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Thursday, 18 July 2024 06:36

Government climate advisors warns UK significantly off track for Net Zero by 2030

The Climate Change Committee (CCC), the independent, statutory body which advises the UK and devolved governments on emissions, is warning that the UK is significantly off track on its target to achieve Net Zero by 2030.

CCC ANNUAL REPORT PROGRESS IN REDUCING CARBON EMISSIONS

The warning comes in the CCC’s 2024 Progress Report to Parliament published this morning which provides a comprehensive overview of the UK Government’s progress to date in reducing emissions.

The Committee’s assessment is that only a third of the emissions reductions required to achieve the country’s 2030 target are currently covered by credible plans.

The country’s emissions are now less than half the levels they were in 1990, largely due to the phase out of coal and the ramping up of renewables. However, to continue to decarbonise the UK will now need to see ambitious action not just in the energy sector, but also across transport, buildings, industry and agriculture. The plans in place from the previous Government will not deliver enough action, the Committee warns.

Professor Piers Forster, interim Chair of the Climate Change Committee said:

“The country’s 2030 emissions reduction target is at risk. The new Government has an opportunity to course-correct, but it will need to be done as a matter of urgency to make up for lost time. They are off to a good start. Action needs to extend beyond electricity, with rapid progress needed on electric cars, heat pumps and tree planting.

“The transition to Net Zero can deliver investment, lower bills, and energy security. It will help the UK keep its place on the world stage. It is a way for this Government to serve both the people of today and the people of tomorrow.”

The Committee has set out a priority list of ten recommendations - top among these are to make electricity cheaper, reverse recent policy rollbacks, and ramp up rates of tree planting and peatland restoration.

The Report says that while much of the low carbon technology needed is already available, almost all the indicators for the scale up and roll out of that technology are off track, with rates needing to significantly ramp up as follows by 2030:

  • Annual offshore wind installations must increase by at least three times, onshore wind installations will need to double and solar installations must increase by five times.
  • Approximately 10% of existing homes in the UK will need to be heated by a heat pump, compared to only approximately 1% today.
  • The market share of new electric cars needs to increase from 16.5% in 2023 to nearly 100%.

Damage done by previous Government’s policy rollbacks increased gap between UK’s plans and targets

The Committee is also drawing attention to the damage done by the previous Government’s policy rollbacks. According to the CCC, these have increased the gap between the UK’s plans and its targets, leaving the country further off track. The broader messaging, both domestically and internationally, has also caused significant uncertainty about the country’s commitment to Net Zero.

The Committee is urging the new Government to address this, with a clear commitment to the Net Zero transition, backed with rapid policy action and a sharp-eyed focus on removing barriers.

The Committee’s ten recommendations are:

  • Make electricity cheaper. Removing policy costs from electricity prices will support industrial electrification and ensure the lower running costs of heat pumps compared to fossil-fuel boilers are reflected in household bills.
  • Reverse recent policy rollbacks. Remove the exemption of 20% of households from the 2035 fossil-fuel boiler installation phase-out, address the gap left by removing obligations on landlords to improve the energy efficiency of rented homes and reinstate the 2030 phase-out of new fossil-fuel car and van sales. The damage of these rollbacks can be limited by quickly reinstating these policies.
  • Remove planning barriers for heat pumps, electric vehicle charge points and onshore wind.
  • Introduce a comprehensive programme for decarbonisation of public sector buildings.
  • Effectively design and implement the upcoming renewable energy CfD auctions. Ensure funding and auction design for the Sixth and Seventh Allocation Rounds are appropriate to deliver at least 50 GW of offshore wind by 2030.
  • Accelerate electrification of industrial heat. Strengthen the UK Emissions Trading Scheme to ensure that its price is sufficient to incentivise decarbonisation and that support is available for a rapid transition to electric heat across much of industry.
  • Ramp up tree planting and peatland restoration. Tree planting must be scaled up in the 2020s for abatement to be sufficient for later carbon budgets and Net Zero. There must be no more delays to addressing the barriers to delivery.
  • Finalise business models for large-scale deployment of engineered removals. Finalise and open to the market the business models for engineered removals.
  • Publish a strategy to support skills. Support workers in sectors which need to grow or transition and in communities that may be adversely impacted.
  • Strengthen NAP3 with a vision that sets clear objectives and targets and reorganise government adaptation policy. Adaptation must become a fundamental aspect of policymaking across all departments and be integrated into other national policy objectives.

 

According to the Government’s climate adviser, polling shows that the UK public has no appetite for climate division. Until last year, as well as showing domestic leadership, successive UK Governments had played a leading role in international climate diplomacy and could fairly claim to have accelerated action worldwide.

The Committee says it hopes the new Government will take the opportunity of COP29 in November to re-establish UK leadership on the global climate stage.

The CCC will publish its advice on the Seventh Carbon Budget and an updated path to Net Zero early in 2025.

ICE - "new government is going to have to act fast to meeting the 2030 target"

Commenting in response to the Climate Change Committee's annual UK Progress Report, David Hawkes, Interim Associate Director of Policy at the Institution of Civil Engineers said:

"Delays, reversals, and inconsistent plans have hindered the UK’s decarbonisation progress. Despite this, the UK has reduced emissions by more than half.

"But with the roll out of many low-carbon technologies behind schedule, the new government is going to have to act fast to meeting the 2030 target.

"The focus must shift to supporting public behaviour changes and adapting the UK’s existing infrastructure for climate change.

Click here to download the CCC’s 2024 Progress Report to Parliament

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