Liz Truss’ (net) zero sum game
Polls show the British public love action on climate
change. Will the next prime minister dare change course?
BY KARL
MATHIESEN, ESTHER WEBBER AND NOAH KEATE
SEPTEMBER
4, 2022 5:34 PM
https://www.politico.eu/article/liz-truss-net-zero-sum-game/
LONDON —
Bashing solar farms and scrapping green taxes might excite the Tory faithful —
but the message Liz Truss is hearing from senior Conservative strategists is
that pulling the plug on net zero would not be politically wise.
While the
U.K. Conservative Party front-runner has promised during the current leadership
campaign to “double down” on the U.K.'s goal to zero out its greenhouse gas
emissions by 2050, her most prominent musings on actual climate policy have
been to express doubts about the “depressing” spread of solar power
“paraphernalia” on agricultural land, and to pledge to scrap levies on energy
bills supporting clean power and home insulation.
Such
anti-green signaling has earned applause from the right-wing press and
climate-skeptic Tory parliamentarians, and has hit the spot too with the
Conservative grassroots — Truss is widely expected to be confirmed as the
leader, and so Britain's next prime minister, when the result of the membership
ballot is announced Monday.
But it
would not be a winning strategy in government, said James Frayne, the founder
of polling consultancy Public First, whose research is closely watched by
senior Conservatives involved in policymaking.
“If you're
looking basically to maximize votes, there's no point in going in this
direction,” said Frayne. Even with an ongoing pandemic, looming recession and a
war-driven energy crunch, climate change remains “a tier-one issue for young
professionals and a high tier-two issue for everybody else, including working
class voters.”
If, as
polls suggest, Truss wins her leadership battle against former Chancellor Rishi
Sunak on Monday, she will be confronted by three climate-related realities
likely to guide her medium-term choices: a transition toward clean energy which
is already well underway; a cataclysmic energy crisis; and an electorate
broadly supportive of action on climate change.
Her first
priority in government will undoubtedly be to bring much-needed bill relief to
households and businesses. She's promised action on that front within the first
week of taking office. But even if she deals with the acute price crisis, Truss
will face a more fundamental question: How to ensure the ongoing security of
the nation’s energy supply?
Truss has
indicated her desire to embrace home-grown supplies of all energy sources —
except perhaps solar, which is currently nine times cheaper than gas, having
plummeted in cost over the past decade to become, alongside wind, the cheapest
form of power. Her proposals include ending a U.K.-wide moratorium on fracking
— albeit with requirements for local community buy-in — which party insiders
suggest could be one of her early moves in No. 10.
Outgoing
Prime Minister Boris Johnson sent a shot across the bows of his would-be
successor last week, warning fracking was “not going to be the panacea that
some people suggest.”
According
to reporting from the Times, Truss also wants to issue new licensing rounds for
oil and gas extraction in the North Sea. That prospect was immediately slammed
by Greenpeace U.K.’s chief scientist Doug Parr as a "gift to the fossil
fuel giants already making billions from this crisis.”
These new
licenses will be of limited assistance to the U.K.'s broader energy needs,
however. The additional supply from new projects would take years to hit the
market and be “relatively small in comparison to the overall level of energy
demand,” said Josh Buckland, a former energy policy adviser to recent
Conservative governments in No. 10 Downing Street, the Treasury and the
business department.
“The
biggest driver of the current energy challenge is obviously the availability of
gas, and the price of gas,” he said. “So really, the key medium term question
for the government is: how do you reduce your reliance on gas?”
Where the
public sits
Nevertheless,
a vociferous campaign blaming the recent increase in energy bills on the U.K.’s
net zero policy has been propagated by right-wing think tanks, media and
several prominent Tories, including Truss-backers — and former ministers —
David Frost and Steve Baker. Baker did not want to be interviewed for this
article.
If Truss
becomes prime minister, climate advocates and the Labour opposition are
watching for the appearance of such faces in key roles around her Cabinet
table. Such appointments could indicate that Truss intends to make climate
policy one of the so-called "culture war" issues which featured
prominently in the early stages of her leadership campaign.
