The US is galloping ahead of the UK in renewables. Nicholas Hartnett, owner of Pure Power Solar, holds a panel as his company installs a solar array on the roof of a US home. AP
The US is galloping ahead of the UK in renewables. Nicholas Hartnett, owner of Pure Power Solar, holds a panel as his company installs a solar array on the roof of a US home. AP
The US is galloping ahead of the UK in renewables. Nicholas Hartnett, owner of Pure Power Solar, holds a panel as his company installs a solar array on the roof of a US home. AP
The US is galloping ahead of the UK in renewables. Nicholas Hartnett, owner of Pure Power Solar, holds a panel as his company installs a solar array on the roof of a US home. AP

How UK signals to business set up a self-defeating carbon fight


Chris Blackhurst
  • English
  • Arabic

There was no doubting the signal from Rishi Sunak on how the UK economy would decarbonise at the recent Cop28 summit in Dubai.

It was one of the key topics of conversation among the delegates that first week: how the UK Prime Minister had flown in for just half a day; how he argued for climate change solutions that don’t affect people’s finances; how his government was accused by the Conservatives’ own president of the previous Cop26 in Glasgow, Alok Sharma, of rowing back on its road to net zero pledge.

Sunak’s was a very public display, calculated to send a message. In the UK, a succession of U-turns has reinforced the impression of a change of heart – that Sunak is nowhere near devoted to combating a hotter planet than previously.

This culminated in Chris Stark, head of the UK Climate Change Committee, the government watchdog that advises ministers and assesses progress on targets, telling Laura Kuenssberg at the weekend that Sunak has “set us back” on climate change and left the UK at risk of falling behind other countries.

Stark said Sunak had “clearly not” prioritised the issue as much as his predecessors. He accused him of telling the world that the UK is now “less ambitious” than it once was.

Prior to Stark’s criticism of the Prime Minister – extremely rare from the head of a statutory body – the UK has witnessed a raft of ‘anti-climate change’ steps. They include: the reopening of the North Sea to fossil fuel exploration; rolling back on diesel and petrol new car bans so they will carry on being manufactured; renewing support for Heathrow's expansion; the scrapping of plans for household heat pumps and energy efficiency; and pressing ahead with a new deep-cast coal mine in Cumbria.

There have been ‘pro-green’ measures, including relaxing the ban on onshore wind farms and restoring the moratorium on fracking. But the overall impression is of a UK leader who no longer cares whether he is seen as ‘green’.

Electricity costs

Two reasons are being cited at Westminster for the PM’s shift. One is the cost. Going green is not cheap. As yesterday’s Resolution Foundation report found, implementing a low-carbon electricity system in the UK will require a four-fold increase in electricity investment over the next decade.

Sunak simply does not possess that sort of money. There is not sufficient spare cash in the national purse. And ahead of a possible election victory, Labour is already signalling the same, which does not augur well.

The other is that there are no votes in eco, not in the volume that could deliver Sunak an improbable victory. Those Red Wall constituencies that drove a Tory triumph last time are looking for investment in infrastructure projects, in hospitals, schools, transport and in tax cuts. What little he must play with, Sunak is going to use to try to woo marginal voters, not flex environmental muscle.

The result is confusion. Yes, he told Cop28 that he would not “burden working people” with the meeting of climate targets. But he did say that Britain had every intention of meeting them, just “in a more pragmatic way”.

In theory, the government still has a ‘Build Back Greener’ net-zero strategy. It’s also meant to be ‘powering up Britain’ with a net-zero growth plan. They may exist but they don’t seem as vital, as high a priority, as they once did.

Britain's then Prime Minister Boris Johnson, left, and Sir David Attenborough attend the launch of the UK-hosted Cop26 UN Climate Summit in 2001. AP
Britain's then Prime Minister Boris Johnson, left, and Sir David Attenborough attend the launch of the UK-hosted Cop26 UN Climate Summit in 2001. AP

Society takes its cue from those in charge. People and businesses always look for a steer as to how they should behave. Alarmingly, there are signs that business has made up its mind and that without government assistance, to make climate change initiatives worthwhile, some companies are prepared to push saving the planet to the back burner.

Fossil fuel enterprises have rushed to ready themselves to apply for the new licences to survey and drill in the North Sea.

Car manufacturers are revisiting their production plans. They are doing so in the knowledge, that like the oil and gas producers, they are no longer the pariahs they once were.

It’s the same at Heathrow, which speaks of "net-zero aviation", while the industry is busy dusting off the airport’s growth and development files after taking a low profile as the sector endured the stop-start legacy of Covid-19.

Similarly, fracking may be banned but lobbyists are quietly pressing the cause, believing they can see the granting of permission in sight once more.

Mining and quarrying, long off the agenda are very much back on again. It’s not only in Cumbria. Hanson UK, part of the giant Heidelberg Materials group, has submitted a planning application to double the size of its cement mining operation in another beautiful part of the country, in Rutland. This, despite widespread concerns about the impact on traffic, noise, dust and carbon emissions.

Heidelberg stress their adherence towards the decarbonisation of their sector, in providing low-carbon products and being 'Nature Positive'. However, granting permission to increase the site by a huge 120 hectares will be in direct conflict to the county council’s stated aim of reducing the impact of climate change, of achieving "net zero by 2050".

