The UK must take full responsibility for its entire carbon footprint
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Your support makes all the difference.Curbing greenhouse gas emissions and reversing environmental breakdown are the most pressing issues facing humanity. 2020 saw deadly wildfires, flooding and heatwaves – and further devastation is expected in the years ahead. Though voters want climate agreements to be made legally binding, world leaders are failing to live up to their rhetoric – and have repeatedly missed emissions and biodiversity targets.
At home, the government’s actions have fallen far short of fulfilling the UK’s responsibilities under the UN Biodiversity and Climate Change Conventions. Our projected carbon emissions are two to three times higher than required if the UK is to comply with the most ambitious end of the Paris Agreement obligation to limit global heating to 1.5 C.
Given the serious need for a viable plan, we support the Climate and Ecological Emergency Bill. If passed, it will ensure – in law – that the UK takes full responsibility for its entire carbon footprint, acts to protect our vital ecosystems, and give citizens a say in the transition to a zero-carbon society.
Though 118 MPs and peers support the bill, parliamentarians have been denied time for it to advance through Westminster. But with global temperatures hitting 1.2 C above pre-industrial levels last year, this issue can’t be kicked down the road any longer: this legislation must form part of the government’s next Queen’s Speech agenda on 11 May.
As the host of the vital G7 and Cop26 summits this year, the UK has a golden opportunity to lead the charge in limiting global heating and restoring nature. As we begin to heal from the effects of Covid-19, the CEE Bill offers the last, best chance for the UK to make a serious roadmap to tackle the climate and ecological emergency.
Time’s running out, but we have this final chance to act. Mr Johnson, please seize it.
Prof Joanna Haigh, Imperial College London; Dr Charlie Gardner, University of Kent; Guy Singh-Watson, Riverford Organic Farmers; Sue Riddlestone OBE, Bioregional; Harriet Lamb CBE, Ashden; Farhana Yamin, Climate Vulnerable Forum; Christopher Davis, The Body Shop; Dr Ann Pettifor, Green New Deal Group; Prof Tim Jackson, University of Surrey; Safia Minney MBE, REAL Sustainability; Dale Vince OBE, Ecotricity; Prof Henrietta Moore, UCL; Dr Doug Parr, Greenpeace UK; Paul Lindley OBE, entrepreneur.
Submitted by (and with the consent of the above) by Oliver Sidorczuk, coordinator, CEE Bill Alliance
Divided we fall
Where have all the SNP’s bold and ambitious plans got to over the last 14 years? Who can answer?
Have the SNP delivered on Healthcare? Have the SNP delivered on the Economy? On Homelessness? On Poverty? NO! Are Scotland’s working-class being looked after? NO!
Give the SNP another majority? NO! More of the same will only produce more of the same. The future of Scotland’s wonderful people under the SNP and their friends the Greens is on a slippery slope down to economic, political and social woe.
More seriously, to pursue independence and break up our nation would be a disaster for the whole of our Union. The steady support of Westminster will be lost, and this at a time when oil revenues are declining. Our borders would melt away, our fishermen would lose out badly, and the nation’s defence capability would be lost. An open invitation for hostile nations to harass both Scotland and the United Kingdom.
I would like to send a plea to the electors Please, don’t let it happen. Open your eyes! Remember us, your friends south of the border. We love Scotland! Scotland needs the Union and the Union needs Scotland – for security, for prosperity, for company. Without the Union, Scotland is doomed.
W.Beesley
Ferndown
Interest in sleaze
So the PM and his government think the British people aren’t interested in the lies, the sleaze, the mismanagement, the waste of money, the poor agreement with the EU, the state of the NHS, the poor people in Northern Ireland threatened with the return of the Troubles of the 70s and 80s (remember them?), the inability to cover the cost of safe cladding while they work out why the person who put it on the buildings in the first place isn’t responsible ... and food banks? And this is just the start of a much longer list of things we aren’t interested in.
A vaccination programme that is successful should be a given in a country rich in talent, in energy and spirit (none of which came from this government) and should never be used to sweep away the real problems.
Judith Marris
Bath
Love of Scotland
I have to take issue with David Lindbergh’s letter, which states that Scottish people love living in Scotland. It appears that more than one million Scottish born people live outside Scotland. It is also estimated that over five million Scottish descendants live outside Scotland.
Keith Poole
Basingstoke
John Lewis visit
I am aghast at the recent infantile display by the opposition Leader, Keir Starmer fondling rolls of wallpaper in a department store.
Does this man not realise that there is a global pandemic threatening millions of lives in this country? Is he not aware of the Covid Precautionary Advice to shoppers that they must not handle goods on shop shelves, other than to purchase them? Can he not see that there are infinitely more important priorities in this country at the moment than ascertaining precisely who paid for some room decoration?
If this is the trivial level of the Labour Party leadership mentality, I for one will have to seriously reconsider my voting pattern at the forthcoming Welsh elections.
Ian McNicholas
Ebbw Vale
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