The UK’s Climate Change Act ‘faces a stress test’

Posted: April 26, 2024 by oldbrew in Accountability, alarmism, government, Legal, net zero, opinion
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So says an ardent fan of the idea of human-caused weather variations, who thinks UK climate laws were ‘once the envy of the world’. But unwelcome reality strikes in due course, because those in charge ‘underestimate just how far-reaching the necessary changes are’. The article tries to make out that a bit more belt tightening will do the trick, which almost certainly underplays the pain ahead if the current over-the-top net zero policies are persisted with.
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The Scottish government’s decision to row back on its 2030 climate pledge illustrates the crux of any target: it’s easy to set one with a big political flourish, but harder to follow through with a careful plan to achieve it, says The Conversation (via Phys.org).

Does that mean that targets for reducing the emissions of greenhouse gas driving climate change are worthless? Not necessarily.

There are two types of climate target: the empty promise and the calculated ambition. Only one of these works.

Empty promises abound in climate policy. Such targets deflect criticism—look, they say, we take climate change seriously, we have a strong target. But a closer look reveals, at best, loopholes and at worst, no plan at all.
. . .
The UK’s Climate Change Act, a landmark piece of legislation first introduced in 2008, is the second type of climate target: the calculated ambition. It set a long-term target, amended in 2019 to the more ambitious goal of net zero emissions by 2050.

Crucially, it also set a series of legally binding interim targets or “carbon budgets,” overseen by a watchdog, the Climate Change Committee, which reports progress to parliament each year.

As Scotland’s example shows, however, a rigorous plan still needs to be executed—and governments and firms underestimate just how far-reaching the necessary changes are.

The best laid schemes…
A target must be achievable as well as ambitious. Before the UK set its net zero target in 2019, it asked the Climate Change Committee whether it could be done—and went ahead reassured by the committee’s careful analysis and conclusion that eliminating greenhouse gas emissions is both possible, and also socially and economically beneficial.

This is, perhaps, where Scotland went wrong: ignoring the Climate Change Committee’s advice and setting a more stringent target without quite knowing how it would meet it.

The UK’s carbon budgets may be legally binding, but this doesn’t make them watertight. Governments won’t sue themselves, so the system relies on others to hold them to account—which is exactly what happened in 2022, when three campaigning organizations took the government to court over its inadequate climate strategy, and won.

Although the Climate Change Act is much admired [Talkshop comment – by climate alarmists], it has significant weaknesses that are now difficult to ignore, as my own analysis has shown. Statutory targets are set at the national level only, and the contribution to be made by each sector of the economy, or by local areas, is not specified.

Neither are there clear links to planning or industrial strategy, which is why proposals for coal mines or drilling for oil are being dragged through the courts. Without a step change in climate ambition, future governments are likely to face further legal challenges.

Full article here.

Comments
  1. ivan says:

    They should realise the only real answer to the climate change act 2008 is to repeal it because it isn’t based on reality – how can a gas that is necessary for all life on the earth be something that needs to be removed from the atmosphere, are they trying to turn the earth into a clone of mars?

  2. davep5860 says:

    Typical Scottish SNP one-upmanship, they have to be better than Westminster. This was typical with COVID, where they always had to lockdown longer and stronger,

    same with Climate. Goals were set sooner by a totally incompetent bunch of clowns, who were also under the thumb of the greens.

    also here in Scotland, many are off the grid for gas, using LPG and coal or logs.
    As the SNP implodes, they sense an election is imminent. It’s more of a political decision in an attempt to survive, rather than a pushback against Net Zero, unfortunately.

  3. coecharlesdavid says:

    I understand that popcorn sales are through the roof in Scotland at this time. The only ones who can’t lose during this mess are the bookies.

  4. oldbrew says:

    Legislating timetables for so-called climate action is just a gift for the fanatics.

  5. oldbrew says:

    The article says: Without some serious policy breakthroughs, we are likely to see more areas following Scotland’s lead, and rowing back on their pledges.

    ‘Policy breakthroughs’ is code for more unwanted net zero medicine that won’t work as intended.

  6. Phoenix44 says:

    “Neither are there clear links to planning or industrial strategy, which is why proposals for coal mines or drilling for oil are being dragged through the courts.”

    Reveals the real ambition – run economies and societies as they want them run, banning what they hate regardless of “Net” emissions.

  7. liardetg says:

    One per cent. There’s no chance that the steady climb of the Keeing curve will be checked. What is the CCC doing about road haulage and aviation? Stupid , vilely incompetent , lying, lefty , ignorant . Oh and putting small van drivers upon whom every thing depends out of business , but being middle class ignorants they get their stuff delivered by Waitrose. (Diesel ). Makes me sick.

  8. oldbrew says:

    There are two types of climate target: the empty promise and the calculated ambition. Only one of these works.

    Neither works as the problem doesn’t exist.

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