The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

UK has responsibi­lity to lead in action to take the tackle crisis: PM

Johnson refuses to answer questions on who will replace sacked clean growth minister Claire O’neill as president of the talks at November UN summit in Glasgow

- PRESS ASSOCIATIO­N

The UK must take the lead in tackling the climate crisis, Boris Johnson said as he launched a crucial summit following an attack by the event’s sacked president.

The prime minister said he wants to see every country following the UK’S lead in setting “credible” targets to reach net-zero emissions at the UN COP26 summit in Glasgow in November.

At a launch event at the Science Museum in London, Mr Johnson refused to answer questions about who will replace former clean growth minister Claire O’neill as president of the talks.

Mr Johnson was joined at the Science Museum by naturalist and broadcaste­r Sir David Attenborou­gh and Giuseppe Conte, prime minister of summit co-hosts Italy.

The PM met local school children before addressing experts, campaigner­s and politician­s, telling them: “We’ve put so much CO2 in the atmosphere collective­ly that the entire planet is swaddled in a tea cosy of the stuff.

“It’s now predicted, unless we take urgent action, to get 3C hotter, and in the hurricanes and the bushfires and melting of the ice caps and the acidificat­ion of the oceans, the evidence is now overwhelmi­ng.

“We know as a country, as a society, as a planet, as a species, we must now act,” Mr Johnson said.

He called for efforts to reverse the “appalling loss of habitats and species” alongside climate change.

The PM said the UK was leading the way by setting a legal goal to reach netzero by 2050, adding: “I think it’s quite proper that we should, we were the first after all, to industrial­ise.

“Look at historic emissions of the UK, we have a responsibi­lity to our planet to lead in this way and to do this.”

As part of the UK’S moves to meet net-zero, the government will consult on bringing forward a planned ban on the sale of new petrol and diesel vehicles from 2040 to 2035 – and earlier if feasible.

The ban will also include hybrid vehicles for the first time.

Motoring and car manufactur­ing groups warned the ban would be extremely challengin­g, but environmen­tal campaigner­s called for the government to go further and move the target to 2030.

Sir David said it was up to the UK to organise the world into action in Glasgow. “That’s why it’s so encouragin­g the present government have declared this year, the year not of talking about it, not of alarming people, not of warning, but of action,” he added.

Ms O’neill had earlier said there is an “extraordin­ary state of stand-off” with the Scottish Government over the summit’s budget which caused Mr Johnson to consider moving the event to England, as well as tensions with First Minister Nicola Sturgeon.

“I had asked if you would consider resetting your relationsh­ip with the first minister – putting aside the devolution battle for the sake of this vastly more important agenda. I understand you declined in salty terms,” the former climate chief said.

Ms Sturgeon wrote to Mr Johnson calling for Scotland’s Cabinet Secretary for the Environmen­t and Climate Change, Roseanna Cunningham, to attend the UK Government’s Cabinet meetings on climate change for COP26.

The first minister said the priority for the COP26 summit is tackling the climate crisis rather than her relationsh­ip with Mr Johnson.

She tweeted yesterday: “To be clear – @scotgov wants #COP26 to be a success & will play our full part in making it so. It’s not about Boris Johnson or me – it is about tackling the climate crisis.”

In the Commons, shadow foreign secretary Emily Thornberry accused the government of not taking a global lead on climate change, signing up to deals committing to new drilling for oil and gas at the Uk-africa trade summit, and refusing to stand up to the “climate denier-in-chief” Donald Trump.

Questions remain over who will take the lead as president of the talks, after Ms O’neill was sacked from the role by the PM’S special adviser, Dominic Cummings, on Friday.

Downing Street tried to avoid being further drawn into the row over the allegation­s made by Ms O’neill, with the prime minister’s official spokesman thanking her for her work.

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