Backtrack on net zero and lose votes, Tory MPs
warn Sunak
Many Conservatives concerned that push to woo
motorists will alienate voters concerned about climate
Aletha Adu,
Peter Walker and Ben Quinn
Mon 31 Jul
2023 18.30 BST
Rishi Sunak
must resist pressure and avoid backtracking on Britain’s net zero goals or risk
losing the support of an environmentally responsible electorate, Conservative
MPs have warned.
Many Tory
MPs are privately very concerned that the prime minister’s desperation to
appear on the side of motorists could see him lose sight of the country’s
climate commitments. Many have, however, stopped short of publicly criticising
him.
Sir Robert
Buckland, a former Wales secretary and member of the Conservative Environment
Network, said: “It’s really important the prime minister sticks to the legally
binding commitments on net zero. Of course energy security has to be an
important consideration but we shouldn’t be seeking to water down any
commitment that we have already made.
“We have
shown leadership on this area, and it’s time the prime minister resists calls
to somehow backtrack on them.”
He added
that it was too early to say Sunak was less passionate than Boris Johnson about
reaching net zero.
On Monday,
Sunak defended a decision to grant more than 100 new licences for oil and gas
extraction as “entirely consistent” with the UK’s net zero commitments.
Speaking
about the need for oil and gas, the prime minister said: “If we’re going to
need it, far better to have it here at home rather than shipping it here from
halfway around the world with two, three, four times, the amount of carbon
emissions versus the oil and gas we have here at home.”
Yet one MP
said colleagues had expressed concern in backbench WhatsApp groups that the
PM’s move could lose them votes to the Liberal Democrats in some
constituencies.
“I think we
all recognise it has to be a balanced approach – yes, speak up for drivers, but
we also need to reassure people that we’re serious about the environment,” they
said. “Some MPs are worried we might be throwing the baby out with the
bathwater. We have to tread very carefully, and make sure it doesn’t look like
we’re junking any commitments.”
A senior
Conservative backbencher urged his wary party colleagues to “calm down”,
insisting Sunak has not yet dropped any climate commitments.
Elliot
Colburn, a Conservative MP in a marginal south London seat, said that
opposition to London’s ultra-low emission zone (Ulez) was a potent issue, and
one he had campaigned on.
But
Colburn, also a member of the Conservative Environment Network, added: “There
is definitely a big sense locally here of environmental responsibility and
people take that quite seriously.
“I’m very
keen to ensure that we stick on the path to net zero, but I don’t think people
view Ulez as the way to go about it.
“The
overwhelming majority of the public agree that changes have to be made, but
they also think that transition to net zero needs to be sustainable, achievable
and one that takes people with you.”
“I’m not
meeting people on the doorsteps who are very much in disagreement with net zero
or view it all as rubbish. But what they do want is a more incentivised
approach.”
The former
cabinet minister Damian Green said Britain’s net zero commitments were “red
lines” which should not be crossed, including the policy to ban the sale of new
petrol and diesel cars from 2030.
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