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Posts Tagged ‘climate change’

In a keynote speech on 20th March at the annual Ecobuild conference in London, Climate Change Minister Greg Barker announced the coalition is to cut more red tape to allow small businesses in to the Green Deal market.

The Green Deal is the government’s plan to improve the nation’s draughty homes at no upfront cost to the consumer. It will be launched later in the year.

Greg Barker said:

“I want to see a thriving Green Deal market which means we must make it as easy, as cheap and as straightforward as possible for businesses of any size to get involved. So I have cut the red tape to help promote a competitive market and reduce costs which will not only help small businesses in particular but will also make the Green Deal a better deal for consumers.”

In his speech, Greg Barker announced:

* Removal of the requirement to hold a surety bond in case of insolvency. Feedback from the consultation indicated having such a bond would be very costly, especially for smaller Green Deal providers and would act as a disincentive to join the market. Instead, requirements will now be included in the Green Deal Framework Regulations and Green Deal Arrangements Agreement to ensure that a Green Deal provider’s ongoing obligations are fulfilled by the person who is entitled to the payments under a Green Deal Plan, and that the Secretary of State is still able to provide redress and recalculate the plan if the obligations are not completed properly.

March 22, 2012 9:40 am - Posted by admin  | Comments ( 0 )

The EU must show global leadership on climate change by agreeing to ambitious emissions cuts under a second phase of the Kyoto climate treaty, Friends of the Earth said today.

The call comes as Government Ministers from around the world gather in South Africa for next week’s crucial UN climate talks.

Friends of the Earth’s Executive Director Andy Atkins said:

“If we fail to act urgently on climate change the world faces an environmental and financial catastrophe that will dwarf our current economic difficulties.

“The world’s richest nations, who have done most to cause the climate threat we now face, must take the lead in tackling it.

“The EU must show its commitment to a safer, cleaner future by pledging ambitious emission cuts under a second phase of the existing Kyoto climate treaty – negotiating a new climate deal will take too long and be a recipe for inaction.”

December 5, 2011 1:24 pm - Posted by admin  | Comments ( 0 )

New analysis by strategic energy consultants Element Energy, commissioned by Friends of the Earth and the Cut Don’t Kill campaign has revealed that the Government’s planned cut to the Solar PV Feed-in Tariff will destroy up to 29,000 jobs and cause the Treasury to lose up to £230 million a year in tax income.

The research highlights the remarkable fact that this cut will cause the Government to lose sizeable amounts of money through reduced income taxes and National Insurance. Campaigners have described the cut as “utterly counterproductive”.

The estimated current income for the Treasury from employment taxes and VAT alone from the Solar PV sector is £275m – a figure which is even higher once corporation tax and indirect spending are taken into account. The proposal to cut the Feed-in Tariff from 43.3p per kiloWatt hour to 21p per kWh has been billed by Climate Change Minister Greg Barker as a money-saving measure, but Element’s new analysis demonstrates that in fact it would be a costly loss to the Government through reduced tax revenues.

November 24, 2011 9:42 am - Posted by admin  | Comments ( 0 )

Incentive payments to encourage the use of renewable energy generation are to be dependent on making homes energy efficient.

Climate change minister Greg Barker has today announced that eligibility for schemes such as the domestic feed-in tariff will be dependent on meeting minimum energy efficiency standards.

The move is designed to encourage take up of the green deal, the government’s flagship energy efficiency initiative which is due to launch in late 2012.

The green deal will allow households to access energy efficiency improvements to their homes without paying upfront. The costs will be paid back over time through energy bill savings, but officials are concerned this may not be a sufficient incentive to encourage take up.

October 27, 2011 3:04 pm - Posted by admin  | Comments ( 0 )

The UK has the world’s toughest targets for cutting the carbon emissions that create global warming and George Osborne very clearly had these in his sights at the Conservative party conference.

“We’re not going to save the planet by putting our country out of business,” he said. “So let’s at the very least resolve that we’re going to cut our carbon emissions no slower but also no faster than our fellow countries in Europe. That’s what I’ve insisted on in the recent carbon budget.”

But can he actually weaken the targets? It looks unlikely, but highly polluting businesses are likely to get exemptions or handouts to ease the impact of new regulations to curb carbon.

The budget he referred to was approved in May and is now enshrined in law. It commits the UK to a 50% cut by 2025. It was passed after a bitter cabinet row that needed David Cameron’s intervention. The price exacted by Osborne, and his unlikely ally Vince Cable, the business secretary, was a review in 2014. That review will be carried out by the government’s official advisers, the Committee on Climate Change (CCC), which is tasked with proposing carbon budgets.

