Thursday, 26 January 2023

Another Email to my MP: Tackling Short-termism

 Dear Ms Richardson,


Thank you for this response [about the proposed Cumbria coal mine] which I am sure you will not be surprised to read I find deeply disappointing. The creation of just 532 jobs at the expense of releasing in the order of 0.4Mt CO2e/yr for decades I consider to be an equation that is well out of balance.

However, it is not the mine that is my focus in this email; rather it is the inherent (and not surprising) short-termism behind much legislative decision making. It seems to me that there is a need for mechanisms to ensure that all public bodies, especially including government, take into account the long-term impact of their decisions. Considering climate change, for instance, it is our children and our children's children, who will suffer or otherwise from actions being made today. The Well-being of Future Generations (Wales) Act 2015 is an example of such a mechanism.

May I urge you to pursue, at every possible occasion, a similar mechanism to cover the entirety of the UK?

Yours sincerely

Richard Bawden

Tuesday, 24 January 2023

Fossil Fuel Industry - A Business MOdel At Odds With Human Survival

 Guterres equate big oil with tobacco for wilfully ignoring the messages of science. This reposted from EiD, itself reposting from the Guardian


At Davos, UN Secretary General critical of fossil fuel industry of refusing to abandon a business model at odds with human survival

The Secretary General has really taken the lead to work at every angle to get climate change policies on track to meet our Paris climate agreement. At COP27, he was very vocal, thankfully. This week Mr. Guterres was at Davos, criticising big companies that, ‘like the tobacco industry’, ride roughshod over their own science. Larry Elliot discusses events this week in an article on The Guardian website.

 

UN head accuses fossil fuel firms of business models ‘inconsistent with human survival’

The head of the United Nations has accused the world’s biggest fossil fuel companies of refusing to abandon a business model at odds with human survival despite knowingly putting the world on course for a climate meltdown decades ago.

Speaking at the Davos summit of business and political leaders, the UN secretary general, António Guterres, launched a strong attack on the world’s leading oil companies, many of which are represented at the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting at the Swiss resort.

Guterres said recent revelations that ExxonMobil knew back in the 1970s that its core product was “baking our planet”, made “big oil” similar to the tobacco companies that knew smoking led to cancer.

“Just like the tobacco industry, they rode roughshod over their own science. Big Oil peddled the big lie … And like the tobacco industry, those responsible must be held to account,” he said.

“Today, fossil fuel producers and their enablers are still racing to expand production, knowing full well that their business model is inconsistent with human survival. This insanity belongs in science fiction, yet we know the ecosystem meltdown is cold, hard scientific fact.”

The need to step up progress in the global battle to prevent a rise in temperature of more than 1.5C has been one of the themes of the Davos meeting but the head of the UN said many of the pledges made by companies to achieve net zero carbon amounted to greenwashing.

Guterres said achieving the climate goals agreed by the international community required the full engagement of the private sector, and acknowledged that more and more businesses were making net zero commitments.

“But benchmarks and criteria are often dubious or murky. This misleads consumers, investors and regulators with false narratives. It feeds a culture of climate misinformation and confusion. And it leaves the door wide open to greenwashing.”

Corporate leaders should put forward credible and transparent plans to achieve net zero by the end of the year, the UN head said, adding that reliance on carbon credits did not amount to “real” emission cuts.

Soaring energy prices caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine have led to some countries stepping up the use of coal as a substitute for expensive gas but Guterres warned that the world was in a race against time to curb carbon emissions.

“The battle to keep the 1.5-degree limit alive will be won or lost in this decade. On our watch. My friends, right now it is being lost.

“We must act together to close the emissions gap. To phase out coal and supercharge the renewable revolution. To end the addiction to fossil fuels. And to stop our self-defeating war on nature.”

Guterres said restoring trust meant “meaningful climate action”, as he urged rich countries to fulfil their $100bn climate finance commitment to help developing nations – facing the brunt of the climate emergency – to cope with the crisis.

“Adaptation finance must be doubled. And the biggest emitters – namely G20 countries – must unite around a climate solidarity pact in which they make extra efforts in the 2020s to keep the 1.5-degree limit alive.”

UK Missing All Key Nature Targets

 This repost from Edie just about sums up post-Brexit Britain. 


