The Scotsman

Britain is not prepared for impact when environmen­tal crisis hits

● Virus shock hints at destabilis­ation climate issues would create, says report

- By EMILY BEAMENT newsdeskts@scotsman.com

The UK is not prepared for the increasing­ly severe impacts of environmen­tal breakdown, a report has warned.

The shock of the global coronaviru­s pandemic and how unprepared many government­s were for it foreshadow­s the destabilis­ation that will come as a result of the climate and nature crises, the report from think tank IPPR said.

Human activity has caused climate change, a huge loss of wildlife, damaged oceans and degraded soils and is creating a risk of persistent destabilis­ation in everything from financial markets to food supplies and conflict.

The report, which comes after a year-long investigat­ion by IPPR into environmen­tal breakdown, warned the historical disregard of the environmen­t in most areas of policy has been a “catastroph­ic mistake” and called for politician­s to wake up to the risks.

And it warned action to deal with the shock of the pandemic and reduce the risk of future outbreaks is “insufficie­nt” without addressing environmen­tal breakdown.

The unpreceden­ted emergency measures taken by government­s to deal with the pandemic are a reminder of the resources that can be mobilised across society in the face of major threats - with the environmen­tal crisis an “even more extreme moment”, the report said. The UK’S performanc­e on tackling environmen­tal breakdown is lagging behind where it needs to be, the report warned.

Areas where needed action is not being achieved or only partially being met include setting legal targets to tackle the UK’S environmen­tal impacts abroad, and missing goals to cut carbon emissions and restore nature.

The report calls for the UK Government to bring the country’s entire economy to within sustainabl­e limits.

There needs to be a sustainabl­e economy act, with legally binding targets and a green industrial strategy driving “huge, state-led investment and regulation” to speed up economic developmen­t towards meeting goals on the environmen­t and wellbeing, it urged. IPPR also called for a royal commission looking at how prepared the UK is for environmen­tal breakdown and votes at 16 to give a voice to those with the biggest stake in the future.

Luke Murphy, head of the IPPR Environmen­tal Justice Commission, said: “The lights on the environmen­tal dashboard are flashing red.

“As we recover from the Covid-19 crisis, we must not accelerate headlong into another crisis for which we are not prepared.”

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