“In order to change any legislated target there must be, in the words of the Climate Change Act, a ‘significant change in circumstances’,” David Kennedy, chief executive of the CCC, told the Guardian. “I am not expecting that.”

October 12, 2011 8:32 am - Posted by admin  | Comments ( 0 )

Proposals to create a vast sustainable building project across Brighton are to be redesigned in an updated ‘core strategy’ plan that aims to provide a green framework for the city leading up to 2030.

Council leaders are hoping that the revamped blueprint will bring a surge of regeneration investment into the area from the private sector, generating employment opportunities.

Brighton’s green aspirations include development at Shoreham Port.

The Green-led administration hopes the new plan will exacerbate the level of infrastructure building when compared to the previous core strategy plan, and to implement the latest green technologies including solar panels for heating water and electricity.

September 28, 2011 12:31 pm - Posted by admin  | Comments ( 0 )

Done right, support for energy intensive industries could help green our economy. But at worst, it’d just be a carbon tax rebate for our worst polluters

CRC News

Ministers should abolish a carbon tax that was only announced in April, the head of the manufacturers’ association told the Financial Times on Monday. Yet the Treasury and the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS) are already busying themselves with the preparation of a package of measures to support energy-intensive industries affected by the tax, such as steel, aluminium, chemicals and paper. Details are due in the autumn, but its objectives are already clear: to reduce the impact of the carbon tax, which was introduced to make polluters pay for a greater proportion of the pollution they create.

Given that the tax’s express purposes is to make polluters pay, it might seem odd to then reduce its impact on energy-intensive industries, which are alone responsible for 45% of total UK business and public sector emissions. But there could be logic in this counter-intuitive approach, as there is a case for governments to provide temporary, short-term support to help polluting industries evolve and succeed in the carbon and resource constrained world that we now inhabit.

If the package is actually designed to support the transformation of energy intensive industries, so they can become part of the solution to climate change and the other environmental challenges, that would be a tremendously good thing. The government could do this by providing greater financial support to cover the upfront costs of installing the greenest and lowest-carbon production methods, working to research and deploy cleaner technologies with industry, and promoting tougher regulations in Europe and internationally.

Instead, there is a risk that the energy-intensive industries package does none of this, and that it merely becomes a crude tax rebate for the very worst polluters. It would be yet another subsidy, complementing the staggering windfall that energy-intensive industries received under the EU emissions trading scheme. If this comes to pass, it would be a missed opportunity. For it would do nothing to support the adoption of sustainable, low-carbon production methods and the retooling of industries, and by reinforcing the status quo, it would actually harm our international competitiveness in the future.

September 16, 2011 9:32 am - Posted by admin  | Comments ( 0 )

Britain’s companies are failing to meet the challenge of climate change, according to a report published today which assesses the sustainability performance of UK business.

Despite encouraging progress in many areas, it finds that UK plc is “nowhere near the path” to achieving government targets for an 80% cut in greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.

Sustainable Business 2011: Reflecting on Progress is the first independent indicator-based assessment of UK business sustainability. It is published by environmental information specialist ENDS (Environment Data Services), in collaboration with Forum for the Future.

The report finds that in the last year UK business has slipped back on industrial carbon emissions, energy efficiency, decarbonising electricity generation, and greenhouse gas emissions from freight transport – all areas which are crucial to the fight against climate change.

It states: “Electricity carbon intensity will have to fall by 17 grams of carbon dioxide per year, every year, to 2020 to support a halving of UK emissions, according to the Committee on Climate Change. The average annual fall since 2000 has been 6.7gCO2. Industrial energy intensity has not shown a net improvement since 2007. Road freight carbon intensity has retreated to 2007 levels.”

Nick Rowcliffe, Editor-in-Chief of ENDS said: “Current business efforts to engage with the climate change dimension of sustainability are not sufficient. Radical action is needed, including rethinking of business models.”

David Bent, Forum for the Future’s deputy director of sustainable business, said: “More and more companies are seeing that sustainability makes good business sense, but UK plc as a whole is risking its long-term future by not acting fast enough to meet the challenge of climate change. ”

The report tracks 16 indicators, each representing an important aspect of environmental, social and economic sustainability, to capture a snapshot of the state of UK business. It gives a mixed picture of companies’ performance on sustainability and creating a green economy.

September 15, 2011 9:47 am - Posted by admin  | Comments ( 0 )