivermectin, ENDS COVID almost overnight.” Except…
  • Japan’s vaccine rollout is ongoing
  • Japan has not approved ivermectin as a Covid treatment
  • Covid did not end overnight
The article has been viewed over 400,000 times and has been shared widely over social media.

In reality, Japan has administered around 360,000 doses of Covid vaccine a day for the past week and this week announced plans to begin its rollout of booster jabs in December.

As for ivermectin, Japan’s equivalent of the MHRA asserts that, although clinical trials are ongoing, it is “not approved for use to treat disease caused by SARS-CoV-2 infection.”

Covid case rates have certainly fallen substantially in Japan since the summer, now reporting an average of 168 cases per day. However, this does not necessarily mean that the disease has been “wiped out,” as is claimed in the article.
Covid in Japan
FACT CHECK
What are the risks of Covid-19 in pregnancy?
 
In partnership with charity Pregnant Then Screwed, we’ve been asked lots of questions on WhatsApp about the risks of Covid in pregnancy.

The evidence so far shows that you are not more likely to be infected with Covid-19 during pregnancy, but pregnant women who do catch it are more likely to be admitted to intensive care.

There are also higher rates of complications to pregnancy and delivery when women require hospital treatment for Covid-19.
What the experts say
FACT CHECK
Study doesn’t show tea and coffee cause lower dementia and stroke risk
 
A study concluded that drinking two to three cups of coffee with two to three cups of tea each day is associated with about a 30% lower risk of certain types of stroke and dementia. However, the authors clearly state that their research “cannot establish a causal relationship”. 
 
This means that contrary to the headlines of articles in The Daily Telegraph and The Daily Express, this study does not confirm that “Keeping the cuppas coming reduces risk of stroke and dementia”, or that tea and coffee “slashes your risk of the condition by 32%”.
 
Professor Tara Spires-Jones, UK Dementia Research Institute programme lead, told the Science Media Center that while the research is “interesting” and “robustly conducted”, it is “not possible to know from this kind of data whether the tea and coffee drinking are the cause of reduced risk of stroke or dementia”. 
 
She added there may be other factors in people that drink tea and coffee that are the “real influencers of disease risk”. 
 
What the scientists did
MORE FACT CHECKS
Also this week...
Read our latest fact checks
Stop the spread of bad information

Find these updates useful? We'd be incredibly grateful if you could share our fact checks and help more people access good information.

Share Share
Tweet Tweet
Forward Forward
Share Share
All the best,
Team Full Fact

 
Follow us
Donate
Like us
Follow us
Have any questions or feedback? Please get in touch via our contact form. We do not respond to direct replies to this email address.

Find out how Full Fact is funded.

Copyright © Full Fact 2021 - All rights reserved

A registered charity (no. 1158683) and a non-profit company (no. 6975984) limited by guarantee and registered in England and Wales.

Our mailing address is:
2 Carlton Gardens, London, SW1Y 5AA

We use Mailchimp to send you our emails and to see which articles are most popular. Read our privacy policy or Mailchimp's privacy policy

unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences