ABG: Britain's already behind on ambitious new climate goal, science board says

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Britain's already behind on ambitious new climate goal, science board says
'I still don't think the enormity of the task has sunk in yet'
https://www.autoblog.com/2019/07/10/britain-climate-goal-net-zero-carbon/

Britain has failed to set sufficient policies to combat climate change and must act urgently to cut greenhouse gas emissions to meet its new net zero target, a report by the government's climate advisers said on Wednesday.

The Committee on Climate Change (CCC) report comes after Britain last month became the first G7 country to adopt an ambitious law to reach net zero emissions by 2050.


The report said the lack of policies meant the country was already struggling to meet its old target to cut Britain's emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases by 80% compared with the 1990 level by 2050.

"I still don't think the enormity of the task has sunk in yet. It (the net zero target) needs to be the lens through which the government views all other areas," Chris Stark, CCC chief executive said in an interview with Reuters.

He said Britain has a 12-18 month window, ahead of next year’s international climate conference which it hopes to host, to get policies in place to make the target a reality and ensure the country's credibility at the event. . . .

Stark said Britain must develop plans to curb emissions from transport and phase out new petrol and diesel cars by 2030 or 2035 at the latest, rather than the current 2040 goal.

Climate campaigners have also criticized Britain's decision to back a third runway at London's Heathrow airport which is likely to increase emissions from the country's aviation sector. . . .

Britain's greenhouse gas emissions have fallen 43.5% since 1990 largely due to a rapid increase in renewable power such as wind and solar, and a move away from polluting coal plants.

The CCC, however, said the government has been too slow to develop technology to capture, store and use carbon dioxide emissions, held back the development of onshore wind farms, and failed to launch large-scale trials to use low-carbon hydrogen. . . .

Under the Climate Change Act, Britain must produce proposals on how it intends to reach its climate targets, set in five-yearly carbon budgets.

The CCC said government policies are insufficient to even meet the fourth (2023-2027) and fifth (2028-2032) carbon budgets set under the old target. . . .
 
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