'Reckless' UK leader Sunak faces uproar as green goals rolled back
The UK Prime Minister is looking to revive his chances ahead of an upcoming election as he trails badly in polling
UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has delayed goals to roll out electric vehicle and heat pumps in the country, while stressing planned “comprehensive” reforms to energy infrastructure including grid connection.
Sunak on Wednesday pushed back a ban on buying new petrol and diesel cars in the UK from 2030 to 2035, in a move likely to infuriate the electric vehicle makers. He also said people will have “far more time” to transition from gas boilers to heat pumps.
Moments after the announcement, criticism was already being voiced fiercely by companies, green groups and political opponents.
Friends of the Earth UK claimed: “Rishi Sunak is being environmentally reckless and economically inept.
“The government is already being taken to court over its weak and feeble climate action plan, which we say is unlawful. If this current package is weakened further, and in a way that’s not transparent about delivery risks, then further legal challenges are inevitable."
Jenny Curtis, managing director at Vattenfall Heat UK, said: "The UK cannot afford to stall the deployment of low carbon heating by sending mixed messages about the future of fossil fuels. Companies will stop investing and the establishment of the supply chain and skills base that we so desperately need will fail to happen."
Sunak said he remained committed to the UK’s target of reaching net zero emissions by 2050, but wants to take a “pragmatic, proportionate and realistic approach” to this.
He said one of the “biggest constraints” to reaching net zero is that there is huge investment in renewable energy projects but the UK lacks the grid infrastructure to bring the energy to households.
He claimed there are enough renewables projects waiting for grid connection to “generate over half of our future electricity needs.”
Sunak continued that his government would bring forward “comprehensive new reforms to energy infrastructure” and set out the UK’s “first ever spatial plan for that infrastructure” to “give industry certainty and every community a say.”
Earlier in the day, RenewableUK CEO Dan McGrail had said that Sunak must “put in place some new policies to attract investment in green technology to the UK – otherwise it will just be another blow to investor confidence.”
If Sunak pursues a “negative framing of green technologies” and sees green industry as “something to be politicised,” he said investors are “going to look overseas at more stable and attractive markets instead.”
E.ON UK CEO Chris Norbury meanwhile denied there was any “green v cheap” debate and that delaying renewables targets based on the cost of living crisis in the UK was a “false argument”.
Sunak’s predecessor Boris Johnson said that the country “cannot afford to falter now” or “lose ambition” when it comes to green tech.
Across the Atlantic, former US Vice President and climate change campaigner Al Gore weighed in by saying that Sunak is doing “the wrong thing” by weakening green goals, describing the move as “unfortunate.”
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