
Advisors have cautioned that to meet Keir Starmer’s new climate objective, British citizens must purchase electric vehicles and heat pumps and even reduce their meat consumption.
The prime minister said at the COP29 meeting in Azerbaijan that the UK will reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by 81% by 2035.
He insisted it was possible to meet the goal without telling people ‘how to live their lives’, arguing that decarbonising the power network was the key.
However, the government’s Climate Change Committee (CCC), which originally laid out the aim, has made clear that other changes, such as more vegetarian and vegan diets and less travel, would also be needed.
CCC head Emma Pinchbeck told the Telegraph: ‘They’ve done the job with working out how to get a lot of clean, cheap domestic electricity.
‘We need to get technologies into people’s homes so they can use the electricity. What we’re looking for is progress on heat decarbonisation, transport decarbonisation and renewables.’
Ms Pinchbeck said the ‘secret weapon technologies for the next decade are heat pumps and electric vehicles’.
Pressed yesterday on what Brits would have to do to hit the target, the PM said: ‘What we’re not going to do is start telling people how to live their lives. We’re not going to start dictating to people what they do.’
Asked again whether it was really possible to meet the goal without people changing their lifestyles, he said: ‘Yes, of course it is.’
Challenged that the CCC recommendations stressed the importance of adjusting behaviour, Sir Keir said: ‘The target is my target and the plan is my plan; I’m not borrowing from somebody else’s plan.’
The Tories warned the vow would lead to ‘sacrifice and hardship’ and would require a shift away from foods with a high carbon footprint and petrol and diesel vehicles.
In the Commons, shadow energy secretary Claire Coutinho told MPs that the pledge made the UK’s ‘already stringent carbon emission targets even higher’.
‘That’s despite the fact that we’re only one percent of global emissions, and whilst the leaders of the world’s highest emitting countries, making up over 60 percent of emissions, are not attending,’ she added.
‘The Climate Change Committee has said this target will require, for example, an accelerated shift away from meat and dairy, less travel, and a gas boiler ban for the British people, and yet the Government’s approach would see our reliance on Chinese imports—a country which is 60 percent powered by coal—go through the roof.
Ms Coutinho said the government was ‘asking for more sacrifice and hardship from the British people in return for more goods from one of the world’s largest carbon emitters’.
She warned that would mean fewer ‘jobs in Britain and more carbon in the atmosphere’.
Sir Keir was also asked if he was ‘disappointed’ that there were so few leaders of major world countries present at the Cop29 summit in Baku, Azerbaijan.
The heads of the biggest polluters were notably absent, including Chinese Premier Xi Jinping, US President Joe Biden and Indian PM Narendra Modi, while many EU leaders also stayed away.
The 81 percent target, which is based on reducing emissions compared with 1990 levels, forms the UK’s latest formal commitment to reducing its greenhouse gas emissions.
In 2020, when the CCC set the goal for 2035, it detailed a series of changes that would need to be made to live in the UK to achieve it.
These included phasing out gas boilers by 2033 and ending sales of new petrol and diesel vehicles, including hybrids, by 2032.
Additionally, it stated that encouraging people to consume less meat and dairy products, slowing the expansion of flights, reducing automobile travel, and reducing trash would all contribute to around 10% of the emissions savings.
The UN’s climate change chief Simon Stiell hailed the UK commitment, saying it set a powerful example to other G20 nations.
Charities and academics also welcomed the goal but cautioned that the government would need a proper plan to meet the target.
Tanya Steele, chief executive at WWF, said the UK had positioned itself as a climate leader but said it needed to back up the target with ‘solid and credible delivery plans’.
Dr Caterina Brandmayr, from the Grantham Institute—Climate Change and the Environment, Imperial College London, said the target was ‘what the world needs’ but said it needed to back it up with strong policy and investment plans to show it was serious.
Since electric cars and heat pumps are now too costly and are not the way of the future, many people will NOT make the changeover.
The largest political earthquake in history will occur before the next election, and Keir Starmer will not be the prime minister after. Labour will also be more shattered than the Conservatives were.
This kind of thinking is illogical. This government has no brain cells at all. Keir Starmer promised that his administration would prioritise the needs of the people before its own, but that isn’t the case.
I think that I speak for many, but if I don’t, then please correct me! Things are going to get much more chaotic and cold, amongst other things, but hopefully, common sense and economic necessity will prevail, and hopefully, at some point, Keir Starmer will realise that the rest of the country is not impressed, and neither will his voters be.
Our government has been sneakily telling us what we can and cannot do for a long time, but now they are telling us what we should eat!
Heat pumps are extremely inefficient and costly, particularly when temperatures drop below 5 degrees. The money you will spend on electricity is inefficient and useless.
What a liar Keir Starmer is. Although he said they wouldn’t begin dictating to individuals how to live their lives, we all know that they will and have already begun. They will create new tax laws and use taxes to do this; if we are not vigilant, they will next implement a meat tax!
We all know how they do this and their Stalin town councils will rub their greedy palms together with glee, knowing they have us right under their thumbs. Labour equals a centrally controlled and oppressive state.