Current:Home > ScamsRishi Sunak defends U.K. climate policy U-turn amid international criticism -NextLevel Wealth Academy
Rishi Sunak defends U.K. climate policy U-turn amid international criticism
View
Date:2025-04-26 06:54:25
LONDON — Amid growing international criticism, British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has defended watering down key U.K. climate policies.
In a press conference Wednesday, Sunak announced a series of major U-turns on climate policies, including delaying by five years the target to ban sales of new gas and diesel cars — which will now come into force in 2035 rather than 2030 — and a nine-year delay on phasing out gas boilers, which will now come into force in 2035.
Sunak insisted he was not slowing down efforts to combat climate change. But his government's own climate adviser called the prime minister's assertion that the U.K. would still succeed in meeting its 2050 net-zero target "wishful thinking."
Sunak said the changes were about being "pragmatic" and sparing the British public the "unacceptable cost" of net-zero commitments.
His home secretary, Suella Braverman, told the BBC that the Conservative government was "not going to save the planet by bankrupting British people."
The government's Climate Change Committee — independent advisers on cutting carbon emissions — estimates that meeting Britain's legally binding goal of reaching net zero by 2050 will require an extra $61 billion of investment every year by 2030.
But the committee has said that once the savings from reduced use of fossil fuels are factored in, the overall resource cost of the transition to net zero will be less than 1% of GDP over the next 30 years. By 2044, the committee has said, breaching net zero should become cost-saving, as newer clean technologies are more efficient than those they are replacing.
Criticism at home and abroad
Sunak's overhaul of his green targets has been met with criticism at home and internationally.
Former U.S. Vice President Al Gore described the changes as "shocking and disappointing" and "not what the world needs from the United Kingdom."
Some in the prime minister's own Conservative Party warned that the changes risk damaging Britain's reputation as a global leader on the climate.
Sunak decided not to attend the United Nations Climate Summit in New York this week, making him the first British prime minister to miss a U.N. General Assembly in a decade.
Former Conservative minister Alok Sharma, who chaired the 2021 COP26 U.N. Climate Change Conference in Glasgow, told the BBC Wednesday's announcement had been met with "consternation" from international colleagues.
"My concern is whether people now look to us and say, 'Well, if the U.K. is starting to row back on some of these policies, maybe we should do the same,'" he said.
In the U.K., Sunak's announcement prompted a backlash from climate activists, car manufacturers and the energy industry.
In a statement, U.K. Ford chair Lisa Brankin said, "Our business needs three things from the U.K. government: ambition, commitment and consistency. A relaxation of 2030 would undermine all three."
And the chief executive of one of Britain's largest energy suppliers, Eon UK, said the move was a "misstep on many levels."
Sunak's pivot occurs as extreme weather due to climate change is growing more frequent
Sunak said the announcement was part of his desire for a more "honest debate" about what reaching net zero will actually mean for the British public.
But he has come under criticism from the British media for claiming to scrap measures that some have pointed out never existed as formal government policy in the first place, such as taxing meat and requiring households to have seven different waste and recycling bins. (The government had previously said it wanted to standardize waste collection in England, although the plan was subsequently delayed and never became policy).
Political analysts say Sunak's gamble marks a shift for the prime minister, who has spent his first year in office largely steadying the ship after the tumultuous governments of his predecessors Liz Truss and Boris Johnson. With a general election coming up next year, they say, Sunak has chosen net zero as a dividing line.
Sunak's pivot away from more aggressive action on global warming occurs as extreme weather is becoming more frequent and more intense around the world, including the U.K., because of the effects of climate change. Scientists say this will continue as long as humans continue to emit planet-warming greenhouse gases.
In the U.K., temperatures hit 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) for the first time on record in July 2022. The World Weather Attribution network says this would have been "basically impossible" without climate change.
During this week's climate summit in New York, London Mayor Sadiq Khan said the capital faced what he called the "incredibly worrying" prospect of seeing 45-degree Celsius (113 degrees Fahrenheit) days in the "forseeable future."
veryGood! (44534)
Related
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- Sister Wives' Christine Brown Is Engaged to David Woolley 2 Months After Debuting Romance
- Glaciers are shrinking fast. Scientists are rushing to figure out how fast
- Here's Proof the Vanderpump Rules Cast Has Always Ruled Coachella
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- The first named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season floods Florida
- Dozens of former guests are rallying to save a Tonga resort
- Biden meets with Israel's Herzog, extends invite to Netanyahu amid tensions
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- A sighting reveals extinction and climate change in a single image
Ranking
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Ukraine can join NATO when allies agree and conditions are met, leaders say
- Fed nominee Sarah Bloom Raskin withdraws after fight over her climate change stance
- Climate change fueled extreme rainfall during the record 2020 hurricane season
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Making weather forecasts is hard. Getting people to understand them is even harder
- How these neighbors use fire to revitalize their communities, and land
- The Work-From-Home climate challenge
Recommendation
Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
Democrat Gavin Newsom to face Republican Brian Dahle in California race for governor
A Climate Time Capsule (Part 1): The Start of the International Climate Change Fight
Cerberus, heat wave named for dog that guards Greek mythology's underworld, locks its jaws on southern Europe
Jorge Ramos reveals his final day with 'Noticiero Univision': 'It's been quite a ride'
Billy McFarland Announces Fyre Festival II Is Officially Happening
Family sues over fatal police tasering of 95-year-old Australian great-grandmother
'Jaws' vs 'The Meg': A definitive ranking of the best shark movies to celebrate Shark Week