The Guardian (USA)

UK must become global leader in tackling climate crisis, says CBI

- Rupert Jones

Britain needs to step up and become a global leader in climate action, creating a number of green jobs and boosting productivi­ty to help the economy recover from the coronaviru­s pandemic, the CBI will say on Monday.

Launching the organisati­on’s “green recovery roadmap”, the CBI’s directorge­neral, Carolyn Fairbairn, will call on the government to take ambitious steps nationally and use the rest of this year to reignite global efforts to achieve net zero carbon emissions by 2050.

Its recommenda­tions to the government include creating jobs and energy savings by retrofitti­ng homes and buildings to be more energy-efficient, pumping money into the developmen­t of sustainabl­e aviation fuels, and kickstarti­ng the creation of a hydrogen economy in the UK as part of efforts to find new, cleaner ways to heat the UK’s homes and businesses.

In the run-up to the autumn budget a growing number of organisati­ons are putting forward their demands and wishlists aimed at stimulatin­g job creation, supporting millions of households at risk of unemployme­nt or financial difficulty and tackling the climate emergency.

Fairbairn is expected to say that this feels like a time of fiercely competing goals, with the world facing two seemingly separate yet fundamenta­l problems: Covid-19 – the biggest health crisis in living memory – and climate change, the defining challenge of the modern era.

“But they are not separate – the response to one affects success on the other. And the defining question is: how does the UK use this moment to rebuild our economy and the greener and stronger world we want to return to?” she will say.

The CBI roadmap recommenda­tions to the government include publishing the energy white paper and national infrastruc­ture strategy this autumn to unlock business investment. Both have been delayed.

With Britain having set a legally binding target to create a carbon-neutral economy by cutting emissions to net zero by 2050, campaigner­s say this will require a huge increase in lowcarbon generation to help meet the UK’s rising need for clean electricit­y for transport and heating. However, green organisati­ons have expressed concern about a lack of progress, while the energy industry has been urging ministers to publish the energy white paper so it can see the government’s action plan.

Meanwhile, the national infrastruc­ture strategy will allocate the £640bn of capital investment for roads, railways, internet, schools, hospitals and other projects that was outlined in the budget in March.

The CBI is calling on the government to use the upcoming autumn budget to prioritise public spending on low-carbon projects and “gamechangi­ng” technologi­es.

The CBI’s green recovery roadmapout­lines a number of priorities designed to reignite business investment and create green jobs.

These include speeding upthe delivery of electric vehicle-charging networks, alongside government funding for a UK-based gigafactor­y to make batteries for electric cars. It emerged over the summer that a startup, Britishvol­t, plans to build Britain’s first battery “gigaplant” at a site in south Wales.

The CBI wants to see the creation of an “office for sustainabl­e aviation fuels”to secure the developmen­t of low-carbon alternativ­es and commit £500m of matched public-private funding – £1bn in total – to support the UK’s first commercial sustainabl­e fuel plant.

The business organisati­on also proposes that the government spends at least £1bn on funding hydrogen testing programmes. According to the National Grid, hydrogen has the potential to be a lower-carbon, cleaner alternativ­e to methane gas “but we still need to do further research and testing to understand how it could work within the current energy system”.

Another recommenda­tion is for the UK to become a world leader in socalled carbon capture, utilisatio­n and storage (CCUS) technology, which involves capturing the carbon dioxide generated by large-scale energy-intensive industries such as cement and steel production, thereby preventing it from entering the atmosphere and contributi­ng to climate change.

 ??  ?? Carolyn Fairbairn, the director-general of the CBI, is launching its ‘green recovery roadmap’. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA
Carolyn Fairbairn, the director-general of the CBI, is launching its ‘green recovery roadmap’. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA

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