Climate and nature recovery law blocked from progressing in the Commons
A proposed law to compel the UK Government to help achieve climate and nature targets has failed to make progress in the Commons.
The Government successfully moved a motion to adjourn the second reading debate on the Climate and Nature Bill, meaning it is unlikely to be considered further in the current parliamentary session.
Liberal Democrat MP Dr Roz Savage (South Cotswolds) had tabled the Bill to require ministers to develop a strategy with yearly targets, in a bid to reduce carbon dioxide emissions, halt oil and gas exploration and imports, and reverse nature decline in a way which is “visibly and measurably on the path to recovery”.
Some Labour MPs offered their support to the principles being pursued by the Bill, but the Commons heard it would not be pushed to a second reading vote following “fruitful conversations” between Ms Savage and the Government on how to make progress.
Ms Savage said she would be working with ministers to find a way forward.
Bill
Green Party co-leader Carla Denyer clashed with the Lib Dems over the best way to approach the Bill, saying: “I understand the member for South Cotswolds has agreed not to push it to a vote today in exchange, it seems, for just a meeting with the Secretary of State for Energy and Net Zero (Ed Miliband) and a video, with an agreement to work together but with no specific commitments.”
Ms Denyer was heckled by Lib Dem MPs, with one heard saying: “Are we just making stuff up now?”
Lib Dem MP Pippa Heylings (South Cambridgeshire) defended Ms Savage’s approach to the Bill, adding: “She did receive commitments which will enable us to move forward, not at the pace we want but together and I’m very, very worried about the way in which she’s undermining the efforts that have been made to take this forward.”
Ms Savage later told Ms Denyer: “I very much believe we do need to have cross-party consensus with this so I have been willing and, in fact, eager to have conversations with the Government on this.
“I have been an environmental campaigner for the last 20 years, I have tried the placard waving, I have marched in the streets, that absolutely has an important role to play, but there is a reason I chose to come to this place and that is to take the policy approach.
“And as a third party the only way we can do that is by working with government.”
MPs voted 120 to seven, majority 113, in favour of a motion to adjourn debate on the Bill.
The debate was relisted for July 11 but it is unlikely to be considered further.
Labour MP Clive Lewis (Norwich South) earlier told the debate: “If we want to have a sustainable economy, a sustainable biodiversity, if we want to actually protect nature, do what’s right, to ensure future generations have something to live in and have food security, water security, then we need to make sure that this Bill or something like it becomes law and we need to make sure that we on this side do the right thing when it comes to climate and nature and what our constituents want to see.”
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Let me fix the headline…
‘Idiotic, ideological bill fails to survive contact with reality.‘
You’re welcome.
Not a fine moment for our beloved government. We normally don’t get hurricanes in the UK. But the storm today hit UK with sustained hurricane force winds. Earth is getting warmer, oceans are heating up and the climate is getting very energised. The time to take action went 25 years ago with barely a ripple. Taking next to no action now feels like crawling across a motorway.