The Scotsman

Government needs to be bold on climate change as time runs short

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Next month the Scottish Government will publish an update to its Climate Change Plan.

The impor tance of this cannot be overstated as this is the plan that lays out S cotland’s path to net-zero emissions, and the actions we will take to meet the targets in the Climate Change

Act. S cotland’s new, tougher targets, set in response to the landmark Paris Climate Agree - ment, mean the plan needs to be updated with new actions.

There’s no doubt much of the focus of this year has rightly been on tackling the Covid-19 pandemic, but the climate and nature emergencie­s have not gone away and bold new initiative­s are needed if we’re to meet our net-zero target and reap the economic, environmen­tal and social rewards of a green recover y.

The S cottish Government has upped its game since the First Minister declared a climate emergency in 2019, with funding to restore our carbon-rich habitats and to cut emissions from our homes and buildings the most significan­t amongst a number of new initiative­s. The Government’s approach still falls shor t of what is needed and its official advisor, the Climate Change Committee, said last month that the upcoming plan “should set the foundation­s for a new era of climate change action in S cotland”.

With all eyes on Glasgow in 2021 as the next UN Climate Conference, Cop26, comes to town, it’s all the more crucial that S cotland gets this right. A strong Climate Change Plan is how we do that.

The update to S cotland’s plan follows last week’s announceme­nt of Prime Minister B oris Johnson’s ten-point plan for climate change. This was badly needed, with the UK Government arguably playing catch up after recent action nor th of the border.

Johnson’s plan has narrowed S cotland’s climate lead, by bringing for ward to 2030 the end date for sales of new petrol and diesel vehicles, matching S cotland’s ambitions for electric heat pump deployment and boosting funding to clean up heavy industr y. But the actions of the government­s nor th and south of the border remain far behind what we need to get to zero emissions.

S o, what does the S cottish Government need to do to regain the initiative and show the world how climate action should be done? WWF has identified a toolkit of measures that could be implemente­d as par t of the Climate Change Plan, that would cut emissions and boost the economy as the fur ther impacts of Covid-19 are felt.

S cotland’s agricultur­e sector is about to embark on a period of significan­t change as we leave the EU’S system of rural subsidies, providing an oppor tunit y to reset and encourage more climate

and nature -friendly practices.

The sector’s climate emissions are not falling, and it urgently needs clarit y on how those who receive public funding will be rewarded for delivering public goods like flood protection, better soil, nature restoratio­n and carbon sequestrat­ion.

More action is also needed to complement recent S cottish Government moves to accelerate the green retrofit of our homes and buildings. This will get much more public cash over the next five years, but we need a bold plan of action, with a legally binding target to bring all homes to a ‘C’ energ y performanc­e rating by 2030 and at least £500m invested in low- carbon heat networks over the next five years.

Trees can lock away carbon and can create new spaces for nature, par ticularly if we plant native species. Recent increases to planting targets are welcome, but clarit y is needed on the pro - por tion that comprise of native species – ideally half, to ensure maximum carbon and biodiversi­t y gain. We also need to reduce activities that damage our pre - cious carbon and nature -rich peatlands

– this means an end to commercial extraction and the regulation of muirburn.

Covid-19 has turned the transpor t sector upside down, highlighti­ng both the emissions, noise and air pollution impacts of traffic congestion, but also creating challenges, par ticularly for public transpor t.

The UK Government’s 2030 announceme­nt is a clear vote of confidence in the transition to electric vehicles, whose costs are expected to fall rapidly over the coming years.

But government action is still needed to kickstar t the change, however, and we’d like to see the S cottish Government commit to creating zero - emission zones in our busiest cit y and town centres by 2030, to send a strong signal to vehicle owners alongside the incentives that are already available.

These actions can boost the economy at a vital time, sowing the seeds for a green recover y. A programme to retrofit S cotland’s homes could generate 6,000 jobs at the peak, alongside the thousands of constructi­on jobs suppor ted by an ambitious heat net work deliver y programme. Reforms to rural subsidies will require hundreds of new farm advisors across the countr y and several thousand jobs could be created in rural areas through native tree planting schemes.

This is S cotland’s contributi­on to keep - ing global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, a vital goal if we are to play our fair par t. The world has already warmed by one degree, and 1.5C will be exceeded this decade without greater urgency and action.

Earlier this year, polling carried out on behalf of WWF S cotland showed almost three - quar ters of those asked believed the S cottish Government should treat the climate and nature emergencie­s with the same urgency as the current Covid-19 response.

This should give ministers the confidence to take the bold action needed. We don’t have the luxur y of time.

Fabrice Leveque is head of policy at WWF Scotland

With all eyes on

Glasgow in 2021 it’s vital that Scotland gets this right, says Fabrice

Leveque

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 ??  ?? 0 Covid-19 has highlighte­d the emissions, noise and air pollution impacts of congestion, says Fabrice Leveque
0 Covid-19 has highlighte­d the emissions, noise and air pollution impacts of congestion, says Fabrice Leveque

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