The Government published its ‘Clean Growth Strategy’
in October 2017, setting out how it intended to meet the ‘carbon
budget’ emissions reduction targets under the Climate Change Act.
The Strategy lists four areas where progress is planned:
- ‘Improving Our Homes’;
- ‘Accelerating the Shift to Low Carbon Transport’;
- ‘Delivering Clean, Smart, Flexible Power’; and
- ‘Enhancing the Benefits and Value of Our Natural
Resources’.
The Strategy emphasised the role that innovation can play in
meeting the targets, with £2.5bn allocated for ‘low carbon
innovation’ between 2015 and 2021. It also stressed that as well
as cutting emissions, such innovation can “create jobs and help
companies grow”. A wide range of technologies are being developed
with the hope of contributing to emissions reductions including –
but not limited to – small modular reactors, nuclear fusion,
hydrogen and fuel cells, smart grids, negative emissions
technologies and innovative construction materials or methods.
The Committee on Climate Change has concluded that:
- the next two ‘carbon budget’ targets would be missed;
- in some areas the “policy to deliver [on the reductions
targets] has not yet been worked up”; and
- the Strategy is “generally focused at early-stage innovation
…[which] “must be supported by funding and policies to drive
deployment and learning-by-doing”.
Terms of reference
The Science and Technology Committee is undertaking an inquiry
into the technologies needed to meet Clean Growth emissions
reduction targets, and would welcome written evidence
by Friday 26 October that addresses
the following issues:
- The strategy:
- the relative importance of the four main areas
identified in the Strategy, and whether the Strategy places
the right weight on each of those sectors to deliver
emissions reductions;
- progress on meeting carbon budget targets to date and
areas where more progress is needed going forward;
- the extent to which current and future technologies can
help to meet the carbon budgets; and
- the uncertainty in future technologies’ contribution to
emissions reductions, and how that uncertainty can best be
incorporated into the Government’s carbon budgets.
- How the development and deployment of technology can best be
supported, and the extent to which the Government should support
specific technologies or pursue a ‘technology neutral’ approach;
- The relative priority that should be attached to developing
new technologies compared to deploying existing technologies,
including consideration of the costs and pollution involved in
the decommissioning of technologies or infrastructure;
- Examples of specific technologies whose development and
deployment have been effectively supported so far, as well as
those that show particular promise for meeting the Government’s
carbon emissions targets or supporting the UK’s economy, or which
would benefit from specific Government action, in the future; and
- The role of the Industrial Strategy ‘Clean Growth Grand
Challenge’, and what the Government should do to ensure it
contributes effectively to meeting emissions targets.
Submitting written evidence
Submit written evidence
via our inquiry page.
Each submission should:
a) be in Word format with as little use of logos as
possible.
b) have numbered paragraphs.
c) include a declaration of interests.
Please note that:
- Material already
published elsewhere should not form the basis of a submission,
but may be referred to within a proposed memorandum, in which
case a hard copy of the published work should be included.
- Memoranda submitted
must be kept confidential until published by the Committee,
unless publication by the person or organisation submitting it is
specifically authorised.
- Once submitted,
evidence is the property of the Committee. The Committee
normally, though not always, chooses to make public the written
evidence it receives, by publishing it on the internet (where it
will be searchable), by printing it or by making it available
through the Parliamentary Archives. If there is any information
you believe to be sensitive you should highlight it and
explain what harm you believe would result from its disclosure.
The Committee will take this into account in deciding whether to
publish or further disclose the evidence.
- Select Committees are
unable to investigate individual cases.