‘A concerning picture’: UK still set to miss every key nature target, watchdog warns

The UK’s post-Brexit environment watchdog has unveiled its assessment of work to improve nature in England over the past year, concluding that progress is off track for all 23 environmental targets it assessed.

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Published 18th January 2023

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‘A concerning picture’: UK still set to miss every key nature target, watchdog warns

A decline in species abundance is confirmed, as is stagnant progress in improving water quality. Stock image, picturing Walthamstow

According to the Office for Environmental Protection (OEP), there has been year-on-year improvement in some areas relating to the UK Government’s key environmental goals, including improving air quality; reducing greenhouse gas emissions and improving climate adaptation.

Nonetheless, the rate of progress has not been rapid enough to put England on track to meet new legally binding targets – even though these targets, in and of themselves, have been broadly criticised as unambitious. That is the conclusion of the OEP’s latest report, out today (19 January).

The OEP also documented how, on the whole, signs of “encouraging progress” are “the exception” rather than the rule. The report states that the watchdog could not concluded that there have been any improved outcomes, nationally, on enhanced water quality, improved biosecurity or helping plants and wildlife to ‘thrive’.

On the latter, it confirms a 17% decline in priority species abundance between 2013 and 2018 and an 82% decline in species abundance more widely between 1970 and 2018. The Environment Act targets species abundance in 2042 that is greater than 2022, and at least 10% greater than 2030. Critics of this target argue that it ignores the damage already done pre-2022.

Progress on waste, the OEP stated, has gone backwards. It confirms an increase in residual waste production per capita of 13% between 2014 and 2019. The Environment Act targets a 50% reduction by 2042, against a 2019 baseline, but the OEP’s findings prove that previous trends will need to be bucked to achieve this. They also raise questions on whether 2019 is an appropriate baseline year.

Backwards progress is also regarded in terms of water consumption, which is increasing rather than decreasing.

OEP chair Dame Glenys Stacey summarised: “There have been recent improvements in air quality and people’s engagement with nature, as Covid lockdowns changed the way we live our lives. But many extremely worrying environmental trends remain unchecked, including a chronic decline in species abundance.

“Using the data and information available, our assessment shows that the current pace and scale of action will not deliver the changes necessary to significantly improve the environment in England. But there is clear opportunity to change course.”

Environment Improvement Plan recommendations

The report states that the Government can sieze this opportunity through good design of its next Environmental Improvement Plan (EIP), which is due for publication later next year.

Rather than recommending specific targets, the OEP has set out attributes which it believes an effective EIP should include, beyond strong top-line visions that are aptly broken down.

These include measures to improve coordination across government departments and different levels of government; measures to improve data collection and collation and improved governance. The OEP also wants the Government to improve its methods of assessing progress, enabling it to notice adverse trends and assess the cause as a priority.

Additionally, it wants assessment regimes that look more into the future, bridging the gap between short-term EIPs and the 25-Year Environment Plan.

edie reached out to Defra and the department said it would carefully consider the OEP’s recommendations. It also confirmed that the new EIP will be “delivery-focussed”.

Green economy reaction

The Environmental Audit Committee’s chair Philip Dunne MP said the OEP’s report presents a “concerning picture” with its “unflinching analysis of the current situation”.

He said: “It is deeply disappointing that progress against so many crucial targets is falling short of what is needed to secure nature recovery. We face a nature and climate emergency and the importance of restoring nature cannot be overestimated.

“Two years ago, the Committee’s report on biodiversity and ecosystems stressed the importance of engaging people with the natural world around them. It is encouraging that the OEP has identified improvements in this area. But these alone are not enough.

“In its refreshed EIP, due to be published shortly, the Government has the opportunity to set clear and ambitious – but achievable – targets to address the worrying decline of nature. I look forward to being able to quiz Ministers on how they intend to deliver on their assurances that they will be leaving the environment in a better state than that in which they found it.”

Similarly, Wildlife and Countryside link’s chief executive Richard Benwell called the report “a clear warning that rapid, concerted action and investment is needed across Government to deliver the big green promise of halting the decline of nature by 2030”.

This promise was ratified by the UK and dozens of other nations at the UN’s most recent biodiversity COP in Montreal last month.

Benwell added: “To halt the decline of nature, the days of fluffy wish lists, and back-of-the-settee funding for nature policy must end. The EIP needs scientifically sound delivery plans to stop the decline in wildlife, backed by the funding to make it happen.

