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UK is failing to meet almost all of its climate action targets

The Committee on Climate Change has warned that the UK failed to meet 15 out of 18 of its targets for tackling emissions between 2013 and 2017

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THE UK is failing to tackle climate change on almost all key measures of success, according to the Committee on Climate Change.

This organisation advises the UK government on how to meet its legally binding target of cutting carbon emissions by 80 per cent by 2050. As schoolchildren took to the streets to protest the UK’s lack of climate action on 15 February, the committee set out a dire picture of the country’s climate policies in a letter to Claire Perry, UK minister for energy and clean growth.

Although the UK did reduce its official emissions by 14 per cent more than the target for the period from 2013 to 2017, it can’t claim credit, says the letter. “The surplus is not due to policy but very largely due to accounting changes in the EU Emissions Trading System and the lasting effects of the recession.” The surplus should therefore not be subtracted from future targets, the committee says.

The letter also warned that, during this time period, the UK has failed to meet 15 out of 18 key indicators for cutting emissions from buildings, transport, agriculture, land use and waste.

For buildings, the country hasn’t met its targets for insulating lofts, cavity walls and solid walls, and for installing heat pumps. It did meet the very modest goal of getting 4 per cent of heat from “low carbon” sources, but only by relying heavily on bioenergy such as wood burning. This is not only highly polluting, some critics say it might actually increase carbon dioxide emissions rather than reduce them.

“The letter paints a stark picture of the lack of progress that’s been made in energy efficiency and heat over the last eight years,” says heat policy expert Richard Lowes at the University of Exeter, UK. “I think it’s quite depressing.”

The UK did manage to meet two targets for cutting emissions from waste. But it met none of its transport targets, with just 48,000 electric cars registered per year – 19 per cent of the 250,000 target. Biofuels accounted for 3 per cent of fuel by volume rather than the 8 per cent target. However, this may be a good thing, given that biofuels are being made out of vegetable oils such as palm oil.

The UK also met none of its targets for reducing emissions from agriculture. And less than 7000 hectares per year were planted with trees, well under the target of 25,000.

Lastly, emissions of fluorinated gases, which are highly potent greenhouse gases, rose instead of declining.

“The politicians are not doing nearly enough, just token gestures,” 16-year-old Raffi Gannon told èƵ at a protest in London last week. “It’s my future, I feel like I should be protesting for it.”

“I’m afraid for my future. It is not sustainable to keep on living the way we are. We’re not going to have anywhere to live,” said 17-year-old Poppy Flack.

Topics: Climate change / Politics