Relevant to biofuels:
Take cars. As the
report I commissioned from Professor Julia King shows, there are exciting new
vehicle technologies just over the horizon: commercial hybrid engines, and soon
plug-in hybrids, fully electric cars, hydrogen fuel
cells. And Professor King believes that a halving of average emissions by 2030
- to around 80 grammes per kilometre - is feasible. The EU is looking to
introduce a new mandatory efficiency standard of 130 grammes by 2012.
Finally, in transport, we will do more to stimulate
sustainable forms and sources of biofuels. I take
extremely seriously concerns about the impact of biofuels on
deforestation, precious habitats and on food security. The
http://www.number10.gov.uk/output/Page13791.asp
Speech
on Climate Change
19
November 2007
Gordon
Brown has called for "vision and determination" from world leaders to
rise to the challenge of climate change.
Read
the speech
[Check
against delivery]
I am
privileged to be here at this event hosted by WWF today.
For over
forty years WWF has led the way to a greater public understanding of the beauty
and diversity of the natural world we inhabit:
- your campaigns have saved habitats and
species across the globe;
- your practical work has shown how
nature conservation can also provide sustainable livelihoods for local
communities;
- and you are now in the forefront of
the global campaign against climate change.
Indeed, from long before it became fashionable, you have reminded us of our
obligations ---- and you have demanded of us that we take care of the earth
which belongs not just to us but to future generations.
I am speaking to you today just two weeks before the UN Climate Conference
begins in
The task sounds specific - to launch negotiations leading to a post-2012 global
agreement on climate change.
But our
mission is, in truth, historic and world changing ---- to build, over the next
fifty years and beyond, a global low carbon economy.
And it is
not overdramatic to say that the character and course of the coming century
will be set by how we measure up to this challenge.
In the years after 1945 the world came together to rebuild broken economies and
fractured societies - billions of new investment mobilised to redevelop
post-war
And at the heart of that endeavour was the Marshall Plan that transferred three
per cent of national income from
At that
time, leaders had to fight against short-sightedness, inertia and the dominance
of old backward looking dogmas.
But they
met the challenge because they understood that prosperity is indivisible, that
to be sustained it has to be shared, and that meeting the costs and bearing the
burdens were the only guarantee of prosperity and security.
Today we face another fateful choice.
Building a low carbon global economy demands a worldwide commitment on a
comparable financial scale, requiring billions of pounds of new investment in
clean energy.
The
climate change crisis is the product of many generations, but overcoming it
must be the great project of this generation.
And it will have to involve not just Europe and
So once
again leaders will have to demonstrate vision and determination --- because,
just as in 1945, we must understand that it is only by rising to the challenge
of change that we can guarantee our prosperity and security, now and in the
future.
The latest report from the International Energy Agency makes clear the scale of
that challenge: that if we continue with 'business as usual', by 2030:
- world energy demand will be 50 per cent higher than today with 80 per cent of
this for fossil fuels;
- the average oil price will remain over 60 dollars a barrel with most oil and
gas coming from unstable regions;
- and global carbon dioxide emissions will have risen by almost 60 per cent.
And the latest report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
concluded that such trends, unabated, would mean temperature increases by the
end of this century of up to 4 degrees centigrade and sea levels rising by up
to 60 centimetres ---- with pervasive and prolonged consequences for
ecosystems, food and water supplies and human settlements.
Such a catastrophe would also be the most terrible injustice. For while the
richest countries have caused climate change, it is the poorest who are already
suffering its worst effects.
As the Stern Report shows, the economic cost of this kind of climate change -
the change which the world is currently headed for - would be comparable to the
economic effects of a Great Depression combined with world war.
But what the Stern Report also demonstrated is that - momentous as the
challenge is - meeting it is both technologically feasible and economically
rational; the costs of urgent action are far less than the costs of delay; and
the earlier we act, the easier and less expensive our task will be.
So the role of government is transformed. Once government's objectives were
economic growth and social cohesion. Now they are prosperity, fairness and
environmental care.
And it falls to this generation to show that we can meet and master the
challenge of combining economic growth and environmental stewardship with
social justice.
The issue is not, as some would have it: can we afford to do more.
The now undeniable reality is that we cannot afford to accept any less.
Our starting point is
For our part,
A global carbon market is at the heart of our approach - not the old way of
rigid regulation but the modern way: harnessing the power of the market to set
a global price for carbon, rewarding the most efficient and innovative action
to tackle climate change.
Built on the foundation of the EU Emissions Trading Scheme, with the City of
And that
is why we want the post-2012
A global carbon market will also facilitate a transfer of technology and
resources so that developing countries can bypass the polluting 20th century
path to industrialisation and move straight to the clean energy technologies of
a new era.
