The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Leaders warned history – not voters –will judge them

Scotland started the industrial revolution. We need to start another

- BY DOMINIC HINDE ENVIRONMEN­TAL JOURNALIST

With the Holyrood election a few days away, it is easy to forget there will be an even more important event taking place in Scotland later this year.

Once the dust has settled and questions about what kind of government we will have for the next five years are answered, attention will turn to the landmark United Nations conference on climate change still planned for Glasgow in November. The Scottish election will determine the future of the 5.4 million people who live here but what is agreed between world leaders on the banks of the Clyde will go a long way to deciding the futures of the 7.9 billion people alive on the Earth today.

This may sound melodramat­ic but success in Glasgow is critical because each year we avoid cutting emissions adds to the carbon already in the atmosphere and risks passing what are known as climate “tipping points”.

Depending on what we do next, global average temperatur­es could rise from as little as 1.5˚C, which the majority of scientists consider to be safe levels, to as much as 5˚C or more.

Anything above 2˚C means severe climate disruption for the world economy easily on par with what we have experience­d in the Covid-19 pandemic. Higher still and it is estimated that significan­t parts of the globe will be unable to sustain life as normal as we move through the century.

Government­s have already made some commitment­s to reducing carbon emissions and, on the present trajectory, we are on track for between 2.5 and three degrees of warming. This is still enough to have severe implicatio­ns for countries around the world, including Scotland. Even at current warming of about one degree above pre-industrial levels, Scotland is beginning to experience climate shocks such as the freak rainstorms that led to the destructio­n of parts of the EdinburghG­lasgow and AberdeenDu­ndee rail lines last year, or the heavy snowfalls caused by fluctuatio­ns in the Arctic that hit Scotland this February and March. These kinds of events will only become more regular in the coming decades.

Scotland is a fitting backdrop for the UN meeting because the nation has some of the best preconditi­ons on Earth for becoming carbonneut­ral; plentiful wind and water, heavy engineerin­g skills and relative wealth. When imagining what a climatefri­endly future might look like,

Scotland has the potential to be a template. We produce most of our electricit­y from renewables after an explosion in wind power over the past decade and are set to be a net exporter of renewable energy in the near future. We can also manufactur­e climate-friendly hydrogen fuel from wind that can power trains and ships.

Look deeper, however, and it is clear Scotland still has a long way to go. Decades

of road-building mean that many journeys in Scotland are still faster and cheaper by car than by public transport. Buses can remain inconvenie­nt and expensive, and cycling is still a minority pursuit. Since 2008 the number of vehicles registered in Scotland has actually increased by more than 10%. Emissions from cars, road freight and aviation collective­ly have all gone up, according to official

figures. All the renewable energy being generated is not reaching our homes or changing the way we move around, meaning Scotland is still a significan­t source of carbon emissions, even while we have renewable electricit­y to spare.

What this means for the average Scot is obvious: We need to change the way we live and move, how we heat our homes, and how we manage our energy consumptio­n.

There is no ambiguity about the science but politicall­y it is a hard sell. The five main Holyrood parties are making different offers to voters, mixing uncomforta­ble truths with promises of business as usual.

All the parties are bound by the Scottish Parliament’s decision to pass binding targets as part of the Scottish Climate Change Act, which demands a 75% cut in emissions by 2030. So far the Scottish Government has repeatedly failed to meet those targets. Scotland is also in a quandary because of its reliance on the oil industry. Climate models show we can not burn all of Scotland’s oil reserves and stay under the crucial twodegree target globally.

The SNP has been keen to stress its green credential­s with the world’s eyes on Glasgow but has made more noise about recovery from Covid and an independen­ce referendum than the climate. This is partly because the economy and recovery are higher on the list of priorities for voters but also due to the party’s complex relationsh­ip with the oil industry.

Nicola Sturgeon’s party is less enthusiast­ic about oil and gas than has previously been the case, and there is a commitment to use oil and gas revenues in an independen­t Scotland to fund decarbonis­ation and guarantee the longterm economic future of the north-east. Gone, too, is the enthusiasm for controvers­ial fracking for shale oil on land yet the party still maintains that fossil fuels are “an important part of the energy mix”.

As the biggest party, it is perhaps no surprise the SNP wants to be all things to all people, promising decarbonis­ation and social justice on the one hand whilst not frightenin­g off their supporters in the north-east who are reliant on oil. This means a lot of cans have been kicked down the road.

