Prime Minister Boris Johnson's piece in the Financial
Times.
Slowly but surely humanity is taking the upper hand in the fight
against the virus. We have not won yet. There are still hard
weeks and months to come. But with better drugs, testing and a
range of vaccines, we know in our hearts that next year we will
succeed.
We will use science to rout the virus, and we must use the same
extraordinary powers of invention to repair the economic damage
from Covid-19, and to build back better.
Now is the time to plan for a green recovery with high-skilled
jobs that give people the satisfaction of knowing they are
helping make the country cleaner, greener and more beautiful.
Imagine Britain, when a Green Industrial Revolution has helped to
level up the country. You cook breakfast using hydrogen power
before getting in your electric car, having charged it overnight
from batteries made in the Midlands. Around you the air is
cleaner; trucks, trains, ships and planes run on hydrogen or
synthetic fuel.
British towns and regions — Teeside, Port Talbot, Merseyside and
Mansfield — are now synonymous with green technology and jobs.
This is where Britain’s ability to make hydrogen and capture
carbon pioneered the decarbonisation of transport, industry and
power.
My 10 point plan to get there will mobilise £12bn of government
investment, and potentially three times as much from the private
sector, to create and support up to 250,000 green jobs.
There will be electric vehicle technicians in the Midlands,
construction and installation workers in the North East and
Wales, specialists in advanced fuels in the North West,
agroforestry practitioners in Scotland, and grid system
installers everywhere. And we will help people train for these
new green jobs through our Lifetime Skills Guarantee.
This 10 point plan will turn the UK into the world’s number one
centre for green technology and finance, creating the foundations
for decades of economic growth.
One — we will make the UK the Saudi Arabia of wind with enough
offshore capacity to power every home by 2030.
Two — we will turn water into energy with up to £500m of
investment in hydrogen.
Three — we will take forward our plans for new nuclear power,
from large scale to small and advanced modular reactors.
Four — we’ll invest more than £2.8bn in electric vehicles, lacing
the land with charging points and creating long-lasting batteries
in UK gigafactories. This will allow us to end the sale of new
petrol and diesel cars and vans in 2030. However, we will allow
the sale of hybrid cars and vans that can drive a significant
distance with no carbon coming out of the tailpipe until 2035.
Five — we will have cleaner public transport, including thousands
of green buses and hundreds of miles of new cycle lanes.
Six — we will strive to repeat the feat of Jack Alcock and Teddie
Brown, who achieved the first nonstop transatlantic flight a
century ago, with a zero emission plane. And we will do the same
with ships.
Seven — we will invest £1bn next year to make homes, schools and
hospitals greener, and energy bills lower.
Eight — we will establish a new world-leading industry in carbon
capture and storage, backed by £1bn of government investment for
clusters across the North, Wales and Scotland.
Nine — we will harness nature’s ability to absorb carbon by
planting 30,000 hectares of trees every year by 2025 and
rewilding 30,000 football pitches worth of countryside.
And ten, our £1bn energy innovation fund will help commercialise
new low-carbon technologies, like the world’s first liquid air
battery being developed in Trafford, and we will make the City of
London the global centre for green finance through our sovereign
bond, carbon offsets markets and disclosure requirements.
This plan can be a global template for delivering net zero
emissions in ways that creates jobs and preserve our lifestyles.
On Wednesday I will meet UK businesses to discuss their
contribution. We plan to provide clear timetables for the clean
energy we will procure, details of the regulations we will
change, and the carbon prices that we will put on emissions.
I will establish Task Force Net Zero committed to reaching net
zero by 2050, and through next year’s COP26 summit we will urge
countries and companies around the world to join us in delivering
net zero globally.
Green and growth can go hand-in-hand. So let us meet the most
enduring threat to our planet with one of the most innovative and
ambitious programmes of job-creation we have known.