Through
the Clean Development Mechanism, significant finance is already being provided
to these countries - and the flows could be much larger in the future.
And building on the World Bank-led Clean Energy Investment Framework and
Britain's £800 million pound Environmental Transformation Fund, I want to work
with the US, Japan and other G8 and European donors to create a new
multilateral funding framework through which we can channel our assistance to
help the developing world shift to lower carbon growth, reduce emissions from
deforestation and adapt to climate change.
And as we help developing countries so
The
decisions made by the EU Spring Council:
- to cut emissions by 20 per cent by
2020, or 30 per cent as part of an
international agreement; - to commit to 20 per cent renewable
energy and a 20 per cent increase in energy efficiency by 2020;
have
committed our continent to a low carbon trajectory, demonstrating how Europe
can provide the platform for
The EU view is that to stand a chance of keeping the temperature increase below
the 2 degrees centigrade target - and as part of a multilateral agreement -
emissions from industrialised countries like
In
By 2050 we need to be producing between just 155 and 310 million tonnes - less
than half as much in an economy which will be two and a half times its present
size.
So within
four decades each pound of GDP needs to produce just one sixth to one twelfth
of the CO2 equivalent it does today.
This means a significant change in our energy economy. Indeed I believe it will
require no less than a fourth technological revolution. In the past the steam
engine, the internal combustion engine and the microprocessor transformed not
just technology but the way society was organised and the way people lived. Now
we are about to embark on a comparable technological transformation - to low
carbon energy and energy efficiency.
This represents an immense challenge for
Globally, the overall added value of the low carbon energy sector could be as
high as 3 trillion dollars per year worldwide by 2050, and it could employ more
than 25 million people. If
So
building our own low carbon economy offers us the chance to create thousands of
new British businesses, hundreds of thousands of new British jobs and a vast
new export market in which
And this
will also be essential to our energy security, as we move from a period where
most of our energy has come from domestic sources to one where, on present
trends, by 2020 up to 80 per cent could come from overseas.
The foundation of our approach is providing clear, credible and long-term
signals.
First, our Climate Change Bill will place a statutory cap on
Every new
policy will be examined for its impact on carbon emissions - not just those
which reduce emissions, but those which increase them. And where emissions rise
in one sector, we will have to achieve corresponding falls in another.
The
legislation will enact our target of achieving a reduction in carbon dioxide
emissions of at least 60 per cent by 2050 through domestic and
The
Climate Change Bill will also put into statute our interim target for 2020 of a
26 to 32 per cent reduction in carbon dioxide emissions, which means cutting
greenhouse gas emissions overall by between 32 and 37 per cent - Britain's
contribution to the European target and to the new
We have already led the debate within the EU to ensure that aviation emissions
are included in the EU Emissions Trading Scheme as soon as possible. We will
now also ask the climate change committee to examine whether and how
And because we know that alongside measures to reduce carbon emissions we must
do more to deal with the effects of climate change, there will be new powers in
the Climate Change Bill to require public bodies to assess, where necessary,
the risks of climate change and set out what action they need to take in
response.
Our second imperative is a major improvement in our energy efficiency.
At
present, a third of all the oil, coal and gas we buy is wasted - a result of
still relying on the technologies, and the mindset, of the past.
This must
change.
Take cars.
As the report I commissioned from Professor Julia King shows, there are
exciting new vehicle technologies just over the horizon: commercial hybrid
engines, and soon plug-in hybrids, fully electric cars, hydrogen fuel cells.
And Professor King believes that a halving of average emissions by 2030 - to
around 80 grammes per kilometre - is feasible.
The EU is looking to introduce a new mandatory efficiency standard of 130
grammes by 2012.
At the same time, we must do more to improve energy efficiency in our homes.
By 2016, all new houses will have to be zero carbon.
Building
regulations, already requiring 40 per cent higher efficiency than 2002, will be
tightened.
New Energy Performance Certificates will provide householders with an energy
rating for their home.
And within a decade our aim is that every householder able to do so fits loft
or cavity wall insulation, installs low energy light bulbs, and uses low-energy
consumer goods.
For consumer goods, including those with wasteful standby facilities, we are
working with retailers to raise energy efficiency standards. And we have
already secured agreement that standard high energy light bulbs will start to
be phased out from next year, and removed totally by 2011 - the first European
country to do so.
Since 2001 government schemes have insulated 2 million homes. But over the next
three years - as a result of new carbon emission reduction targets for energy
companies - I can announce that 5 million more homes will benefit from
discounted or free loft and cavity wall insulation, and another 3 million from
discounted or free low energy light bulbs and energy efficient appliances.
