Election 2010 -- Green manifesto commitments at a glance


This week saw the release of the three main parties’ election manifestos and
environmental commitments formed a central component of each. In fact, in many
areas the manifestos hammered home the admirable political consensus that has
developed around the low-carbon policies, with each party outlining broadly
similar plans for a new low-carbon infrastructure bank, green home loans,
ambitious renewable energy targets, and increased investment in clean coal
technology.



However, there were also crucial differences in the Parties’ philosophical
approach to delivering a low-carbon economy, and clear dividing lines around
some high-profile green policies, nuclear energy, Heathrow expansion and
environmental taxes.



BusinessGreen.com wades through the manifestos (so you don’t have
to) and offers an at-a-glance guide to the three main parties’ low-carbon
commitments:




Labour’s
"green recovery"



Philosophy:



"Labour’s environmental agenda reflects our values. Only active government
can shape markets to prioritise green growth and job creation. Environmental
sustainability cannot be left to individuals and businesses acting alone. We
believe that people have the right to a healthy environment. That means giving
everyone access to the beauty and amenity of natural places; we want to make it
easier to live in a sustainable way whatever your standard of living."



Politics:



While all the main parties share many green policy proposals, Labour’s
manifesto accuses the Tories of adopting an approach to the environment that is
"all about image".



The manifesto explicitly argues that Conservative reluctance to support
renewable energy projects, proposals to reverse planning reforms, and opposition
to the government’s interventionist industrial policy would "put Labour’s
low-carbon revolution in jeopardy".



It argues that only an interventionist government can drive the development
of low-carbon industries, but also positions Labour as pragmatic
environmentalists who are still willing to support the expansion of Heathrow
airport.



Policies:




  • Achieve about 40 per cent low-carbon electricity by 2020 and create 400,000
    new green jobs by 2015.

  • Introduce "pay as you save" green home makeover scheme and require landlords
    to insulate rented homes.

  • Move towards a "zero waste" Britain, banning recyclable and biodegradable
    materials from landfill.

  • Push for strong and binding international climate change treaty, and lobby
    EU to raise emission reduction target for 2020 to 30 per cent below 1990 levels.

  • From 2013 provide climate assistance for developing countries that is
    additional to commitment to provide 0.7 per cent of UK national income in
    overseas aid.

  • Develop new high-speed rail network.

  • Roll out smart grid and smart meters for all homes.

  • Ensure 15 per cent of UK energy comes from renewables by 2020.

  • Make decision on Severn tidal barrage plans early in next parliament.

  • Roll out new fleet of nuclear reactors.

  • Develop at least four CCS demonstration plants.

  • Ban unabated coal-fired power plants.

  • Promote community-scale renewable energy and district heat schemes by making
    it easier for community organisations, co-ops and social enterprises to provide
    energy services.

  • Introduce "recycle on the go" schemes.

  • Link together new protected areas of habitat; maintain the Green Belt;
    increase forest and woodland areas.

  • Continue to push for reform of common agricultural policy and appoint
    supermarket ombudsman to protect interests of suppliers.



Conservatives:
"vote
blue, go green
"



Philosophy:



"This is a Conservative vision for our future, and it is
based on Conservative values. We believe that it is our responsibility to create
a clean and healthy environment to pass on to our children. That is why we have
put green issues back at the heart of our politics and that is why they will be
at the heart of our government.



"Instead of using rules and regulations to impose a centralised worldview, we
will go with the grain of human nature, creating new incentives and market
signals which reward people for doing the right thing. Instead of pulling
bureaucratic levers from above telling people what they can’t do, we will
provide people with the information they need to make more responsible choices.
Instead of holding businesses back by imposing unfair retrospective stealth
taxes, we will unleash the power of green enterprise and promote resource
efficiency to generate thousands of green jobs. This is how we will live up to
our responsibility to be the greenest government in our history."



Politics:



The Conservative manifesto returns Labour’s criticism that it is only focused
on green rhetoric, accusing the previous government of "stark" failures in its
attempts to tackle climate change.



It highlights the UK’s poor performance in Europe’s renewable energy league
table and the fact that it has taken a recession to deliver deep cuts in carbon
emissions.



It also argues that "a succession of 11 energy ministers and eight
secretaries of state with responsibility for energy has left our policy muddled
and put our energy security at risk".



Finally, the Conservatives attempt to draw some dividing lines of their own
by committing to blocking the proposed expansion of Heathrow and making a pledge
to raise green taxes as a proportion of overall Treasury revenue.



Despite the ideological commitment to incentives and individual
responsibility, there are also a sizeable number of policy proposals that would
require government intervention to drive low-carbon investment.



