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Peter Black AM and South Wales West Liberal Democrats Representing Aberavon, Bridgend, Gower, Neath, Ogmore, Port Talbot, and Swansea |
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Peter Black AM and South Wales West Liberal Democrats | <info@southwaleslibdems.org.uk> |
One year on and pollution still threatens12.00.00am GMT Sun 11th Nov 2007 Dunvant Councillor Nick Tregoning has given Labour one out of ten for their environmental record and has warned that local residents will suffer from more extreme weather if action is not taken to tackle pollution. Nick, who is also Gower Assembly Spokesperson for the Welsh Lib Dems, said: "Last year the Stern Report highlighted the huge dangers we face if action is not taken to cut the pollution we are causing. "One of the biggest pollutants, carbon dioxide, has a huge impact on our local environment leading to serious problems like severe storms and we are producing more and more of it all the time. "The response to the Stern report by the government was at first positive. But ministers have failed to carry through any big policies needed to tackle climate change and global warming, and in some areas they have gone into reverse. "Since Gordon Brown became Prime Minister, the government has watered down plans to generate more energy from clean, green sources. One of his first acts as Prime Minister was to downgrade the importance of a top cabinet committee on the environment. "Meanwhile Brown has seen a coalition of important green groups, which includes Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth, and the World Wide Fund for Nature, pull out of the government's nuclear consultation, claiming that the ministers were distorting the evidence and that they are considering taking the Government to court again on the issue. "A decade under Brown as Chancellor saw the overall tax burden on pollution fall whilst that on incomes rose, making it cheaper to pollute. "This is a sorry record on the environment from Labour. The Stern Report, praised by Mr. Brown last year when it was published, is now gathering dust. The call for action is not being taken seriously by the Prime Minister or the Labour government. "This situation however could have been very different. Mr. Brown could have led the call for change to save the environment. His failure to do so will mean that areas such as Swansea are likely to suffer as the freak weather and damage caused this year becomes the norm in the future. "If Labour and their Plaid helpers in Cardiff are really serious about tackling climate change then they will put pressure upon their friends in Westminster to take Stern seriously." Ends WELSH LIBERAL DEMOCRATS DEMOCRATIAID RHYDDFRYDOL CYMRU Notes to editors Background notes on Labour's recent record on the environment. Watering down renewable energy targets Gordon Brown's Government are backtracking on the target to generate a fifth of Britain's electricity from renewable sources by 2020. In October 2006, David Miliband, the then Environment Secretary, told the House of Commons: "We are committed to generating 20 per cent. of our electricity supply from renewables by 2020."[1][1] On October 23rd 2007, Energy Minister Malcolm Wicks said on Newsnight that Britain would only aim to generate 10-15% of its electricity from renewables by 2020. This followed the leak of an internal government paper in August 2007 which conceded that Britain "has achieved little so far on renewables", and asked ministers to examine "what options there are for statistical interpretations of the target that would make it easier to achieve" (i.e. how the figures could be fiddled to make it look like the Government are doing better than they are). Downgrading environmental issues in the Government One of Gordon Brown's first acts as Prime Minister was to downgrade the key cabinet committee on the environment. The Ministerial Committee on Energy and the Environment was previously a full cabinet committee chaired by the Prime Minister but will now be a sub-committee chaired by the Chancellor. In addition a sub-committee which aimed to embed sustainable development in central government departments has been scrapped entirely. Failure on green taxes Green taxes as a proportion of the total tax burden have fallen from 9.6% to 7.4% since Labour came to power. Green taxes are at the lowest share of national income for a quarter of a century. Efforts to cut carbon emissions inadequate A report by the Cambridge Econometrics think-tank, published on August 24th 2007, predicts that the UK will reduce emissions by only 15 per cent by 2020, rather than the target of 26 per cent. An inadequate Climate Change Bill In a report, published on 3rd August 2007, the cross-party Draft Climate Change Bill Committee warned that the Government's proposals to tackle climate change need to be tougher and legally enforceable. Attacked by own adviser Jonathon Porritt, chairman of the Government's Sustainable Environment Commission, accused the Prime Minister of making 'soaring speeches' about global warming but failing to match his words with deeds. 'One out of six' from green groups In September, the Green Standard - a report by nine leading environmental groups - looked at each party's environmental commitments and actions and gave Labour only one 'green light' out of six. The Liberal Democrats were rated highest, getting three 'green lights'. Green groups accuse government of 'stitch up' The Brown government has been accused of 'conducting a public relations stitch-up designed to deliver a preordained policy on new nuclear power' by Britain's leading environmental groups. The coalition, which includes Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth, WWF and Green Alliance, pulled out of the Government's nuclear consultation, claiming that the Government is distorting the evidence and that they are considering taking the Government to court again on the issue. Watering down requirements for environmental reporting by business Proposals to strengthen the environmental and social reporting requirements on businesses, to provide reliable information for ethical investors and consumers, were watered down last year after Gordon Brown's intervention. Promise of "environmental jobs" disappeared Gordon Brown failed to keep the promise he made at Labour's autumn 2006 conference to make an announcement on creating 100,000 new environmental jobs.
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