For Labour,
that may prove a double-edged sword. Polling indicates that public support for
the net zero target is strong — 61 percent of Brits support the policy, versus
just 14 percent who oppose it, according to a poll organized by Onward, a
center-right Conservative think tank — and Labour strategists believe their
party will always be viewed as greener than the Tories. Conservatives like
Frayne say any backsliding by the Tories therefore carries significant
electoral risk.
Ukraine’s
prime minister taking Russia visa ban fight to Berlin, Brussels
“The number
of people that are very, very green-skeptic is tiny,” said Frayne. “Even people
who are very worried about their money always say the same thing — 'we’ve got
to do something for our children and grandchildren.'”
But a
hard-nosed political strategy which emphasized the cost of green measures and
scapegoated clean energy for the nation's economic problems would undoubtedly
test public support for the finer details of climate policy. It’s a zero sum
political fight that can be summed up by two competing Twitter hashtags:
#costofnetzero vs. #costofnotzero.
Such a
prospect has some climate advocates and Labour officials worried that public
support for net zero may prove skin deep, and that the policies required to achieve
it could easily be framed as interventionist or too expensive. Labour’s
research indicates the finer policy details of how to reach net zero are
arguments yet to be won in some parts of the community.
Frayne,
however, insisted green levies remain “way, way, way, down” on the list of
things voters believe are making them poorer during the current crisis.
Another
signal from which some green Tories are taking encouragement is the prospect of
current Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Kwasi
Kwarteng becoming chancellor.
“On energy,
I'm told she listens very closely to Kwasi Kwarteng,” said Sam Hall, the
director of the Conservative Environment Network. Kwarteng has “shown he is a
believer in net zero," Hall added. "And he's correctly analyzed the
current energy crisis as a gas crisis — and that the way out of that is to get
off gas more quickly.”
Truss'
personal views remain unclear. During the current leadership campaign she has
given little indication that she was indeed “an environmentalist before it was
fashionable,” as she told the Conservative Environment Network in a green
manifesto that failed to outline much in the way of green policy.
More
significantly, as chief secretary to the Treasury in the dying days of Theresa
May’s administration, she is said to have opposed the 2050 net zero target, and
the U.K.'s hosting of COP26. A former cabinet colleague said: “She's going to
be largely uninterested in the environment [as PM], because that romantic part
of the Conservative movement, which is significant, doesn't spring in her
breast.”
But if
Truss ultimately decides that beating Russian President Vladimir Putin means
building a home-grown industry providing stable, affordable energy, then she
may not need to be a net zero evangelist to deliver the net zero goods. That’s
certainly what green Tories, climate advocates and officials in Whitehall are
hoping.
“I'm
confident that the pressure of this winter — and probably the next couple of
winters in terms of continued high energy bills and fears about energy security
— will drive a lot of this transition,” said Hall.
Details,
details
The
pressure of soaring bills is not the only climate policy hurdle the presumptive
prime minister will have to leap in her first months in office, however.
The U.K.
still holds the U.N. climate presidency — handing it over to the Egyptians at
the beginning of COP27 on November 6 — and Truss’ government will be under
immediate pressure from developing countries to offer up finance for clean
energy, climate protection and damage recovery.
Then, two
days after COP27 begins, the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities
is due to make a highly-symbolic decision on whether to grant permission for
Britain’s first new coal mine in a generation.
And a
further key milestone looms in March next year, when the U.K. government has
been ordered by the High Court to submit an updated version of its strategy for
reaching net zero emissions by 2050. Satisfying the court’s order, analysts
said, will require the submission of extra data on how the strategy would
actually work.
The
Committee on Climate Change (CCC), an independent body that advises the U.K.
government on climate policy, has been scathing about the strategy’s multiple
shortcomings. In particular, the committee said the window was closing fast for
the U.K. to decide how it will renovate millions of buildings to make them more
energy efficient, replace gas-fired heating systems in homes and reform the
agricultural system to cut methane production.
If she's
serious about net zero, said Buckland, Truss will have little choice at that
point but to set out a genuine long-term plan.
“If that
document doesn't include a set of new commitments” or at least more detail how
Britain can actually become carbon neutral, he said, it will be a “real
credibility test.”

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário