Muscat Daily

UK’S Sunak U-turns on attending UN climate conference in Egypt

-

London, UK - Britain’s new prime minister Rishi Sunak on Wednesday announced he will join the UN climate conference in Egypt after all, having provoked anger for refusing to attend the global event early into his tenure.

Sunak had argued that ‘pressing domestic commitment­s’ would keep him away from COP27 in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-sheikh - after inheriting an economic crisis from predecesso­r Liz Truss.

But that fuelled doubts about Sunak’s interest in the planetary emergency, and critics said the

inexperien­ced leader was passing up an opportunit­y to rub shoulders with the likes of US President Joe Biden and European peers.

“There is no long-term prosperity without action on climate change. There is no energy without investing in renewables,” Sunak wrote on Twitter.

“That is why I will attend @COP27P next week: to deliver on Glasgow’s legacy of building a secure and sustainabl­e future.”

The Scottish city was the venue for COP26 under the leadership of Truss’s predeces

sor Boris Johnson, who made climate change and ambitions to make Britain ‘net zero’ in emissions a signature policy.

Truss cast serious doubt on that commitment with her avowed scepticism about net zero - and blocked King Charles

III from attending COP27.

The new monarch is a lifelong campaigner for the environmen­t, and Sunak’s change of heart could revive debate about whether Britain should allow him to press the climate case in Egypt. The monarch is due to hold a pre-cop reception at

Buckingham Palace on Friday for business leaders, campaigner­s and politician­s, including US climate change envoy John Kerry.

Sunak’s about-face came after Johnson, in a Sky News interview broadcast on Tuesday, confirmed he was heading to COP27 at Egypt’s invitation, potentiall­y upstaging Sunak.

‘Phoney’

“If the UK wants to be seen as a global leader, it needs to lead. It is only right that the prime minister attends the upcoming COP27,” Oxfam GB climate lead Tracy Carty said after Sunak’s U-turn.

“It is critical that the UK steps up, not only for the benefit of countries bearing the brunt of climate change, but also for its own credibilit­y on the global stage,” she said.

During his tenure, Johnson championed renewable energy as the key to a greener UK economy and its quest for net-zero carbon emissions by 2050.

But on taking office, Sunak demoted COP26 president Alok Sharma from his cabinet.

Sharma said he was ‘ delighted’ at Sunak’s change of mind, but Ed Miliband of the opposition Labour party accused the new leader of being a ‘phoney’.

“The Prime Minister has been shamed into going to COP27 by the torrent of disbelief that he would fail to turn up,” Miliband, Labour’s climate spokesman, tweeted. “He is going to avoid embarrassm­ent not to provide leadership.”

The Green Party’s only MP in the UK parliament, Caroline Lucas, welcomed Sunak’s announceme­nt. “But what an em

barrassing mis-step on the world stage,” she tweeted. “Let this be a lesson to him - climate leadership matters.

“Now he urgently needs to increase UK ambition on emission reduction targets & pay what we owe to global climate funds.”

Britain drew criticism this week after it emerged that it has failed to make some Us$300mn

in promised payments to internatio­nal climate finance bodies.

There is no prosperity without action on climate change. There is no energy without investing in renewables Rishi sunak

 ?? (AFP) ?? Britain’s PM Rishi Sunak attending the weekly session of Prime Minister’s Questions in the House of Commons in London on Wednesday
(AFP) Britain’s PM Rishi Sunak attending the weekly session of Prime Minister’s Questions in the House of Commons in London on Wednesday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman