Continued delays to the updated climate change plan and further
slippage in promised climate policies mean that the Climate Change Committee no
longer believes that the Scottish Government will meet its
statutory 2030 goal to reduce emissions by 75%. There is no
comprehensive strategy for Scotland to decarbonise towards Net
Zero.
The Scottish Government delayed its draft Climate Change Plan
last year despite the 2030 target only being six years away. This
has left a significant period without sufficient actions or
policies to reach the target; the required acceleration in
emissions reduction in Scotland is now beyond what is credible.
Professor Piers Forster, interim Chair of the Climate
Change Committee said:
“Scotland has laudable ambitions to decarbonise, but it isn’t
enough to set a target; the Government must act. There are risks
in all reviewed areas, including those with significant policy
powers devolved to the Scottish Government.
“Scotland’s Climate Change Plan needs to be published
urgently, so we can assess it. We need to see actions that will
deliver on its future targets.”
Scotland missed its annual target for 2021. This is the eighth
time in the past 12 years that they have missed a target. The
only sectors to reduce emissions in 2021 were electricity supply
and industry. Most key indicators of delivery progress, such as
tree planting, peatland restoration rates and heat pump
installations are off track.
There is a path to Scotland’s post 2030 targets, but stronger
action is needed to reduce emissions across the economy. The
transport and buildings sectors will require a particularly rapid
increase in the rate of emissions reduction to meet the targets
set out in the last Climate Change Plan update (2020 CCPu).
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Buildings. The 2020 CCPu requires emissions
from heating buildings to decrease by 71% by 2030, meaning the
annual emissions reduction rate must increase by almost a
factor of ten. There are welcome bold proposals in the Heat in
Buildings consultation, which if implemented could become a
template for the rest of the UK. But these proposals must be
delivered in practice and the planned rate of decarbonisation
will not achieve those promised in 2020.
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Transport. The 2020 CCPu requires Scotland’s
transport emissions to decrease by 44% by 2030, meaning the
annual emissions reduction rate must increase by almost a
factor of four. Scotland has an extremely stretching target to
reduce car-kilometres by 20% on 2019 levels by 2030, but a
clear strategy on how this will be achieved is still missing.
Practical delivery plans must focus on deploying and improving
electric car charging infrastructure – and developing plans for
aviation.
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Agriculture and land use. The 2020 CCPu
requires this to decrease by 11% by 2030 - a reversal of recent
emissions increases is needed. On woodland creation, Scotland
needs to double its recent rate. On peatland restoration a
tripling of Scotland’s rate is required to reach its own
target, which remains less ambitious than the CCC’s.
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Engineered greenhouse gas removals. The Acorn
carbon capture cluster has received ‘Track 2 status’, which is
positive progress for engineered removals in Scotland. But the
Scottish Government should assess Acorn’s deployment potential
against its own aim to achieve -3.8 MtCO2 engineered
removals by 2030. A feasibility study published by the Scottish
Government estimates potential for only 2.2 MtCO2 by
2030 in Scotland.
This is a crucial time for Net Zero in Scotland. The handling of
plans to close the Grangemouth refinery underlines the risk of
omitting meaningful dialogue between communities, industry and
government and the important role for the Scottish Government in
ensuring a just transition towards Net Zero. Further delay to the
Scottish Government’s draft Climate Change Plan will prevent
further progress on these strategic issues.
Notes to editors:
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Download and view the
Committee’s report on reducing emissions in Scotland.
- Emissions were 41.6 41.6 MtCO2e in 2021,
based on the 1990-2021 inventory. This is a 2.4% increase since
2020 but remains 10.0% below pre-pandemic levels in 2019.
Emissions in 2021 were 49.2% lower than levels in 1990. This
represents a higher reduction in emissions compared to the UK,
where 2021 emissions were 47.2% below 1990 levels.
- Only three of the 14 key recommendations from the CCC’s 2022
Scottish Progress Report scored ‘good progress’. Two scored
‘moderate progress’, seven scored ‘some but insufficient
progress’, and two made ‘no progress’ at all.