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United Kingdom

Britain's Climate Action Plan Unlawful, High Court Rules (theguardian.com) 25

The UK government's climate action plan is unlawful, the high court has ruled, as there is not enough evidence that there are sufficient policies in place to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. From a report: The energy secretary, Claire Coutinho, will now be expected to draw up a revised plan within 12 months. This must ensure that the UK achieves its legally binding carbon budgets and its pledge to cut emissions by more than two-thirds by 2030, both of which the government is off track to meet. The environmental charities Friends of the Earth and ClientEarth took joint legal action with the Good Law Project against the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ) over its decision to approve the carbon budget delivery plan (CBDP) in March 2023.

In a ruling on Friday, Mr Justice Sheldon upheld four of the five grounds of the groups' legal challenge, stating that the decision by the former energy security and net zero secretary Grant Shapps was "simply not justified by the evidence." He said: "If, as I have found, the secretary of state did make his decision on the assumption that each of the proposals and policies would be delivered in full, then the secretary of state's decision was taken on the basis of a mistaken understanding of the true factual position."

The judge agreed with ClientEarth and Friends of the Earth that the secretary of state was given "incomplete" information about the likelihood that proposed policies would achieve their intended emissions cuts. This breached section 13 of the Climate Change Act, which requires the secretary of state to adopt plans and proposals that they consider will enable upcoming carbon budgets to be delivered. Sheldon also agreed with the environment groups that the central assumption that all the department's policies would achieve 100% of their intended emissions cuts was wrong. The judge said the secretary of state had acted irrationally, and on the basis of an incorrect understanding of the facts. This comes after the Guardian revealed the government would be allowing oil and gas drilling under offshore wind turbines, a decision criticised by climate experts as "deeply irresponsible."

Britain's Climate Action Plan Unlawful, High Court Rules

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  • Really, a judge referred to as "Mr Justice Sheldon"? Britain must be having one of it's "laughs" again.
  • Finally (Score:4, Insightful)

    by gosso920 ( 6330142 ) on Friday May 03, 2024 @06:44PM (#64446142)
    A sign of sanity from the court system.
    • I agree.

      I wish more countries, including the U.S. were held to stricter plans, but those with the wealth (companies) and the one's controlling those (the ultra rich), will put profit over the people/planet every-time by kicking the can down the road, or just lying to us, like they have always done e.g. tobacco doesn't cause cancer, climate change isn't real, plastic is fully recyclable (the last two are the same companies and ultra rich using the former lever). We just don't have the checks and balances i

  • The UK is near the bottom of the list of CO2 emissions for wealthy countries.

    Annual CO emissions (per capita) tonnes per person:

    Australia 15.0T
    USA 14.9T
    Canada 14.2T
    South Korea 11.6T
    Russia 11.4T
    Japan 8.5T
    China 8.0T
    Germany 8.0T
    Ireland 7.7T
    Norway 7.5T
    UK 4.7T

    • Where's France on that list? 4.76T according to a list shown on Wikipedia, using data from EDGAR/EU.
      The list in parent post must come from a different source because the list on Wikipedia shows UK at 5.00T.
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      France produces a lot of electricity from nuclear fission and that lowers their CO2 emissions. They could do better with technologies like grid scale storage because as it is now they run their nuclear power plants at low capacity factors because their nuclear power plan

  • Better just repeal the act then

If the aborigine drafted an IQ test, all of Western civilization would presumably flunk it. -- Stanley Garn

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