The International Trade Committee launches a new inquiry
examining how the Government’s approach to trade interacts with
its environmental goals.
In a new inquiry on Trade and the Environment, the Committee will
examine how the Government can ensure its environmental policies
are protected as it negotiates free trade agreements, and how it
can encourage trade in green technology and
environmentally-friendly goods and services.
MPs will also consider how UK participation in international
forums helps shape an environmental trade policy, as well as the
extent to which wider climate change objectives are considered in
the work of the Department for International Trade and UK Export
Finance.
The inquiry follows a recent evidence session on trade
and COP26 and correspondence between the
Committee and International Trade Secretary on COP26, UK trade,
and climate goals.
The inquiry comes as the Government signals its ambition to bring
together trade and environmental policy. has said that the Government intends to
support green trade. In its July report into green
trade, the Board of Trade also said that this is a “major
opportunity for the UK economy”.
Commenting on the inquiry launch, , Chair of the
International Trade Committee, said:
“Our new inquiry will examine how the Government is safeguarding
its environmental policy goals when negotiating new trading
relationships.
“As a Committee, we will explore how far the Government’s net
zero ambitions are reflected in its negotiations with other
nations, how it is working to decarbonise international supply
chains, and how it will support a green trade strategy.
“We’re seeking to establish how the potentially competing demands
between trade and environmental policies will be managed,
especially as it is not yet clear what bringing these policies
together in practice will look like, or what the Government means
by the phrase ‘green trade’.”
The new inquiry will sit alongside the Committee’s existing work
on topics including UK trade negotiations, the
UK-EU trading relationship
and trade and foreign policy.