“Of course, that means getting the whole of Government pressing in the same direction. Defra can’t make a success of restoring nature while DLUHC dallies on planning reform, and while BEIS presses ahead with the destructive deregulatory agenda of the Retained EU Law Bill. The Prime Minister should sponsor the EIP and rally the whole of Government to deliver it.”

Wildlife and Countryside Link published a report this week along with other environmental NGOs stating that the Retained EU Law Bill could cost the UK economy more than £82bn over a 30-year period. The Bill, in its current guise, would “sunset” the majority of regulations retained as part of the withdrawal process from the EU that expire at the end of the year. Many green groups believe this would be too swift a process to ensure that environmental standards are not at least upheld.

The Aldersgate Group’s head of public affairs and communications Signe Norberg added: “While the 25 Year Environment Plan set out Government’s long-term vision for the environment, the report is clear: more coordination is needed to restore and reverse the decline of nature. Government now has the opportunity to build on its vision and publish an ambitious and robust environmental improvement plan at the end of the month, featuring better alignment and coordination at all levels of Government, including local and national government.

“A comprehensive and detailed plan would ensure business can commit tangible investments towards nature restoration. Ambitious and clear long-term as well as interim targets – supported by a detailed delivery plan and a whole-of-government vision for the environment – will create a stable framework within which the private sector can invest. It will enable them to accelerate and implement their own plans to address the nature crisis, as well as create new markets and generate jobs across the country.”

Wednesday, 18 January 2023

 The Retained EU Law Bill is another case of "have gun, have foot, shoot". The nonsense of the Northern Ireland Protocol has demonstrated the problems that can and will arise from pig-headed Brexit-derived ideology. 

This is reposted from Edie:


Bonfire of retained EU environmental laws could deliver £82bn blow to the UK

A new report from a collection of UK charities and NGOs has warned that removing or weakening environmental laws retained from the EU could cost the UK economy more than £82bn over a 30-year period.

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Published 18th January 2023

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Bonfire of retained EU environmental laws could deliver £82bn blow to the UK

The report warns that deregulated chemicals and agriculture practices would harm the natural environment

A new report, The economic costs of the Retained EU Law Bill, from groups including the Wildlife and Countryside Link by the Economics for the Environment Consultancy has investigated the potential economic impact that the REUL Bill could have if environmental laws are weakened across chemical regulation, water pollution, air quality and habitats.

The Bill is to be debated in the House of Commons on today (18 January) and if passed would “sunset” the majority of regulations retained as part of the withdrawal process from the EU that expire at the end of the year.

The new report from green groups argues that removing or weakening existing legislation across key environmental sectors could further destroy nature, worsen public health and incur costs of £82.94bn over the next 30 years.

The research warns that losing the Water Framework Directive standards would likely lead to increased levels of agricultural pollutants flowing into water streams, which would increase the wastewater and sewage that is then pumped back into the natural environment. The report warns of a £20.6bn cost over the next 30 years.

The report also warns that poorer air quality levels could costs £10.4bn over the next five years, rising to £44.9bn over 30 years. It states that weakening the National Emission Ceilings Regulations through the Retained EU Law Bill would impact health and the environment.

An additional £1bn could be lost due to weaker protections for key nature sites, whereby deregulation and the weakening of Habitat Regulations would see key biodiversity hotspots degraded or even destroyed. This would also jeopardise the UK’s net-zero ambitions.

The final sector analysed is that of chemicals. The report warns that £12.8bn will be lost market opportunities from weakened chemical regulation over 30 years.

It states that there are “huge business opportunities” for the UK in the recycled packaging sector, for example, but that weakening chemicals regulation diminishes the potential returns and will see businesses in key sectors miss out financially. Additionally, weakened chemicals regulation could cost £3.6bn over 30 years as adverse health impacts such as cancer and infertility become more common.

The report notes that the REUL Bill covers thousands of other retained EU laws, meaning the overall costs are likely to be far higher.

The Wildlife and Countryside Link’s chief executive Dr Richard Benwell said: “Prevention of air and water pollution, protection of precious wildlife and habitats, precautions against hazardous chemical use – they are all put at risk by the Retained EU Law Bill. If long-standing protection for nature is removed or weakened, the economic consequences could run into the billions.

