PMs speech at COP 26 launch
Good morning everybody, Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte, Sir
David, Ladies and Gentlemen I am thrilled to
welcome you all to the launch of what I hope will be a defining
year of action for our country, and indeed for our planet, on
tackling climate change but also on protecting the natural world
now when I used to come in a long time ago as a kid,
as I’m sure all of us have done, there used to be a very curious
exhibit on the...Request free trial
Good morning everybody, Prime Minister
Giuseppe Conte, Sir David, Ladies and Gentlemen
I am thrilled to welcome you all
to the launch of what I hope will be a defining year of action
for our country, and indeed for our planet, on tackling climate
change but also on protecting the natural world
now when I used to come in a long time
ago as a kid, as I’m sure all of us have done, there used to be a
very curious exhibit on the way in – which unfortunately doesn’t
seem to be there – it’s been removed, I think, for repair in
Yorkshire or somewhere
it is a very curious carriage, and it looks
like the sort of thing that could have carried Madame Bovary
around Paris
except it wasn’t pulled by horses this
carriage - can you see the thing in your mind -
it is an electric taxi - the world’s first -
and it was invented by an unsung genius called Walter Bersey in
1897
And Walter Bersey like many of us in
this room was a total nut for electric vehicles
he built an electric bus that went 4000
miles, this is around 1895
he built a series of electric
vans
and he built a total of 75 of these taxis, and
they were popular and commodious, velvet lined and
effective
because they could turn on a dime
they obeyed all the TFL scriptures, and they could mount Savoy
hill, which was the steepest in central London
But the tragedy for Bersey, and the
tragedy for humanity
was that he allowed himself to be daunted in
what he was trying to do
because he was in the end defeated by the
sceptics
and those who thought that his efforts were
technologically impossible
First he was fined for going too fast - his
vehicles could get up to 12 mph - and he was fined for going down
parliament street without a chap in front carrying a red flag,
which you had to have in those days
and he did admittedly, as time
went on, experience some minor technological issues
the beautiful glass batteries that
he had that weighed only two tonnes, were not always reliable,
the tyres gave way under the strain
and eventually his electric taxis - so lovely
and so convenient - were subject to a growing hostile whispering
campaign by those who were wedded to the old technology, the
ostlers and the coachmen and everyone else in involved in horse
drawn vehicles
and in the end, and the end came pretty soon
for Bersey, he gave up,
and he concluded that it was
impossible
He wound up his company, surrendered to the
internal combustion engine in 1899
and that was the last electric taxi on the
streets of London for more than a century, 110 years in
fact,
until a certain visionary mayor decided to
launch a campaign in 2008, and there they are, you can see them
all over the streets, or hybrids anyway,
and as you look at that Bersey taxi it is
impossible not to feel the pathos
It’s as though humanity came 110
years ago - more than that 120 years ago - to a fork
in the road - and took the wrong way
And look at what happened in the century since
Bersey despaired
We have had a catastrophic period in which the
global addiction to hydrocarbons has got totally out of
control
We’ve poured so much CO2 into the atmosphere
collectively that our entire planet is swaddled in a great tea
cosy of the stuff
CO2 levels today are at a level not seen
since 3 million years ago when there were trees on
Antarctica,
Since Bersey despaired of his electric taxi,
the temperature of the planet has gone up by one degree, and it
is now predicted, unless we take urgent action, to get three
degrees hotter
And in the hurricanes and the bushfires and
the melting of the ice caps, and the acidification of the oceans,
the evidence is now overwhelming and it is taking its toll, this
phenomenon of global warming is taking its toll on the most
vulnerable populations around the planet, which is why the UK has
now committed to £11.6bn in tackling global climate change and in
financing climate initiatives around the world
And we know, everyone – and it’s fantastic to
see so many people here this morning – because I think we all
know that as a country and as a society, as a planet, as a
species, we must now act
and we in the UK, will do everything we
can to support our Chinese friends in their biodiversity COP
which is also coming up in the Autumn
and I think it’s very important there should
be a link between the two and there should be a clear sharing of
the agenda,
because we must reverse the appalling loss of
habitats and species
It’s only by repairing the damage to the
natural world
and restoring the balance between humanity and
nature - which is now so grotesquely out of kilter
that we can address the problem of climate
change
and of course at the same time we have to deal
with our CO2 emissions
and that is why the UK is calling for us to
get to net zero as soon as possible,
for every county to announce credible targets
to get there, what’s we want from Glasgow
and that is why we are pledged here in the UK
to deliver net zero by 2050
and we’re the first major economy to make
that commitment, I think it’s the right thing to do,
I think it’s quite proper that should, we were
the first after all, to industrialise. Look at historic emissions
of the UK
we have a responsibility to our planet to lead
in this way and to do this,
and of course there are people in this country
– not necessarily in the Treasury - and people around the world
who may say,
of course it’s expensive, of course it’s
difficult, it will require thought and change and action, people
will say it’s impossible and it can’t be done,
and my message to you all this morning
is that they are wrong
and if you look at what this country has
done, since 1990 - cutting CO2 by 42 per cent and at the same
time seeing a 73% increase in the GDP of this country
We have done that through sheer
determination and technological optimism
in 1990 70 per cent of the power of this
country came from coal
it’s now down to 3 per cent - and we want to
get it to zero by 2024
and that is because, we’re able to do
that, because this county is leading a revolution in renewable
energy and by the way, it’s driving our national agenda of
uniting and levelling up our country,
because it’s parts of the North and the North
East of the country in particular, that are showing the lead in
renewable energy
the world’s biggest offshore wind
turbines are built beside the Humber,
the carbon capture storage is being
pioneered on the banks of the Tees.
one in five electric vehicles sold in
Europe is built on the banks of where - the Wear. And there you
go.
So I say to all those who doubted Walter
Bersey, eat your heart out, because his basic idea has triumphed,
hasn’t it?
And the thing that they thought to be
impossible has actually proved to be the solution,
And even the aviation industry is
now committing to be carbon neutral by 2050
well we are on the verge, I’m assured, within
a couple of years of having viable electric passenger
aircraft
And we will get there, we
will get there
And that is the lesson of that electric taxi
that I wanted to look at and speculate about
mournfully.
it is not that Walter Bersey was wrong,
he wasn’t wrong
he was wrong to doubt himself
and the sceptics are wrong to doubt the
promethean genius of humanity to solve these problems
So we will crack it and I hope that we
can as a planet and as a community of nations get to net zero, as
I say, within decades
We’re going to do it by 2050, we’re setting
the pace, I hope everybody will come with us
and let’s work with Giuseppe, let’s work with
our Italian friends to make COP 26 a great success, a fantastic
success for our country and for our planet
and let’s make this year the moment when we
come together with the courage and the technological ambition to
solve man-made climate change and to choose a cleaner and greener
future for all our children and grandchildren.
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