The quarry provides the raw material to make cement, yet cement contributes almost 8 per cent of global carbon dioxide emissions. When the building market is moving towards more sustainable materials, such as timber, the site is to expand, knowingly adding to pollution. At present, there are 1,575 HGV movements on the local A606 road daily; this will only rise enormously.

In Dubai, Sunak said “climate politics is close to breaking point”. As they look at where the UK is currently, other nations could be forgiven for thinking that in Sunak’s country they lie broken already.

Our legal consultants

Name: Hassan Mohsen Elhais

Position: legal consultant with Al Rowaad Advocates and Legal Consultants.

Director: Romany Saad
Starring: Mirfat Amin, Boumi Fouad and Tariq Al Ibyari

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
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Profile

Name: Carzaty

Founders: Marwan Chaar and Hassan Jaffar

Launched: 2017

Employees: 22

Based: Dubai and Muscat

Sector: Automobile retail

Funding to date: $5.5 million

While you're here
Global Fungi Facts

• Scientists estimate there could be as many as 3 million fungal species globally
• Only about 160,000 have been officially described leaving around 90% undiscovered
• Fungi account for roughly 90% of Earth's unknown biodiversity
• Forest fungi help tackle climate change, absorbing up to 36% of global fossil fuel emissions annually and storing around 5 billion tonnes of carbon in the planet's topsoil

Listen to Extra Time
COMPANY%20PROFILE
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if you go

The flights

Fly to Rome with Etihad (www.etihad.ae) or Emirates (www.emirates.com) from Dh2,480 return including taxes. The flight takes six hours. Fly from Rome to Trapani with Ryanair (www.ryanair.com) from Dh420 return including taxes. The flight takes one hour 10 minutes. 

The hotels 

The author recommends the following hotels for this itinerary. In Trapani, Ai Lumi (www.ailumi.it); in Marsala, Viacolvento (www.viacolventomarsala.it); and in Marsala Del Vallo, the Meliaresort Dimore Storiche (www.meliaresort.it).

What are the GCSE grade equivalents?
 
  • Grade 9 = above an A*
  • Grade 8 = between grades A* and A
  • Grade 7 = grade A
  • Grade 6 = just above a grade B
  • Grade 5 = between grades B and C
  • Grade 4 = grade C
  • Grade 3 = between grades D and E
  • Grade 2 = between grades E and F
  • Grade 1 = between grades F and G
Four motivational quotes from Alicia's Dubai talk

“The only thing we need is to know that we have faith. Faith and hope in our own dreams. The belief that, when we keep going we’re going to find our way. That’s all we got.”

“Sometimes we try so hard to keep things inside. We try so hard to pretend it’s not really bothering us. In some ways, that hurts us more. You don’t realise how dishonest you are with yourself sometimes, but I realised that if I spoke it, I could let it go.”

“One good thing is to know you’re not the only one going through it. You’re not the only one trying to find your way, trying to find yourself, trying to find amazing energy, trying to find a light. Show all of yourself. Show every nuance. All of your magic. All of your colours. Be true to that. You can be unafraid.”

“It’s time to stop holding back. It’s time to do it on your terms. It’s time to shine in the most unbelievable way. It’s time to let go of negativity and find your tribe, find those people that lift you up, because everybody else is just in your way.”

Tamkeen's offering
  • Option 1: 70% in year 1, 50% in year 2, 30% in year 3
  • Option 2: 50% across three years
  • Option 3: 30% across five years 
Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere

Director: Scott Cooper

Starring: Jeremy Allen White, Odessa Young, Jeremy Strong

Rating: 4/5

Long read

Mageed Yahia, director of WFP in UAE: Coronavirus knows no borders, and neither should the response

'Ghostbusters: From Beyond'

Director: Jason Reitman

Starring: Paul Rudd, Carrie Coon, Finn Wolfhard, Mckenna Grace

Rating: 2/5

Europa League group stage draw

Group A: Villarreal, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Astana, Slavia Prague.
Group B: Dynamo Kiev, Young Boys, Partizan Belgrade, Skenderbeu.
Group C: Sporting Braga, Ludogorets, Hoffenheim, Istanbul Basaksehir.
Group D: AC Milan, Austria Vienna , Rijeka, AEK Athens.
Group E: Lyon, Everton, Atalanta, Apollon Limassol.
Group F: FC Copenhagen, Lokomotiv Moscow, Sheriff Tiraspol, FC Zlin.
Group G: Vitoria Plzen, Steaua Bucarest, Hapoel Beer-Sheva, FC Lugano.
Group H: Arsenal, BATE Borisov, Cologne, Red Star Belgrade.
Group I: Salzburg, Marseille, Vitoria Guimaraes, Konyaspor.
Group J: Athletic Bilbao, Hertha Berlin, Zorya Luhansk, Ostersund.
Group K: Lazio, Nice, Zulte Waregem, Vitesse Arnhem.
Group L: Zenit St Petersburg, Real Sociedad, Rosenborg, Vardar

Updated: April 23, 2024, 3:05 PM