King Charles, David Cameron and Rishi Sunak show
UK’s COP28 identity crisis
The environmentalist king, the skeptical PM, and his
shape-shifting Tory predecessor will all jostle for prominence at the big
climate summit.
BY CHARLIE
COOPER
NOVEMBER
23, 2023 8:00 PM CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/the-u-k-s-cop28-identity-crisis/
LONDON —
COP28, meet the U.K.'s three amigos.
One is a
king who has spent most of his adult life campaigning for bold action on global
warming — but is now bound by ancient convention to stick to his government’s
skeptical script.
The second
is a prime minister who just scaled back Britain's net zero ambitions and wants
to “max out” fossil fuel production at home — and stands accused by former
colleagues of being “uninterested” in environmental policies.
And the
third? A former prime minister — now the U.K. foreign secretary — who once
pledged to lead the “greenest government ever,” but then grew tired of what he
called "the green crap” ... and is already showing signs of overshadowing
his new boss.
All three —
King Charles III, Rishi Sunak, and David Cameron — are due to descend on the
United Nations climate conference, COP28, which starts in Dubai next week,
rounding off a year set to be the hottest ever recorded. (Sunak and the king
are already confirmed to attend, while Cameron is due to do so in the coming
days.)
The
unlikely trio, each jostling for their place on the world stage, are symbolic
of a wider identity crisis for the U.K. heading into the summit.
The country
staked a claim as a world leader on climate when it hosted COP26 just two years
ago. But it is now viewed with uncertainty by allies pushing for stronger
action on global warming, following Sunak’s embrace of North Sea oil and gas
and his retreat on some key domestic net zero targets.
“There is a
lot of confusion about what the U.K. is going to do this year,” said one
European diplomat, granted anonymity to give a candid assessment ahead of the
summit.
“It raises
the question, which team are they on? I think we’ll need to find out during
COP."
Green king, Blue Prime Minister
One of the
key moments for the U.K. will come early in the conference, when Charles
delivers an opening speech at the World Climate Action Summit of world leaders,
the grand curtain raiser on a fortnight of talks.
Sunak is
expected to fly in the same day to deliver his own speech later in the session.
At least
Charles has been allowed to attend the summit this year. In 2022, then Prime
Minister Liz Truss advised the king against travelling to Egypt for COP27.
But anyone
looking for signs of friction between Sunak and the climate-conscious king will
be unlikely to find them in the text of Charles’ address.
Speeches by
the monarch are signed off by No. 10 Downing Street and this one will be no
different, said one minister, granted anonymity to discuss interactions between
the PM's office and Buckingham Palace.
That’s not
to say tensions don’t exist. Just don’t expect the king to overstep the
constitutional ground rules, said Charles’ friend and biographer, the
broadcaster Jonathan Dimbleby.
“I can only
imagine that he must be intensely frustrated that the government has granted
licenses in the North Sea," Dimbleby told POLITICO. “Whatever the actual
practical implications of the drilling in terms of combating climate change, it
will not send a great message to the world from a nation that claims moral
leadership on the issue.”
But Charles
finds himself in “a unique position,” Dimbleby added.
“He is the
only head of state who has a very long track record on insisting that climate
change is a threat to the future of humanity ... He speaks with great authority
— but of course on terms from which the government will not dissent, because he
has an overriding commitment, regardless of his own views, to abide by the
constitutional obligations of the head of state in this country.”
Others see
the speech as a major test for Charles.
“This is
one of the most significant speeches he’ll make as king,” said Craig Prescott,
a constitutional expert and lecturer in law at the Royal Holloway university.
Prescott
noted the speech will be watched closely for clues as to how Charles maintains
“political impartiality while pursuing the environmental issue — striking the
right balance.”
“There will
be some to-ing and fro-ing between Downing Street and the Palace," he
added. "But fundamentally he has to comply with any advice he gets.”
As is the
convention, Downing Street declined to comment on any discussions with
Buckingham Palace. The Palace did not respond to a request for comment.
Fossil fuel politics
The king is
attending the summit at the invitation of its hosts, the United Arab Emirates —
a sign of close ties between the British establishment and the Gulf monarchies
presiding over some of the world’s biggest oil and gas-producing countries.
It’s a
connection some view as a potential asset for British climate diplomacy.
