Air pollution over the City of London.
Photograph: Kathy deWitt/Alamy
The Conservative party’s record on tackling the climate crisis was
condemned by leading scientists and former government advisers on
Sunday, as Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn warned that the forthcoming election was the last chance to halt the escalating emergency.
Experts accused the Conservatives
of copying rightwing politicians in the US by deliberately weakening
environmental protections. Meanwhile, new analysis by Labour reveals
that environmental policies put forward since 2017 and opposed by the
Tories would have led to emissions reductions of over 70m tonnes a year
by 2030 – more than the annual emissions of Portugal.
The climate emergency has become a key battleground in the election,
with Labour promising a transformative green industrial revolution, the
Liberal Democrats pledging to spend billions on the crisis, and the
Conservatives announcing a pre-election moratorium on fracking and
pledging to plant 30m trees a year by 2025.
On Sunday, Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said the Conservatives could
not be trusted on the environment. “This general election is our last
chance to radically change course, or face the threat of a hostile and
dying planet,” he said. “The science is clear – we don’t have time to
waste.”
He said Labour’s green industrial revolution would create hundreds of
thousands of “good, clean jobs that will transform towns, cities and
communities that have been held back and neglected for decades”.
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The Conservatives have come under increasing pressure on the climate crisis during the election campaign and recent analysis
shows they are on course to miss several key environmental targets.
Boris Johnson is the only party leader to have refused to take part in a
TV climate debate, and he drew anger in Yorkshire last week when
confronted by people whose livelihoods had been devastated by the
floods. In Somerset, Johnson dodged environmental protesters, whom he
later dismissed as “crusties”.
Leading scientist David King, a key government adviser on the climate
crisis until 2017, questioned whether Johnson could be trusted on the
environment. He said he would give the Conservatives no more than three
or four out of 10 for their record on tackling the climate crisis.
“I wouldn’t give them a pass mark. The leadership has simply not been
there,” said King, who was Britain’s climate ambassador at the Paris
talks that led to the landmark 2015 agreement pledging to keep global
heating below 2C, or 1.5C if possible.
“The government has completely taken its eye off delivery and it has
not been as consistent as it needed to be. If there isn’t support across
the board from No 10, then it’s not going to happen.”
He added: “The Conservatives are trying to be greener than the other
parties, but I wonder just how much we can trust the Conservative party
leadership at the moment.”
Tom Burke, a former senior adviser to three Conservative environment
secretaries, said the government’s record was a disgrace and accused it
of aping the libertarian right in the US.
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“The
current government has systematically weakened the capacity of this
country to manage its environment. It’s been done by stealth.
“They have taken a lesson, I suspect quite consciously, from the
libertarian right in the US that you won’t win the argument about
weakening environmental standards, so you don’t argue it. What you do is
you weaken the capacity to make them effective.
“They have completely cut the budgets of the Environment Agency and
Natural England and they have systematically reduced their
independence,” said Burke, who was a senior adviser to the Foreign
Office special representative on climate change from 2006 to 2012 and
now runs the environmental thinktank E3G.
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In
a much vaunted announcement, the Conservatives this year committed to
making the country carbon net zero by 2050. But their own climate change
committee, in its latest analysis
of their performance, said there was a growing gap between Britain’s
carbon cutting ambition and the policies in place to achieve it.
The committee said the government was likely to miss greenhouse gas
emissions reduction targets from 2023 onwards, there was still no
serious plan for decarbonising UK heating systems, and a tree planting
target of 20,000 hectares a year in the UK was not being met.
In other key areas, including tackling illegal levels of air pollution – which, the latest government data shows, covers 83% of the country – and water quality,
the Conservative government is likely to fail to meet its legal
obligations and targets. It is also set to miss targets for boosting
renewable energy such as onshore wind and solar, according to a Greenpeace analysis.
Carbon emissions from transport, which is responsible for a third of UK greenhouse gas emissions, remain static.
Katie Nield, a lawyer for Client Earth, which has successfully taken
the government to court on several occasions for its failure to clean up
air pollution, said the Tories’ record on tackling toxic air was poor.
“We have had these legal limits for nitrogen dioxide since 2010 in place
– that’s almost 10 years. Yet they have still not met them. That is
despite having a very clear idea of where the problems are, what the
causes are and what potential solutions there are. And a failure to act
in that context is quite shocking.”
The analysis from the Labour party shows that policies opposed by the
government on onshore and offshore wind power, home improvements and
insulation, tidal power and transport would have led to nearly 70m
tonnes of CO2 emissions savings per year by 2030.
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Luke
Clark, from Renewable UK, the renewable energy industry trade
association, said the government in the last five years had excluded
onshore wind and solar from the competitive market for renewable
projects, which had led to an 80% fall in onshore wind installed in
2018, compared with the previous 12 months.
“If [we] are not using cheap sources like onshore wind and solar, we
are slowing down the process of how quickly we can achieve
decarbonisation,” said Clark. “To tackle the climate emergency, we need
all these options.”
Greg Archer, a director of the zero-emissions pressure group Transport & Environment, in a new analysis
of the Conservatives’ nine-year freeze on fuel duty, said the policy
had put the equivalent of 2.5m additional cars on the road.
“Conservative action to tackle transport emissions has been a story
of wrong priorities, little action and missed opportunities, and whilst
it has talked green, transport emissions have flatlined for 10 years,”
said Archer. “Grants for electric cars have been cut and are scheduled
to end in March 2020, stalling progress.”
In addition, UK aviation emissions were forecast to continue to rise,
but the government was advocating additional runways, including the
Heathrow third runway and new terminals, said Archer.
Next year will be a critical in the fight to tackle the climate crisis, with the UK hosting the most important climate conference
since the 2015 Paris agreement was signed. Experts say that will lead
to unprecedented scrutiny of the environment policies of the new
government, which will set the tone for the international response to
the escalating global emergency.
A Guardian investigation earlier this year found Conservative MPs were almost five times as likely to vote against climate action as legislators from other parties. Boris Johnson was among several dozen MPs, mostly Conservatives, who recorded the worst possible score of zero on the Guardian’s climate scorecard of MPs.
Theresa Villiers, the environment secretary, said: “The Conservatives
have taken world-leading action to tackle climate change – legislating
to achieve net zero, reducing emissions by a quarter since coming to
office in 2010, and boosting renewables to record levels.
“We have set manageable targets that will bring society with us.
Corbyn’s Labour would ban people from using their cars or taking
flights, and their plans have been slammed by their own unions as
‘utterly unachievable’.
“Only Boris Johnson and the Conservatives will get Brexit done so we can continue tackling climate change while successfully growing our economy.”
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Scientists and climate advisers condemn Tory environmental record
Reviewed by hafizbd
on
November 17, 2019
Rating: 5
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