Daily Mail

PM to cut cash for overseas fossil fuel

- By Xantha Leatham

FUNDING for foreign fossil fuel projects will end ‘as soon as possible’, Boris Johnson will promise today.

The Prime Minister wants to stop promoting new crude oil, natural gas and thermal coal schemes, with ‘very limited exceptions’.

He described the move – designed to support the transition to low- carbon and renewable energy sources – as ‘ambition on a truly grand scale’. It is a significan­t change as in the last four years the Government has supported £21billion of UK oil and gas exports.

Attention will instead be given to supporting green technology, as well as creating new jobs in the UK. The policy is intended to come into force before the UN Climate Change Conference which will be held in Glasgow next year.

The Government has said it will work with areas such as Teesside and Aberdeen to ensure they become global hubs for wind energy and other ‘clean technologi­es of the future’.

Mr Johnson will make the announceme­nt today as the UK co-hosts the Climate Ambition Summit with the UN and France. The meeting will

‘Ambition on a truly grand scale’

bring together 75 world leaders as well as businesses to make new commitment­s to tackle climate change.

Speaking ahead of the summit, Mr Johnson said: ‘Climate change is one of the great global challenges of our age, and it is already costing lives and livelihood­s the world over.

‘Our actions as leaders must be driven not by timidity or caution, but by ambition on a truly grand scale. That is why the UK recently led the way with a bold new commitment to reduce emissions by at least 68 per cent by 2030, and why I’m pleased to say today that the UK will end taxpayer support for fossil fuel projects overseas as soon as possible.’

A £3,300 pay rise for MPs was scrapped yesterday as officials admitted it would ‘not reflect the reality’ the public is facing due to the coronaviru­s crisis. Richard Lloyd, chairman of the Independen­t Parliament­ary Standards Authority, which made the controvers­ial recommenda­tion in October, wrote to MPs to say their salaries would instead remain frozen for the next financial year.

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