“Trust
between these royal families and institutions could provide the chance to have
candid conversations” on issues such as fossil fuel reduction and the need to
expand renewable energy supply, said Edward Davey, head of the U.K office of
the World Resources Institute, where the king is patron.
“One could
imagine those issues being discussed in a respectful way, in a way that perhaps
other leaders couldn’t achieve.”
“I think
it’s perfectly possible for the sovereign and the PM to both attend a COP and
for them both to play a complementary role," Davey added.
Others are
much more skeptical. “[The king] has a lot of close friends in the Middle East
who are massive producers of oil,” said Graham Smith, boss of the Republic
campaign group, which wants to abolish the British monarchy.
“They can
use him as a point of access to the British state because he has direct access
to the government, and whatever he says to government is entirely secretive.”
Cameron,
meanwhile, has his own close ties to the UAE and — before his return to
government — took on a teaching post at New York University Abu Dhabi earlier
this year.
Negotiation confusion
The U.K.'s
big three will be joined in Dubai by Energy Secretary — and Sunak ally — Claire
Coutinho. But the head of the British delegation is a junior minister, Graham
Stuart, who does not attend Cabinet.
While the
country will be officially arguing — alongside the EU — for a “phase-out of
unabated fossil fuels,” Stuart sparked confusion earlier this month when he
suggested to MPs that he was not troubled by the distinction between a
“phase-out” (a total end to production of fossil fuels, where carbon capture is
not applied) and a “phase-down,” the softer language preferred by the summit’s
president, UAE national oil company boss Sultan Al-Jaber.
Chris
Skidmore, an MP and climate activist in Sunak’s Conservative party, and the
author of a government-commissioned report on net zero policy, said Stuart was
wrong if he thought the distinction was just “semantics.”
“The fate
of the world is resting on a distinction between phase-out and phase-down. But
the U.K. finds itself now [unable] to argue for phase-out because it’s joined
the phase-down club.
“That in
itself puts us in an entirely different strategic position to where we were.”
Climate brain drain
London’s
climate diplomatic corps are still well-respected around the world, said the
same European diplomat quoted above. Even with Sunak’s loosening of net zero
policies, the U.K. is seen to be in the group of countries, alongside the EU,
leading the push for strong action on cutting emissions.
And there
is a chance Cameron’s appointment will see more effort going into the U.K.'s
global reputation on climate, according to Skidmore.
"It
was under his premiership that the U.K. played a leading role in helping to get
the Paris Agreement [to limit global warming] signed through ... It will be
interesting to see if he comes to COP and wants to play on the opportunities
for the U.K. to demonstrate its climate credentials," he said.
But the
team that pulled off a relatively successful COP26 now has significantly less
firepower, said one former U.K. climate official, who warned their efforts risk
being undermined by No. 10's approach to fossil fuels.
“There was
a brain drain of experts working on climate, [the sort of] officials that could
help hold government to account internally and try to maintain the level of
ambition that we needed,” the former official said.
This
spring, the U.K. scrapped the dedicated role of climate envoy, held by the
experienced diplomat Nick Bridge since 2017. The remaining team of climate
diplomats have been left frustrated, the former official said, by changes to
domestic climate policy driven by a Downing Street operation fixated with next
year's U.K. general election, without consideration for how they might affect
Britain's negotiating position on the world stage.
“When Sunak
gave his speech in September [rolling back some interim green targets], his
team didn’t even realize that a U.N. climate action summit was happening in New
York,” the former official said. “His team aren’t thinking in this way. For
them it’s just about votes and the election.”
The risk,
said the European diplomat, is that countries at COP28 pushing for softer
targets on fossil fuels — likely to include the Gulf states, China and Russia —
could point to Sunak’s statements on a “proportionate, pragmatic” approach to
net zero as a reason to ignore the U.K. and its allies when they call for
higher ambition.
"This
will happen," the European diplomat said. "They can point to the
U.K.’s prime minister and say — ‘Look what the U.K. is doing with its own
climate ambitions. So why are you being such a hard-ass about ours?'”
As for
Cameron’s potential impact at the FCDO, the European diplomat was skeptical.
“It was a
big surprise for everybody, but we’re not sure what he can do," they said.
"Maybe he can call a referendum on the climate?”
Emilio
Casalicchio contributed reporting.


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