Following last year’s High Court ruling, the UK Government has
published the Carbon Budget Delivery Plan (CBDP), providing much
greater transparency on its Net Zero plans. However, despite over
3,000 pages of new detail, the Climate Change Committee’s
confidence in the UK meeting its goals from 2030 onwards is now
markedly less than it was in our previous assessment a year ago.
A key opportunity to push a faster pace of progress has been
missed.
UK greenhouse gas emissions have so far fallen 46% from 1990
levels. At COP26, a stretching 2030 commitment was made to reduce
them by 68%. In only seven years, the recent rate of annual
emissions reduction outside the electricity supply sector must
therefore quadruple.
Time is now very short to achieve this change of pace. Glimmers
of the Net Zero transition can be seen in growing sales of new
electric cars and the continued deployment of renewable capacity,
but the scale up of action overall is worryingly slow. The
Government continues to place their reliance on technological
solutions that have not been deployed at scale, in preference to
more straightforward encouragement of people to reduce
high-carbon activities. The Committee has again flagged the risks
of a policy programme that amongst other things is too slow to
plant trees and roll-out heat pumps.
, Chairman of the Climate Change
Committee, said:
“The lesson of my ten years at the Climate Change Committee is
that early action benefits the people of this country and helps
us to meet the challenges of the coming decades more cheaply and
more easily. Yet, even in these times of extraordinary fossil
fuel prices, Government has been too slow to embrace cleaner,
cheaper alternatives and too keen to support new production of
coal, oil and gas. There is a worrying hesitancy by Ministers to
lead the country to the next stage of Net Zero commitments.
“I urge the Government to regroup on Net Zero and commit to
bolder delivery. This is a period when pace must be prioritised
over perfection.”
Net Zero must return to top billing
In a crucial period for delivering progress, key departments did
not deliver on recommendations made by the Committee last year.
The remit of the new Department for Energy Security and Net Zero
has brought welcome focus to the programme, but progress has not
been made on seven of the priority recommendations to BEIS in
last year’s progress report (see notes to editors). Defra and
DLUHC failed to achieve any of the priority recommendations made
by the Committee in 2022.
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The UK has sent confusing signals on its climate
priorities to the global community. Support for new
oil and gas, beyond the immediate increase in gas production
demanded by the Ukraine invasion, and the decision to consent a
new coal mine in Cumbria have raised global attention and
undermined the careful language negotiated by the UK COP26
Presidency in the Glasgow Climate Pact.
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Support is lacking for decarbonised industry in a new
era of global competition. Government has high
ambitions for decarbonised steel production but has no clear
policy to deliver it. Wider incentives are still needed for
electrification of industry. The recent announcement of up to
£20 billion funding for carbon capture and storage is welcome,
but detail and implementation of these spending plans is still
to come.
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Rapid reform to planning is necessary. In a
range of areas, the deployment of essential upgrades to the
electricity grid and other Net Zero infrastructure is being
stymied by restrictive planning rules. The planning system
should have an overarching requirement to ensure planning
decisions give full regard to Net Zero.
- Changing use of land takes time. Essential reforms have
progressed, through the new Environmental Land Management policy,
but Defra must step up rates of tree planting and
peatland restoration and introduce a new framework for
land use change.
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The Government does not expect to make a strategic
decision on the role of hydrogen in heating until 2026. It must
overcome this uncertainty by accelerating deployment
of electric heating and pressing ahead with low-regret energy
infrastructure decisions.
- The list of UK airports proposing to expand capacity
continues to grow, counter to the Committee’s advice that there
should be no net airport expansion across the UK. A
UK-wide capacity management framework is needed to manage these
decisions. No airport expansions should proceed until this is in
place.
Real world indicators of progress
Last year the Committee introduced a new indicator framework,
focused on real-world changes. It shows that progress is
off-track in a number of areas:
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Surface transport. Sales of new electric cars
continue to grow ahead of our pathway, but electric van sales
are still lagging and remain significantly off track.
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Electricity supply. Renewable electricity
capacity increased in 2022, but not at the rate required to
meet the Government’s stretching targets, particularly for
solar. An opportunity was missed for even more rapid deployment
of onshore wind and solar, which could have grown the UK’s
clean energy supply and helped to further reduce the UK’s
dependence on imported fossil gas.
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Buildings. The Government proposes to scale-up
the market for heat pump installations to 600,000 by 2028, but
current rates are around one-ninth of this. Installation rates
of energy efficiency measures fell further in 2022.
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Rebalancing electricity prices vs gas. As part
of a major package of consumer energy support, the Treasury has
removed policy costs from electricity bills, moving electricity
prices closer to gas prices. This will aid the consumer
incentives to adopt electrified technologies and should be made
permanent.
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Land use. Rates of tree-planting must double
by 2025 to reach the Government’s target of 30,000 hectares per
year of woodland creation. Peatland restoration rates increased
slightly in 2022 but remain a factor of five lower than the
Committee’s recommended rates.
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Agriculture. Ruminant livestock numbers, a key
determinant of agriculture emissions, have declined slowly in
number. Reported meat consumption has also fallen, but data on
meat availability shows a less clear picture; further policy
intervention to shift towards healthier low-carbon diets is
likely to be required.
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Industry. Industrial emissions are the third
highest among the sectors. Measuring progress suffers from
enduring poor availability of data, but it is off track for
most available indicators. There is still no clear plan to
support industrial electrification and little evidence that
industry is preparing to electrify at scale.
Notes to Editors
- The Climate Change Committee is the UK’s independent adviser
to Government on tackling climate change. See: www.theccc.org.uk for more
information.
- The seven priority recommendations made to BEIS last year, on
which no progress has been made.
- Develop and publish new policies (with a clear implementation
timeline) to ensure that owner-occupied homes reach a minimum
energy performance of EPC C by 2035.
- Develop and begin to implement contingency plans to address
the range of risks to meeting carbon budgets. These should
broaden the set of emissions reductions pursued, in particular by
including demand-side policies, and avoid increasing reliance on
engineered removals.
- Publish a comprehensive long-term strategy for electricity
decarbonisation, including the roles for low-carbon flexibility
options.
- Develop minimum emissions-intensity standards for domestic
oil and gas production by the next licensing round.
- Consult on a funding mechanism(s) to support the additional
operational and capital costs of electrification in
manufacturing, enabling electrification to compete on a level
playing field with other means of decarbonisation.
- Review, invest in, and initiate reform of industrial
decarbonisation data collection and annual reporting to enable
effective monitoring and evaluation, and policy implementation.
- In line with the Glasgow Climate Pact commitment to phase out
inefficient fossil fuel subsidies, undertake a review of the role
of tax policy in delivering Net Zero.