Policies:




  • Support existing targets for renewable energy and emission reduction, and
    sign central government up to 10:10 campaign.

  • Increase the proportion of tax revenue accounted for by environmental taxes,
    while ensuring that any additional revenue from new green taxes is used to
    reduce the burden of taxation elsewhere.

  • Introduce an Emissions Performance Standard to limit the levels of
    greenhouse gases from power stations, potentially banning unabated coal plants.

  • Support rollout of new nuclear plants – provided they receive no public


    subsidy.

  • Create four carbon capture and storage demonstration projects.

  • Deliver an offshore electricity grid to support offshore wind farms and
    create at least two dedicated Marine Energy Parks.

  • Launch a green infrastructure bank and green saving scheme.

  • Give local authorities the power to establish new district heating networks
    which use biogas and other low-carbon fuels.

  • Allow communities that host renewable energy projects such as wind farms to
    keep the additional business rates they generate for six years.

  • Block proposed third runway at Heathrow and build high-speed rail link from
    the airport to London and the Midlands.

  • Reform air passenger duty to better provide incentives for operators to run
    fuller planes.

  • Launch "Green Deal" scheme, offering every home up to £6,500-worth of energy
    efficiency measures that will be paid back through energy bill savings.

  • Improve energy efficiency of appliances by adopting scheme similar to
    Japan’s "top runner" initiative, which bans the least efficient devices.

  • Retain Energy Performance Certificates to help people improve the
    environmental rating of their property.

  • Ensure labelling of GM foods and block any commercial planting of GM crops
    until and unless it has been assessed as safe for people and the environment.

  • Support reform of Common Agricultural Policy.

  • Introduce a voluntary Responsibility Deal with producers of waste, urging
    them to cut back on waste levels, and roll out incentive schemes to encourage
    this to happen.

  • Ditch pay-as-you-throw proposals, but put a floor under the standard rate of


    landfill tax until 2020 to encourage alternative forms of waste disposal.

  • Work internationally for strong and binding climate change agreement.



Liberal Democrats:
"A
green future
"



Philosophy:



"Liberal Democrats believe that protecting the environment
is one of the greatest challenges this generation faces. We must hand on to our
children a planet worth living on. That requires action across government – this
is everybody’s responsibility, not just one climate change minister’s. It is
because we believe concern for the environment is important in every part of
people’s lives that we have identified policies in every chapter of this
manifesto to protect the planet."



Politics:



The Lib Dems have taken a visibly different approach to environmental policy
by weaving it through every chapter of the manifesto – a tactic that has already
secured plaudits from a number of green groups.



The main political dividing line is the decision to ditch the planned rollout
of new nuclear reactors on the grounds that they are likely to prove more
expensive than renewables and energy efficiency measures. However, it could be
argued that plans for a green stimulus package are more detailed and ambitious
than the low-carbon strategies presented by the other main parties.



Policies:




  • Launch one-year job creation and green economic stimulus package funded
    through £3.1bn of public spending. Aim to create 100,000 green jobs.

  • Set up UK infrastructure bank to invest in low-carbon projects. Allow
    individuals to save with the new bank.

  • Invest £400m in upgrading shipyards to support offshore wind and marine
    energy industry.

  • Launch one-year scrappage scheme offering households £400 when they install
    double glazing, replace an old boiler or install microgeneration technology.

  • Launch green home loan scheme and target loans and grants to renovate
    250,000 unoccupied homes.

  • Increase investment in school energy efficiency.

  • Invest £140m in local council bus scrappage scheme, accelerating rollout of
    low-carbon buses.

  • Reject a new generation of nuclear power stations "based on the evidence
    nuclear is a far more expensive way of reducing carbon emissions than promoting
    energy conservation and renewable energy".

  • Block new unabated coal-fired power stations.

  • Set target to generate 40 per cent of electricity from renewables by 2020,
    raising to 100 per cent by 2050.

  • Strengthen Carbon Reduction Commitment scheme and require all businesses and
    government departments to report on carbon emissions.

  • Sign up government to 10:10 campaign.

  • Replace per-passenger air passenger duty with a per-plane duty (PPD),
    ensuring that air freight is taxed for the first time, and introduce higher
    rate of PPD on domestic flights where alternative forms of travel are available.

  • Oppose expansion of Heathrow and support major overhaul of railway network
    with addition of new lines and new rules to help cut fares.

  • Work internationally for strong and binding climate change agreement.

  • Work with EU to set a target to make all cars zero emission by 2040.

  • Set clear zero-waste targets, aiming to end waste being sent to landfill.

  • Hold an immediate Strategic Security and Defence Review (SSDR), including
    non-military challenges such as climate change.


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