For every household - over the next decade - there will be the offer of a smart
meter that will allow two way communication between the supplier and customer -
giving more accurate bills and making it easier for people to generate their
own energy through microgeneration and sell it onto the grid.
And to help people move towards a greener lifestyle, we are today announcing a
new one-stop Green Homes service --- a single telephone line, a user-friendly
website and a network of advice centres in every region to:
- provide easy access to an energy audit
and the full range of discounted and free services available;
- and give advice not only on energy
efficiency but on microgeneration, water efficiency, recycling and greener
travel.
House to
house visits in fifty of our poorest areas will provide energy efficiency
offers door to door. And for every householder who gets an energy performance
certificate with an 'F' or 'G' rating for a home being sold or bought, the
green homes service will make an offer of discounted or free help with energy
efficiency measures.
This represents the biggest improvement in home energy efficiency in our
history -
- one household in three offered help
over the next three years to cut their carbon footprint;
- with potential savings of over £100
per year for a typical householder.
Businesses
too must play their part in improving energy efficiency and reducing carbon
emissions.
Here the basic policy framework is already in place.
We have the climate change levy on business energy use.
And climate change agreements with the main sectors have delivered savings of
60 million tonnes of carbon dioxide so far.
Major
carbon emitters, accounting for almost half of
From 2010 we will also introduce carbon trading in the
One of the biggest contributors to our greenhouse gas emissions is landfilled
waste.
And all over the country campaigns are forming to get rid of disposable plastic
bags - one of the most visible symbols of environmental waste.
Every year in
In partnership with Government the supermarkets have already committed to
reduce the environmental impact of plastic bags by 25 per cent over the next
year.
But I believe we can go further. Indeed, I am convinced that we can eliminate
single-use disposable bags altogether in favour of long-lasting and more
sustainable alternatives.
So the
Government will convene a forum of the supermarkets, the British Retail
Consortium and other interested groups to urgently assess together how, and how
quickly, this reduction can be achieved.
The third
imperative for a low carbon future is a major drive to decarbonise our energy
sources.
For two
hundred years the British economy has run largely on fossil fuels - coal, oil
and gas supplying us with the plentiful and secure energy that powered our
progress and our prosperity.
But over the coming decades we must move from a largely fossil fuel based
economy to an economy primarily powered by low carbon energy:
- renewables
- potentially nuclear - subject to the
outcome of our consultation
- and the emerging technology of carbon
capture and storage.
At
present around 9 per cent of total energy in
In order to meet our global greenhouse gas targets, by 2050 virtually all
energy for electricity and most of the energy used for heating, cooling and
transport in our country will have to come from low carbon sources.
And because we need to replace a third of our electricity generating capacity
in the next twenty years and most of the new plants will still be operating in
2050, we must start this technological transformation now.
In our Energy White Paper the Government set out its preliminary view that it
would be in the public interest to give energy companies the option of building
new nuclear power stations, as most of our existing nuclear stations will be
decommissioned in the next twenty years.
Having concluded the full public consultation we held on this issue, we are
considering the results and will announce our decision in the new year.
I also believe that carbon capture and storage will be a vital new technology
in reducing carbon emissions around the world.
For many countries - including the
I can announce today that we are launching a competition to build in
And
tomorrow in
We will
also consider whether, if we can show that carbon capture and storage is
technologically and commercially viable, it should be made mandatory in some
form for all new British fossil fuel plants.
The two per cent of our total energy that now comes from renewables is much
less than in most other European countries.
In the
Energy White Paper we announced plans to triple the amount of electricity from
renewables by 2015. But as the urgency of tackling climate change and achieving
energy security increases, the case for more reliance on renewables has become
more compelling.
That is why at the European Council in March
The
And let
me make it absolutely clear: we are completely committed to meeting our share.
The European Commission will come forward with their proposals for how the
overall target is to be divided between Member States in January, with a final
decision expected in early 2009 --- so we do not yet know what the
We must start planning for this now.
And let
me tell the country: it will be a huge challenge.
It will be for the private sector to make the necessary investment but the
government will do more to remove the planning and other obstacles that are
currently holding renewables back.
We already plan to increase the capacity of offshore windfarms from less than
half a gigawatt now to 8 gigawatts. The Secretary of State for Business will
announce shortly details of our proposals to allow a further significant
expansion.
To remove the barriers here I have asked the Secretaries of State for Defence,
Business and Transport to step up their efforts, in cooperation with industry
and the regulators, to identify and test technical solutions to the potential
difficulties windfarms pose to air traffic and defence radar.
