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Change must be 'top of priorities' in UK |
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Written by Philip Foster
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Tuesday, 24 June 2008 |
Richard Lambert, CBI Director-General has warned politicians that the economic slowdown is no reason for them to get distracted from taking urgent action to tackle climate change and secure the UK's future energy supply.
Lambert said energy and the environment were at the top of business's long-term priorities.
Alternative energies like wind and solar were "an economic opportunity on a scale that has not been seen before", he added.
Business Secretary John Hutton will launch a consultation later in the week on the Government's renewable energy strategy to find a way for the UK to reduce its dependency on oil and gas.
Lambert said business supported the next phase of the EU's emissions trading scheme (ETS), but that it was important to get it right.
He said, "Getting to this point has been a huge achievement for Europe. Our ideas for the next phase of ETS, which kicks in after 2012, are intended to ensure Phase 3 of Emissions Trading delivers the tough carbon reductions we know we have to have and which are achievable. In doing this, the proposals provide a degree of certainty for business planning, show that emissions can be reduced without damaging competitiveness and support the growth of international carbon markets."
Changes to the planning system are crucial "if the UK is to have any chance of meeting its targets for reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 2020, and if we are to ensure that we are able to meet our energy security needs", Lambert said.
"To meet our climate change targets, we believe we may need several new nuclear stations consented by 2020, and over 40 large offshore windfarms. Put simply, we don't believe the existing planning system can deal with so many complex, controversial planning applications in time," he concluded. THE END. |
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 24 June 2008 )
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