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Draft Climate Change Bill examined

Summary

The Report from the House of Commons Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee,'Draft Climate Change Bill' (HC 534-I), examines the proposed Climate Change Bill which published in March 2007 as a draft, 'Draft Climate Change Bill' (Cm. 7040).

The Committee finds that target setting alone cannot deliver policy objectives, but enshrining one in law will strengthen the Government's resolve to achieve it, ensure greater public accountability, and give confidence to the business community whose investment decisions are central to meeting the targets.

In addition, the Committee recommends a number of changes to the Bill, including:

  • Inconsistency in language, with 'UK carbon account' and 'UK carbon dioxide emissions' seemingly used interchangeably, should be addressed
  • There should not be an upper limit on the 2020 target (26-32% reduction in carbon dioxide emission), and the Bill should make provision for both the 2020 and 2050 targets to be revised, though only in an upward direction
  • The provision to amend a budget more than a year after the end of a budgetary period is seen as making nonsense of the concept of budgetary periods, and should be removed completely
  • The proposed Committee on Climate Change, rightly composed of experts, should not appear to give more representation to economic interests over environmental ones
  • The resources proposed for the Committee may prove inadequate
  • The impact of climate change on biodiversity should be added to the Bill.

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Law-Making Explained

This is a House of Commons Paper (HC 534-I): it is a Report from the House of Commons Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee.

Find out more about Select Committees.

How does it affect me?

If you are interested in climate change and how Britain proposes to tackle climate change, this affects you.

Have Your Say Now

Read more on the draft Climate Change Bill.

Find out more about the work of the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee.

Read more on climate change policy on the Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs website.


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