The Guardian Australia

UK environmen­t watchdog confronts Thérèse Coffey over missed targets

- Sandra Laville

The head of the independen­t environmen­tal watchdog is holding talks with the environmen­t secretary over delays in meeting key targets to tackle water and air pollution and halt the decline in nature.

Dame Glenys Stacey, the chair of the Office for Environmen­tal Protection (OEP), has told Thérèse Coffey, the new secretary of state for environmen­t, food and rural affairs, that the possibilit­y of taking formal enforcemen­t action against the government over multiple missed targets was being kept under active review. The OEP can launch an investigat­ion and take legal action if it deems it necessary.

Stacey is meeting Coffey after the government missed a key deadline to come up with targets on water quality and halting the decline in nature, which are key planks within its own Environmen­t Act.

Coffey said the targets underpinni­ng the country’s nature recovery would not be released on 31 October as promised but gave no new deadline.

Environmen­tal charities including the RSPB, the Wildlife Trusts and the National Trust have filed a complaint to the OEP and the Department for Environmen­t, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) over the failure to come up with new legally binding targets for air quality, water health, nature and waste management. They also raised a complaint about failures to come up with promised policies to tackle pollution, including a deposit return scheme for plastic bottles first promised by Michael Gove in 2018.

The charities said that multiple missed deadlines suggest delay is at risk of becoming the default culture within Defra.

Ruth Chambers of the Greener UK coalition said: “By missing this deadline the government is underminin­g its own flagship legislatio­n. We urge the new secretary of state to make this an urgent priority and set ambitious targets for restoring our natural environmen­t.”

Stacey’s meeting with Coffey was set up to address strengthen­ing the targets and the delay in their publicatio­n. “The targets proposed earlier this year are welcome in many respects,” she said in a letter to Coffey. “There is room for improvemen­t, however, and a chance, still, to present a suitably ambitious and comprehens­ive suite of targets.”

Her concerns are echoed by environmen­tal groups who want the delay in publicatio­n to be used to bring forward a stronger package of targets before the UN Biodiversi­ty Conference (Cop15) in December.

Stacey warned Coffey that it was imperative the environmen­tal targets are in place by the end of this calendar year at the very latest. “Further delay risks unduly the implementa­tion of important environmen­tal policies so much needed to fulfil government’s commitment­s to environmen­tal protection,” she said.

“This is not a singular incident of a missed statutory deadline. I have set out … details of other environmen­tal law deadlines which appear to have been missed recently … We remain concerned that there is a pattern of missing legislativ­e deadlines.

“It is in this context, and the significan­ce of the failure to comply with landmark domestic legislatio­n, that we will keep our decisions on the use of any formal enforcemen­t powers under active review as you progress your work now.”

 ?? Photograph: Anadolu Agency/ Getty Images ?? Thérèse Coffey said targets underpinni­ng nature recovery would not be released on 31 October aspromised.
Photograph: Anadolu Agency/ Getty Images Thérèse Coffey said targets underpinni­ng nature recovery would not be released on 31 October aspromised.

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