Dropping green pledges would be ‘political
suicide’, Sunak and Starmer warned
Science and business leaders say lurch away from
climate agenda after byelections would be deeply unpopular with voters and
damage UK’s reputation
Michael
Savage, Toby Helm and Robin McKie
Sat 22 Jul
2023 18.11 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/jul/22/green-pledges-sunak-starmer-byelections
Britain’s
leaders have been warned against a “politically suicidal” lurch away from their
green pledges as concerns grow that both major parties may dilute their plans
to combat the climate crisis in the wake of a shock byelection result.
Senior
figures from business, the scientific community and across the political divide
warned that any watering down of climate policies would be deeply unpopular
with voters, set back the international fight to reach net zero and damage
Britain’s green reputation.
There are
fears that both Rishi Sunak and Keir Starmer will loosen their support for such
policies after the Conservatives’ surprise win in the Uxbridge and South
Ruislip byelection on Thursday. The Tories narrowly won the seat, by just 495
votes, with a campaign that capitalised on opposition to plans by London’s
Labour mayor Sadiq Khan to extend the ultra low emission zone (Ulez).
Sunak is
already being urged by the right of the party and some of his own cabinet to
rethink his commitment to green policies in the light of the Uxbridge result.
Meanwhile, a senior Labour MP warned that Starmer risked “allowing the Tories
to edit the next Labour manifesto” over climate change. The Labour leader had
said the Uxbridge result showed the party must not adopt policies that could be
featured on Tory election leaflets.
There is a
concerted effort this weekend to ensure that the political unity over Britain’s
net zero aims remains in place. Alok Sharma, a former Tory cabinet minister and
president of Cop26, said it was vital that all parties maintained the political
consensus on pursuing net zero.
“We have
built up a broad political consensus in the UK on pursuit of net zero policies
which are good for the economy, jobs, exports and the environment. Businesses
support this agenda because they can see the economic benefits, he told the
Observer. “And the independent Office for Budget Responsibility has noted that
unmitigated climate change would ultimately have catastrophic economic and
fiscal consequences for the UK.
“Concerns
about the environment and climate change also consistently rank among the top
issues of importance for voters. Given the economic, environmental and
electoral case for climate action, it would be self-defeating for any political
party to seek to break the political consensus on this vital agenda,” Sharma
warned.
Zac
Goldsmith, the former minister who quit the government over what he described
as Sunak’s lack of interest in the environment, said that any party rethinking
its commitment to the climate would be punished. “Byelection results can be
interpreted in countless ways, and it is the nature of politicians and
political commentators to wedge their own prejudices into the outcomes,” he
told the Observer. “But to use these recent results to advocate abandonment of
the UK’s previous environmental leadership is cynical and idiotic.
“It would
also be politically suicidal, given the very deep and wide support for action
on the environment that exists right across the electorate. And it is immoral,
given that both government and opposition acknowledge the gravity of the crisis
we face.
“So it’s
hard to believe there really are people at the top of either of the main
parties calling for abandonment of green policies, but if there are, I can only
hope they are hammered by the electorate when the time comes,” said Goldsmith,
who had been minister for the international environment and climate before he
stepped down from the Foreign Office.
Professor
Nicholas Stern, who led a seminal 2006 review on the economics of climate
change, also issued a plea for leadership on the climate. “Air pollution kills
tens of thousands in the UK each year – far more than deaths in road traffic
accidents – and millions around the world,” he said.
“Inaction
is not a sane option for us, our children and grandchildren. Second, the costs
of investments in the transition away from fossil fuels are significantly
increased by policy risk due to politicians chopping and changing their views
and actions.
“Third, the
investment costs of the transition need to be distributed fairly. And fourth,
the UK’s reputation in the world depends on its leadership on these issues. Our
standing has already been damaged by the loss of focus since we hosted the
United Nations climate change summit in Glasgow in 2021.”
The latest
Opinium poll for the Observer highlights the perilous state the Tories are in
as MPs headed to their constituencies for Westminster’s summer recess. Labour
has a 17-point lead. The party retains a 42% share of the vote, with the Tories
on just 25%.
Sunak’s
team are desperately searching for ways to reverse the party’s fortunes. As
well as calls to back away from green measures, the prime minister is also said
to be looking at a campaign that would vow to “protect” voters from Labour
policies. Sunak’s government already appears to have watered down and delayed
an end to the effective ban on more onshore wind farms put in place by David
Cameron.
Nathan
Bennett, head of strategic communications at RenewableUK, the renewable energy
trade association, said that now was precisely the wrong time to be “watering
down ambition” and for false arguments to be developing about the costs of
greening the economy. “I am concerned about a false narrative emerging that
green policies are unpopular and costly, as that’s certainly not the case for
renewables and many other clean technologies,” he said.
“New wind
farms are driving down energy bills, and polls consistently show that, if
anything, people want us to roll out more renewables than we currently are,
including new onshore wind.”
Greg
Jackson, chief executive of Octopus Energy, the renewable energy group, said
there was now a risk that the UK would lose out to other countries in the race
for investment: “Harnessing the opportunities of net zero to deliver tangible
financial benefits is extremely popular. Our customers love getting cheap
energy when it’s windy, or being paid to use less when it’s not. Britain has
had a lead in cheap, clean energy, but like so many industries of the past, we
risk other countries getting the benefit of our innovation – costly for
climate, cost of living and national security.”
Starmer
raised concerns within the party by extending his criticism of the Ulez. “We
are doing something very wrong if policies put forward by the Labour party end
up on each and every Tory leaflet,” he told Labour’s national policy forum in
Nottingham. It marks an escalation of his confrontation with Khan over the Ulez
extension. In a change in tone, a source close to Khan said on Friday he was
“listening to Londoners and always looking at ways he can address their
concerns”.
Former
shadow chancellor John McDonnell told the Observer: “Of course potential policy
banana skins have to be avoided, but if we are not careful, effectively this
means allowing the Tories to edit the next Labour manifesto on the greatest
issue facing us, the climate crisis.”
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