“Add to this the costs of years of uncertainty while half the environmental statute book is up in the air and thousands of hours of civil service time spent reviewing laws simply because of where they came from. All together, the costs of this economic and environmental wrecking ball bill could be astronomical at a time when the UK – and our environment – can least afford it.”

The green groups also warn that weakening of the Habitats and Species Regulations could see important nature sites chosen for “unsustainable development projects”, while weakening the Marine Strategy Regulations, could lead to a decline in habitats including seagrass meadows and saltmarshes – both of which act as carbon stores and would further derail the net-zero movement if destroyed.

The report and the campaigners backing it are calling for the Bill to be withdrawn.

Sunset scares

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak campaigned on promises to ensure that UK law diverges from EU law in instances where this could create higher standards and economic benefits. Under Truss, the Government ushered in the Retained Law Bill, which is designed to ensure that the majority of EU laws retained in the UK post-Brexit expire at the end of 2023. The rest of the laws should then be phased out by June 2026.

The Bill was swiftly criticised by green groups who claimed that hasty changes could lead to a downgrade in environmental and social standards. Moreover, delivering the Bill, some have argued, would redirect civil service resource from progressing the pressing changes to legislation needed to meet key climate and nature targets, following years of delays already.

The Office for Environmental Protection (OEP) itself has now warned the Government against a rushed approach to ‘sunsetting’ EU legislation. It is recommending that the 2023 deadline is moved.

The RSPB’s director of conservation, Katie-jo Luxton said: “This new economic report shows that the REUL Bill could cost the taxpayer more than £1bn over the next 30 years simply by opening the door to a weakening of current environmental protections. Having  just published legally binding targets for nature recovery through its own Environment Act, it is baffling that the UK Government is now seeking to dismantle the legal protections to achieve them.”

Oil CEO to lead COP28!!

 This really takes the biscuit. 

Reposted from EiD, which was a repost from the Independent.


UAE names oil chief to lead COP28 climate change talks

The head of one of the world’s biggest oil companies has been named to lead the COP28 global climate talks in Dubai, later this year.  Dr Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber is currently the chief executive officer of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company. He is also the minister for industry and advanced technology for the United Arab Emirates. Samuel Webb writes on The Independent website about the reaction to his appointment.

 

New Cop28 president is CEO of oil company

The President of Cop28 is the CEO of one of the world’s largest oil companies and has been branded a ‘climate criminal’ by Green MP Caroline Lucas.

Dr Sultan Al Jaber is the group chief executive of Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC), as well as the United Arab Emirate’s Minister of Industry and Advanced Technology. He has been appointed President of the 2023 UN Climate Change Conference, which will take place in Dubai in November.

ADNOC produces more than four million barrels of oil per day and around 11.5 billion cubic feet of natural gas. As founding CEO of Abu Dhabi’s renewable energy firm Masdar, in which ADNOC has a 24% stake, Jaber has overseen its mandate to adopt renewables in the UAE.

Green MP Caroline Lucas told The Independent: “The climate criminal CEO of a super-wealthy, super-dirty Emirate oil company should be nowhere near the vicinity of any climate conference, let alone presiding over one. Climate-wrecking fossil fuel companies like ADNOC have got away with polluting our planet for far too long, leaving the damage and destruction at our door, escaping with billions of profits, and then greenwashing us into submission.

“The fossil fuel era is over. If COP28 is going to bring us any closer to tackling the climate emergency and securing a liveable future, this conference needs a president free of any dirty fossil fuel ties.”

In September Dr Al Jaber told the National: “Even in a net zero emissions world, energy security requires that oil and gas be part of the mix.

“We have a responsibility to the billions of people of the world to ensure they have access to energy.”

He added: “You need to maintain the current system, while the world still relies on it [and] drive down its emissions, while driving up investment in new energies.

“Innovative climate action, which involves the fast adoption of renewable energy and other low-carbon sources, has the potential to provide long-lasting energy security. But we are not there yet.”

Chiara Liguori, Amnesty International’s Climate Advisor, said Sultan al-Jaber’s appointment sends the “wrong signal” to people most affected by climate change.

“It is also a disappointing selection for all those hoping COP28 will offer swift progress on reducing carbon emissions and delivering climate justice,” she added.

“The fact that the UAE is a major oil producer does not bode well for the outcome of COP28, and the appointment of the head of the national oil company will heighten concerns that the UAE will use its presidency of the climate conference to foster fossil fuel interests.

FoE to Challenge HMG over Whitehaven Mine

 Good!

Reposted from Edie:



Cumbria coal mine: UK Government to face legal challenge from Friends of the Earth

Friends of the Earth has today (4 January) confirmed that it will legally challenge the UK Government’s decision to approve permission for a new deep coal mine near Whitehaven, Cumbria.

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Published 4th January 2023

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Cumbria coal mine: UK Government to face legal challenge from Friends of the Earth

Pictured: Supporters of several environmental groups collaboratively protesting the mine. Image: Friends of the Earth

Cumbria County Council initially approved West Cumbria Mining’s proposals for the project in October 2020. However, the decision was called in by the UK Government in early 2021 on the grounds of the potential climate impact of the use of the extracted coal. Ministers asked for a full assessment of the mine’s compatibility with national and international climate targets.

Government permission for the proposals was granted last month. Levelling Up Secretary Michael Gove had the final say on the decision, which he made after a string of delays amid two consecutive changes in Prime Minister.

Coal extracted from the mine will be used for steelmaking in the UK and abroad, with around 85% of extracted coal set to be exported. In approving the project, Gove stated his “satisfaction” that there is currently a market for coal in steelmaking in the UK and EU and that there will continue to be as work towards 2050 net-zero targets progresses. Gove stated that he is not a believer in a “compelling case” for electric arc furnaces or direct hydrogen reduction to displace coal in steelmaking, despite investment in these technologies by major steelmakers.

Additionally, the conclusion was that the mine would not increase global emissions, because coal extracted would displace the use of coal extracted elsewhere.

Climate campaigners and steel industry experts have questioned these claims. Another cause of dispute is Gove’s assertion that the mine could be ‘net-zero’ in operation through the use of offsetting schemes. Offset certification provider Gold Standard has publicly stated that this is not a credible approach.

Friends of the Earth is one of the organisations which has criticised the proposals from West Cumbria Mining at every step in the journey. The environmental NGO has today confirmed that it will file a legal claim against the UK Government later this month, on the grounds that the climate impact of the mine has not been thoroughly assessed and that the project is incompatible with the UK’s legally binding emissions target.

Lawyers from Leigh Day Solicitors and the Landmark and Matrix Chambers have been lined up to represent Friends of the Earth if the court decides to hear the case.

“By giving the go-ahead to this polluting and totally unnecessary coal mine the government has not only made the wrong decision for our economy and the climate, we believe it has also acted unlawfully,” said Friends of the Earth lawyer Niall Toru.

Gove has failed to account for the significant climate impacts of this mine, or how the much-needed move to green steelmaking will be impacted by its approval. The steel industry is under no illusion that it must decarbonise if we’re to meet our climate goals, which calls into doubt the long-term viability of the mine and the jobs used to justify it.”

Toru added that green groups “shouldn’t have to take this challenge to court” in a nation with a net-zero target, which has used its presence at UN climate summits to promote a global phase-out of coal in the power sector.

South Lakes Action on Climate Change is also considering legal action against the Government over the approval of the mine but is yet to confirm that it will definitely do so. It wrote to Gove late last year and is poised to submit a legal challenge within the next two weeks.

Net Zero Strategy

Friends of the Earth won a legal challenge against the UK Government, concerning its flagship Net Zero Strategy, at the High Court last summer.

The Strategy was produced in late 2021 as part of preparations for COP26 in Glasgow, with the Government promising a clear plan for all sectors of the economy. Critics of the Strategy have pointed out that it contains no time-bound, sector-specific emissions targets, and that the schemes it funds do not go far enough to decarbonise their respective sectors in line with climate science.

The High Court sided with Friends of the Earth and ClientEarth, ruling that the Strategy is unlawful. It gave the UK Government nine months to update the Strategy, which will bring us through to March 2023.

By this point, Chris Skidmore MP’s net-zero review will be complete and the Government should be working on its detailed response to the resulting recommendations. This should form a good basis for updating the Strategy.

edie’s own Net-Zero Business Barometer survey of 148 energy and sustainability professionals, conducted online in September and October, revealed that most of these professionals are very keen for the Government to update the Strategy as a priority. 59% of respondents classed this move as a top-three priority for policymakers.