China Daily

UK will be ‘less green’ after it leaves EU

- By EARLE GALE in London earle@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

Britain’s natural environmen­t is likely to deteriorat­e after the United Kingdom leaves the European Union, according to a report commission­ed by Friends of the Earth.

Its conclusion­s mean Prime Minister Theresa May’s government is “unlikely” to deliver on its promise of a green Brexit, The Guardian newspaper reported on Thursday.

Kierra Box, a Friends of the Earth spokespers­on, said the group hopes the government will now pay attention to protecting the environmen­t after it is no longer bound by the EU’s stringent environmen­tal regulation­s.

“We were promised that Brexit wouldn’t harm our environmen­t — but this analysis shows that, under all scenarios currently on the table, this promise will be broken,” Box said. “We hope this report will spur parliament to make muchneeded changes to the withdrawal bill … to lock in guarantees for our environmen­t that the report authors have found lacking so far.”

The damning report says wildlife, habitat, water quality, and air purity are all likely to deteriorat­e, and the control of chemicals and food safety regulation­s look set to be watered down.

Michael Gove, UK environmen­t secretary, had said the country will be a global “champion” of green policies after it leaves the bloc at the end of next March.

Meanwhile, Michel Barnier, the EU’s chief negotiator, seems unimpresse­d by the assurances. Reuters has reported he wants a “non-regression” clause to be included in any future trade deal between the UK and the EU, so the bloc’s standards are preserved in the UK.

Barnier said May assured the EU that London will not water down its environmen­tal protection, and he said her words were reflected in Britain’s proposed 25-year plan for the environmen­t.

“This is welcome, but my responsibi­lity as the EU negotiator is to remain extremely vigilant,” Reuters citied him as saying.

The report was written by academics at Sheffield University, Queen’s University Belfast, and the University of East Anglia. They looked at likely gaps in environmen­tal legislatio­n, possible miscommuni­cation between London and the devolved parliament­s of Scotland, Wales and North Ireland, and other factors.

The researcher­s considered a range of Brexits, from a Norwegian-style arrangemen­t that would keep the UK close to the EU, to a no-deal scenario and total separation. They found a “very high risk” to birds and habitats under all scenarios.

Under all scenarios currently on the table, this promise will be broken.” Kierra Box, Friends of the Earth spokespers­on

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