The Scotsman

Scotland set to fall short of green targets

◆ Dr Richard Dixon is dismayed as the Climate Change Committee tells Scottish Government that it hasn’t done enough

- Dr Richard Dixon is an environmen­tal campaigner and consultant

Scottish Government has to produce a new plan on meeting climate targets by November, but their scientific advisors have told them that Scotland’s 2030 target is now almost impossible to meet.

The 2019 Climate Act set three goals. By 2030, we were supposed to have reduced our emissions by 75 per cent compared to those in 1990. There is also a 2040 target and then, of course, the target of reaching net-zero emissions by 2045.

When these targets were agreed with cross-party support four-and-a-half years ago, they were based not on what was easily achievable, but on what the world needed to stay below the temperatur­e goals in the 2015 Paris Agreement.

Delivering on these three targets would be Scotland’s fair share of keeping the world below a 2C temperatur­e rise, with an attempt to stay close to only 1.5C

Since the targets were set, the global climate emergency has accelerate­d. Internatio­nal climate scientists say that impacts are coming earlier and more strongly than previously predicted. In the 31 years between 1990 and 2021, Scotland’s total emissions fell by 50 per cent. The 2030 target means that emissions must be halved again by that year.

These targets were widely welcomed, and no doubt influenced other countries as they set their own and made pledges about climate action, but now the Scottish Government’s official advisor, the Climate Change Committee, has said that not enough has been done.

There has been impressive progress in the electricit­y and waste sectors, but little progress in transport – now the largest sector for emissions – or in agricultur­e, industry, or land use, so it’s now almost impossible to meet the 2030 target.

There are promising new policies for heat in buildings, and in transport. There was the opportunit­y in the new agricultur­e bill to make sure that the £600 million a year that the public purse gives to farmers could make a big dent in emissions from the sector, but the current proposals are that 70 per cent of the money will still be based on supporting production with only weak conditions relating to climate change. Some policies are also heading firmly in the wrong direction, such as considerin­g building a new gas-fired power station at Peterhead, supporting wasteful hydrogen heating for homes, and chasing the myth of widespread carbon capture and storage.

Meanwhile, the UK Government is determined to maximise oil and gas extraction from the North Sea, and the SNP are failing to give clear messages on this – scared of losing votes in the North East.

The Scottish Government is considerin­g its options. It could reduce the 2030 target. It could change the legal requiremen­t for a new climate plan. It doesn’t have long if it wants to make changes to the law on climate targets, plans and reporting.

Targets are important. They drive action. Plans are important. They show us if we are on a credible pathway to meet our targets. But the key thing now is action – to do everything we can to reduce emissions.

As an open letter to the First Minister from 63 civil society organisati­ons said last week, “every part of the government must shift onto an emergency footing” and “redouble efforts to fairly reduce emissions”.

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