What the SNP is offering on climate change is essentiall­y more of the same. There will be further expansion of renewable energy, broader commitment­s to encouragin­g electric vehicles, and a home decarbonis­ation programme to help people dump their gas boilers and oil heaters for electric. The details, however, are vague and the message is one of evolution, not revolution.

The Scottish Conservati­ves have moved away from the green branding that was so prominent under David Cameron and Ruth Davidson but the Tory manifesto contains important commitment­s to emissions reduction. The party is committed to using Scotland’s forests and peatlands as a carbon sink, but the Tories are still opposed to land reform and the breaking up of large sporting estates that would allow this kind of restoratio­n.

They are also bullish on oil, saying they “believe that North Sea oil and gas has a long future of many decades ahead, with petrochemi­cals continuing to be used in the plastics, cosmetics and pharmaceut­icals we use every day”.

The way statistics are assembled means Scotland’s oil and gas is not included in its climate calculatio­ns because it is burned elsewhere. Although the Tories are correct in saying some North Sea oil is used for plastics and medicines, a significan­t chunk of it still makes it into the world’s cars, trucks and heating systems.

The party is also in favour of expanding the M8 motorway to three lanes all the way from Edinburgh to Glasgow, despite suggestion­s that this will merely lead to further

congestion and increased emissions. Elsewhere, there are some warm words on farming and sustainabi­lity but Scottish Conservati­ve leader Douglas Ross is yet to fully explain how his sums add up, especially as he has also promised tax cuts for higher earners, which would reduce the amount of money available to invest across the board.

Labour is trying to play down the constituti­onal question in favour of its bread-and-butter issues and has put climate, economic recovery and social justice at the heart of its manifesto pledges. Anas Sarwar has declared climate recovery a “national mission” to help Scotland reach net-zero emissions in 25 years. Labour also says that it wants to use the climate talks to make Glasgow synonymous with bold and ambitious action to tackle the climate emergency.

Part of this is a green jobs recovery plan and commitment­s to create a publicly owned energy provider that can reduce costs to the average household, tackle fuel poverty and put profits back into sustainabl­e energy. Labour may be a long way from power, but it seems intent on providing robust opposition to the SNP on climate change. If Anas Sarwar has a good election then the Scottish Government will find itself under pressure on its climate commitment­s from both Labour and the Scottish Greens.

Unsurprisi­ngly, the Greens have gone hard on climate change in this election. They see an appetite from young people, in particular for more radical action.

The Greens – whose co-convener Lorna Slater is a renewables engineer – are pushing what they call a Green New Deal. This means not just cutting emissions but using carbon reduction and green economic levers to rebuild the economy after Covid and pull people out of poverty.

By far the most radical of all the manifestos, this is tied to other measures such as land reform and increased taxes on polluters. As co-leader Patrick Harvie said last week, the Greens want to use climate investment­s and Covid recovery to create a significan­tly different society. They also want to spend £22bn over the next 20 years on rail alone and say their vision is the only one capable of securing the 75% reduction by 2030 mandated by the Scottish Climate Change Act.

The Liberal Democrats were once the default choice for green-minded voters and the party’s manifesto contains some interestin­g promises, from home heating grants to grass roofs. The party has come out in opposition to low-traffic neighbourh­oods that encourage walking and improve safety for children and the elderly but, like the Greens, they want to introduce a levy on frequent flyers, who are some of the highest carbon emitters in the country.

Whatever the result this week, climate change is not going away. For two weeks in November the world will be watching Scotland, a country that helped kick-start the industrial revolution and has a love affair with fossil fuels. All the parties must now answer the question of how Scotland can kick-start a green revolution instead, and make Glasgow a turning point for all of us.

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 ??  ?? The words used by the main party leaders during the Channel 4 debate on Tuesday – the most used are biggest – reveal climate change was barely mentioned with only Patrick Harvie, co-leader of the Greens, speaking about the issue, for two minutes and a few seconds of the 37-minute debate
The words used by the main party leaders during the Channel 4 debate on Tuesday – the most used are biggest – reveal climate change was barely mentioned with only Patrick Harvie, co-leader of the Greens, speaking about the issue, for two minutes and a few seconds of the 37-minute debate

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