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National Forest for Wales among plans to achieve net zero emissions by 2050

09 Feb 2021 4 minute read
Forest

A National Forest for Wales is among plans set out by the government to achieve net zero emissions by 2050.

The First Minister Mark Drakeford announced that the National Forest, where a connected forest ecosystem will extend the length of the country, was part of a plan to “get there sooner” on the nations’ climate change goals.

14 sites that will be the starting point for the National Forest were picked out in November of last year.

The Welsh Government added however that for Wales to reach its target the UK Government also needed to step up to the challenge and ensure a swift, fair and equitable transition to a low carbon future.

Minister for Environment, Energy and Rural Affairs Lesley Griffiths said: “We were the first country in the world to declare a climate emergency, but now we will use the new science to make our long-held ambition of a Net Zero Wales, a reality.

“While we have set our intention to achieve this by 2050 in law today, we will continue to do all we can to get there sooner. The global climate outlook is grave, and we will not shy away from stopping harmful emissions being pumped into our atmosphere and heating our planet. Business as usual is not an option.

“As with Covid, climate change will impact us all, but the stark reality remains that our most vulnerable communities will be hit the hardest. The transition towards a Net Zero Wales must be fair and just, a green and clean future which means good quality jobs and leaves no communities behind.

“Recent flooding events have painfully reminded us the havoc our changing weather is already wreaking. The science is telling us events such as these will continue to increase and intensify as our world gets warmer.”

‘Punch big’

The Welsh Government today set out its legal commitment to achieve net zero emissions as it gets ready for the 26th United Nations’ Climate Change Conference of the Parties in November.

The move comes following a recommendation report by the independent Climate Change Committee (CCC) that revealed net zero emissions, previously thought unachievable and unaffordable by experts, was now possible with ambitious policy.

The new evidence from the CCC says greater reductions within the industrial sector will help achieve this goal, as a large proportion of Welsh emissions come from a small number of big emitters, such as Port Talbot steelworks.

The report also highlights the need for everyone in Wales to do their bit to drive emissions down, with more than half of the recommendations being partly or fully driven by societal or behavioural changes with a large reduction in the amount of energy and natural resources we use.

This means government, communities and businesses working together to change how we travel, shop and heat our homes, while switching to lower carbon diets, they said.

“While we are a small country, we punch big when it comes to doing the right thing,” Lesley Griffiths said.

“Wales was one of the worst recyclers in the world before devolution, and now it’s one of the best. We were central to the industrial revolution as we supplied the world with coal from our hillsides, but now we look to a future of green energy and jobs. We also banned fracking as we knew the risks to our environment and the safety to the people of Wales were far too high.

“Perhaps most importantly, we are the first country in the world to have enshrined in law a Future Generations Act. This means that any decision the government makes today must be the right thing for our children and grandchildren, and their children too.

“These ambitious new targets to make a Net Zero Wales is the right thing to do, but not the easiest thing to do. Through Covid we have shown a Team Wales effort that has saved lives and protected our NHS, and I am calling on everyone to use the same spirit to build the Wales we want for our future generations.”


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