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Energy and Climate Change Secretary Ed
Miliband today committed the UK to cutting greenhouse gas emissions
by 80% on 1990 levels by 2050 as a major contribution to a global
deal on climate change.
In a wide-ranging Commons statement, his first since being appointed
to the new Department of Energy and Climate Change, Mr Miliband:
* backed the recommendations of Lord Turner's Climate Change
Committee and said the Government would make the target binding in
law by amending the Climate Change Bill currently going through
Parliament.
* said that he plans to bring an amendment to the Energy Bill, also
currently before the House, to introduce a 'feed in tariff' to
support small scale renewables, and to make a further announcement
soon on encouraging renewable heat.
* made clear that, unless energy companies demonstrate action to end
overcharging for many customers on pre-payment meters, he was
prepared to consult on legislation to end unfair pricing
differentials.
Full Commons statement by Ed Miliband on the Department of Energy
and Climate Change:
"With permission, I would like to make a statement on the new
Department of Energy and Climate Change.
The new department brings together the government's work on three
long-term challenges that face our country:
Ensuring that we have energy that is affordable, secure, and
sustainable.
Bringing about the transition to a low-carbon Britain.
And achieving an international agreement on climate change at
Copenhagen in December 2009.
These are our goals, and the new Department is a recognition that
when two thirds of our emissions come from the use of energy, energy
policy and climate change policy should not be considered separately
but together.
Mr Speaker, in tough economic times, some people will ask whether we
should retreat from our climate change objectives.
In our view, it would be quite wrong to row back and those who say
we should misunderstand the relationship between the economic and
environmental tasks we face.
Of course, there are trade-offs but there are also common solutions
to both: for example, energy-saving measures for households which
cut bills and emissions, such as those announced in September by my
RHF the Prime Minister. Or investment in new environmental
industries which both improve our energy security and reduce our
dependence on polluting fuels.
And what we know from the Stern report in 2006 is that the costs of
not acting on climate change are greater than the costs of acting.
And only if Britain plays its part will a global deal to cut carbon
emissions be possible.
So, far from retreating from our objectives, we should reaffirm our
resolve.
Over the summer, the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and
Rural Affairs asked the independent Committee on Climate Change to
review the long-term target for Britain's emissions.
Based on a Royal Commission report in 2000, the target had been set
at a 60 per cent reduction in CO2 emissions.
Since then, independent reports have added further to our knowledge.
Arctic sea ice has melted faster than expected. Global emissions
have grown faster. And the impacts of each degree of climate change
are known to be worse.
Last week, Lord Turner wrote to me with the Committee's conclusions,
and they have been placed in the library of the House.
His report found that to hold global warming to 2 degrees above
pre-industrial levels, commonly accepted as the threshold for the
most dangerous changes in the climate, global emissions must fall by
50-60% by 2050.
Lord Turner concluded that for Britain to play its proper part the
UK should cut our emissions not by 60% but by 80%.
He concluded that the target should apply not just to CO2, but to
all six of the Kyoto greenhouse gasses.
And he concluded that while there are uncertainties about how to
allocate emissions from international flights and shipping, they too
should play their part in reducing emissions.
Mr Speaker, the government accepts all of the recommendations of the
Committee on Climate Change.
We will amend the Climate Change Bill to cut greenhouse gas
emissions by 80 per cent by 2050, and that target will be binding in
law.
I hope all sides of the House will support this.
Indeed, let me say I want to create as much of a consensus as we can
on climate change.
However, we all know that signing up to an 80 per cent cut by 2050
is the easy part.
The hard part is meeting it, and meeting the milestones that will
show we're on track.
For us in Britain, these will be shaped by the recommendation of the
Committee on Climate Change, who will advise us in December on the
first fifteen years of Carbon budgets - national limits to our total
emissions. We will report next year on how we will meet them.
We are also determined to ensure that the signal and the commitment
comes not just from Britain but, as the Prime Minister has been
making clear in recent days, from Europe too.
That means an agreement by the end of this year on the strengthening
of the EU Emissions Trading Scheme, and on the targets for 2020:
that Europe should reduce greenhouse gasses by 20 per cent
unilaterally, 30 percent as part of a global deal; and that the EU
should confirm its renewable energy target.
Earlier this year we published our draft Renewable Energy Strategy.
What is clear to me is not only the scale of that challenge but also
the urgency of getting on with delivery.
The Renewables Obligation has tripled supply in the last five years
and we are making further changes in its structure, in planning
policy and in access to the grid.
But having heard the debate on this issue, including from many
colleagues in this House, I also believe that complementing the
renewables obligation for large-scale projects, guaranteed prices
for small-scale electricity generation, feed-in tariffs, have the
potential to play an important role, as they do in other countries.
So having listened to views expressed, including in the Other Place,
we plan to bring an amendment to the Energy Bill to make this
happen.
And I believe that renewable power can play a bigger role not just
in electricity but heating too. Heating produces almost half of
Britain's carbon emissions, and cleaner sources of heat can help us
meet our target in 2050 and the milestones on the way. I 'm clear we
need to make rapid progress on this too and will make further
announcements soon.
Mr Speaker, I said at the start that our objective was a climate
change policy that was fair and an energy policy that was
sustainable.
Today's structure of the energy market was designed in a world of
abundant supply, British energy self-sufficiency, low commodity
prices and an emerging debate, but not a settled consensus, on
climate change.
Today all those assumptions have changed: there is international
competition for resources, a need for new investment in supply,
structurally higher energy prices, and an urgency about carbon
emissions.
To respond to this new world, we need a market that secures future
supply, including with investment in nuclear power and carbon
capture and storage; more to incentivise cuts in carbon emissions;
and more to help homes and businesses.
These are the big issues we need to address for the future, but I do
want today to signal a direction of travel on affordability.
Last week, the energy regulator Ofgem highlighted what they believed
to be unjustified higher charges of 4m electricity customers in
areas not connected to the gas main.
They also believe that even taking account of higher costs facing
companies from customers with pre-payment meters, many homes that
use them are being overcharged.
Unfair pricing which hits the most vulnerable hardest is completely
unacceptable.
I made that clear to the representatives of the big six energy
companies when I met them yesterday.
I also told them that the government expects rapid action or
explanation to remedy any abuses and I will meet them again in a
month to hear what they have done.
We, and Ofgem, are determined to see these issues addressed. Ofgem
are consulting on its findings until December 1st as part of a due
process.
If the companies don't act in a satisfactory way, then we will
consult on legislation to prevent unfair pricing differentials.
For us, markets can provide enormous benefits in dynamism and
efficiency, but they will only work properly if they are regulated
effectively in the public interest, including with a strong
independent regulator.
There is more to do to help consumers, and we will not hesitate to
act.
A climate change and energy policy that is fair and sustainable.
Meeting our obligations to today's and future generations.
That is the work we are beginning in my new department.
And I commend this statement to the House."
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