COP26 luxury cars for world leaders could be powered by vegetable oil
fleet of luxury electric cars carrying world leaders to the COP26 conference could be recharged using cooking oilpowered generators because of a lack of charging points.
The UK Government has confirmed the plan despite insisting that “sustainability will be at the core of Cop26”.
The fleet of some 240 Jaguar Land Rover vehicles including its I-pace SUVS will be provided to ferry the 120 visiting heads of state and their entourages between their hotels and the SEC venue in Glasgow next month.
A COP26 spokesperson said where generators were required for charging the vehicles, they would run on hydrogenated vegetable oil – recycled cooking oil – derived from waste products.
The number of generators being provided and their locations have still to be finalised, but there is specua lation they could include the Gleneagles Hotel, 47 miles from Glasgow.
The spokesperson said: "World leaders will be provided with EVS for the duration of their stay.
"The UK will be offsetting all carbon emissions associated with running the event.
“We are aiming to achieve ISO 20121 certification, which will address all aspects of sustainability of the event including carbon, waste management and supply chain management. We are working with sustainability consultants on this effort.”
The experimental use of hydrogenated vegetable oil to power generators during the building of the 21 Moorfields office development in the City of London two years ago saved 1 tonne of carbon for every 350 litres of fuel used but also produced 71 per cent of the nitrogen oxide emissions and 23 per cent of the airborne particulates of diesel.
Announcing the Jaguar
SUVS’ COP26 role last month, the UK Government said: “The vehicles have all been sourced from existing fleets in the UK, helping ensure the carbon footprint remains low.”
Jaguar Land Rover said the vehicles, which cost upwards of £62,245, could travel 292 miles on a single charge.
COP26 president-designate Alok Sharma said the cars demonstrated the carmaker’s “climate leadership in their field”.
Jaguar Land Rover chief executive Thierry Bolloré said it was delighted to “deliver zero-emission transport at the summit”.
However, sustainable transport campaigners were aghast at the lack of planning to ensure enough electric chargers were available.
They said the heads of state should instead make use of the free electric shuttle bus service for COP26 delegates between Glasgow city centre and the SEC.
Transform Scotland director Colin Howden said: “It’s disgraceful that the UK Government is scrambling to put in chip-fat powered generators at the very last minute.
"Governments are great at pretending to take action on sustainable transport but this reveals the complete lack of preparedness for the wholesale switch away from fossil fuel cars that we require.
“Of course, what we do have in Glasgow is a fleet of new electric buses.
"So perhaps this should be used as an opportunity to get some of these world leaders out of their cars and on to buses."
A spokesperson for the Gleneagles Hotel said: “No charging generators have been set up at Gleneagles and we’re not aware of the details of those plans.”
The Queen and senior members of the Royal Family will attend a series of events during the United Nations Climate Change conference.
However, the Vatican has confirmed that Pope Francis will not travel to Glasgow for COP26.
During the event the Queen, the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall, and the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge will carry out Royal engagements from November 1 to November 5.
Prince Charles is a longstanding environmental campaigner and has been joined in recent years by his son William, who has established the Earthshot Prize – an award recognising innovations that “repair” the planet.
Winners of the award, a 10-year project with a total prize fund of £50 million, will be announced later this month.
It had previously been claimed that the 84-year-old Pope would attend the climate conference.
However, the Vatican has announced its delegation would be led by Cardinal Parolin, its secretary of state.
Pope Francis was expected to be among around 120 world leaders due to attend the event.
Dignitaries will also be based in Edinburgh for the climate conference.
A papal spokesman said: "Responding to journalists' questions about the Holy See's participation in the session of COP26, scheduled to take place in Glasgow from October 31 to November 12, the delegation will be led by his eminence Pietro Parolin, secretary of state.”
Pope Francis met other religious leaders and scientists from around the world in the Vatican on Monday to take a common stand for the protection of the environment.
During the Faith and Science: Towards COP26 meeting, the Pope noted that COP26 “represents an urgent summons to provide effective responses to the unprecedented ecological crisis and the crisis of values that we are presently experiencing, and in this way to offer concrete hope to future generations”.