CCC writes to Prime Minister to set out six principles for a resilient recovery from COVID-19
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In letters to the Prime Minister and First Ministers in Scotland,
Wales and Northern Ireland, the Committee on Climate Change
(CCC) sets out six key principles to rebuild the nation
following the COVID-19 pandemic whilst delivering a stronger,
cleaner and more resilient economy. Reducing greenhouse gas
emissions and adapting to climate change is integral to the UK’s
recovery package, the Committee says. Immediate steps are needed to
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In letters to the Prime Minister and First Ministers in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, the Committee on Climate Change (CCC) sets out six key principles to rebuild the nation following the COVID-19 pandemic whilst delivering a stronger, cleaner and more resilient economy. Reducing greenhouse gas emissions and adapting to climate change is integral to the UK’s recovery package, the Committee says. Immediate steps are needed to support reskilling, retraining and research; to build a climate-resilient economy; to scale up housing retrofits and build new homes that are fit for the future; to invest in low-carbon, resilient infrastructure such as improved broadband instead of new roads; to make it easy for people to work remotely, walk and cycle and to expand tree planting, peatland restoration, green spaces and green infrastructure. CCC Chairman, Lord Deben, said: “The COVID-19 crisis has shown the importance of planning well for the risks the country faces. Recovery means investing in new jobs, cleaner air and improved health. The actions needed to tackle climate change are central to rebuilding our economy. The Government must prioritise actions that reduce climate risks and avoid measures that lock-in higher emissions.” Chair of the CCC’s Adaptation Committee, Baroness Brown of Cambridge, said: “This pandemic has shown that global risks need global solutions. As President of next year’s pivotal COP26 climate summit, the UK now finds itself in a unique position to ramp-up climate action at home and supercharge the international response to climate change abroad. The risks we face as a globalised society are now in sharp focus – for their part, UK leaders must act decisively on a climate resilient recovery, and do so together.” Governments in all UK nations should prioritise actions to recover from the pandemic based on six resilience principles. These are:
The Committee’s letter details the steps that Governments can take as a priority, emerging from these six overarching principles.
Notes to editors 1. The Committee on Climate Change (CCC) is the independent adviser to the UK Government and Governments in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland on reducing emissions and preparing for climate change. Find out more about our work: www.theccc.org.uk / @theCCCuk 2. The letter to Ministers is embargoed until 00:01 on Wednesday 6 May 2020. At that time, it will be available at this link: https://www.theccc.org.uk/publications/ 3. To arrange an interview with CCC Chairman, Lord Deben, Chair of the CCC’s Adaptation Committee, Baroness Brown, or CCC Chief Executive, Chris Stark, contact the CCC’s Communications Team, Jo Barrett (07940 703911) jo.barrett@theccc.org.uk or Tom Dooks (07766 366577) tom.dooks@theccc.org.uk 4. The CCC will publish its annual Progress Report to Parliament on 25 June 2020. Alongside this statutory assessment of progress in reducing UK emissions, the Committee will expand on its advice to Government on delivering a resilient recovery from COVID-19. 5. The CCC is due to publish its statutory Sixth Carbon Budget (2033-2037) advice to Government on 9 December 2020 and new advice on Scottish and Welsh emissions targets in December 2020. The Committee’s advice will reflect new circumstances following the COVID-19 pandemic. 6. The Third Climate Change Risk Assessment evidence report – the latest comprehensive assessment of risks and opportunities facing the UK from climate change, which the CCC is coordinating – is due to be published in summer 2021. The publication date is being kept under review. |