Under the
Planning Bill, we will publish a National Policy Statement on the appropriate
balance between enabling wind farms and protecting shipping.
And I
have asked the Secretary of State for the Environment to ensure that our new
Marine Bill responds sensitively to the environmental issues posed by offshore
wind farm development.
We will also explore the potential for major new investment in energy from wave
and tidal sources.
We have
already announced a study of the feasibility of generating tidal energy from
the River Severn: this alone could provide 5 per cent of
And the Secretary for Business is announcing today that we will be including
tidal lagoons and barrages below one gigawatt capacity within the scope of the
Renewables Obligation - potentially benefiting projects such as those being
proposed for Rhyl and
Meeting our renewables target will also require:
- more onshore wind farms - sited in the
right places;
- greater use of energy derived from
waste;
- a major expansion of energy from
biomass;
- and greater use of microgeneration,
including, as costs come down, more solar power.
I
recognise that windfarms and other new energy installations are often seen as a
burden to the local communities living near them, while their benefits go to
society at large. So I want to explore how local communities can themselves
benefit from the economic opportunities they create.
Meeting our target will also require greater use of renewables to heat our
homes and buildings. So we will introduce new measures to bring forward
renewable heat, with a call for evidence in January prior to a full
consultation.
And as we expand renewable heat we will need to ensure that, wherever feasible
and economic, we generate electricity and heat together. So instead of all our
energy being generated remotely, more can be supplied locally - making more efficient
use of our energy resources.
Finally, in transport, we will do more to stimulate sustainable forms and
sources of biofuels.
I take extremely seriously concerns about the impact of biofuels on
deforestation, precious habitats and on food security. The
Increasing our renewable energy sources in all these ways will require national
purpose and a shared national endeavour.
And we will also need to ensure that the costs for businesses and for consumers
remain affordable.
So we
will launch a consultation next year, inviting a serious national debate about
how we are to achieve our targets.
And we will publish our full Renewable Energy Strategy the following spring -
once the EU Directive is passed and we know what the
In the meantime we will legislate, as promised, in our Energy Bill to reform
the Renewables Obligation to bring forward newer technologies. And we will
introduce in our Planning Bill new measures to speed up the planning system for
major infrastructure projects, whilst ensuring the public are properly
consulted.
Let me
say that all three pieces of legislation - the Climate Change Bill, the Energy
Bill and the Planning Bill - are vital to this endeavour. You cannot will the
end if you do not also will the means.
This is what meeting our carbon goals means in practice - not just talking
about it or making vague promises about the future but taking concrete action -
nationally, in Europe and
When I said at the launch of the Stern Review that we were going to build a low
carbon economy in the
I know this means facing up to the hard choices and taking tough decisions.
That it means governing, not gimmickry. And that is what we will do.
And I want the British economy, British firms and everyone in
Last year I asked the Secretaries of State for Environment and Business to
chair a commission of experts on how the
Today we are publishing the Commission's report which estimates that - from
water treatment to global carbon markets - the
It shows that if tackling climate change represents the greatest of challenges
for the world, it is also the greatest of opportunities for
It is an
opportunity I want this country to seize: a greener
So the Government will step up support for British companies as they look to
develop and supply the goods and services of this new technological revolution.
I can tell you today that the first programmes of the £1 billion pound
public-private Energy Technologies Institute will be focused on R&D in
offshore wind, wave and tidal stream energy. And the new £370 million pound
domestic Environmental Transformation Fund will help bring these technologies
to market.
To ensure that we have the skills and the expertise for the environmental
industries of the future, we will work with employers to create apprenticeship
and 'Train to Gain' places in environmental industries and bring forward plans
for a national skills academy in that sector.
And early next year the Government will convene a summit with the Regional
Development Agencies, energy companies, universities, manufacturers,
environmental service providers and NGOs to explore how we can maximise the
economic opportunities of a low carbon future.
We have
seen the excellent work being done to engage their members by groups like
yourselves, the National Trust, Oxfam, Christian Aid, the Women's Institute and
the RSPB.
We have all been impressed by the efforts of companies like B&Q, Marks and
Spencer, Sky and Tesco who are empowering their customers to act as part of the
'We're In This Together' campaign.
But I believe there is even greater scope for business and the voluntary sector
to work with Government to mobilise individuals to take action. So I have asked
Fiona Reynolds of the National Trust and Ian Cheshire of B&Q to recommend
how this might be achieved.
And I am determined too that the Government will meet its responsibilities and
maintain its global leadership.
All of us
- government, business, civil society and individuals - have a part to play.
Working
apart we will surely fail. But working together I have no doubt that this is a
challenge to which the human spirit, and our powers of ingenuity and
enterprise, will rise.