In a fiery exchange at this weekโs Prime Ministerโs Questions, Labourโs Shadow Business Secretary Rebecca Long-Bailey told the government it was โrunning down the clock on ourย planetโ.
She said โthree current cabinet ministers have denied the scientific consensus on climate changeโ and pointed out that several of those vying to replace Theresa May as Prime Minister have โclose links with organisations and individuals promoting climateย denial.โ
So, who was Long-Bailey talkingย about?
Leadershipย Contenders
Borisย Johnson
Former Foreign Secretary and bookiesโ favourite Boris Johnson has rejected climate science a number of times over theย years.
In December 2015, following the signing of the Paris Agreement, Johnson wrote a column for the Daily Telegraph praising the work of notorious climate science denier and brother of the Labour leader, Piers Corbyn, who he called a โgreat physicist andย meteorologist.โ
โIn the view of Piers and his colleagues at WeatherAction,โ he wrote, โit is all about sun spots,โ adding: โWhatever is happening to the weather at the moment, he said, it is nothing to do with the conventional doctrine of climateย change.โ
Johnsonโs position has apparently changed since then, though, having recently come out in support of a โnet zeroโ by 2050 emissionsย target.
And during his stint as Foreign Secretary, he said he would โcontinue to lobby the U.S. at all levels to continue to take climate change extremely seriously.โ Whether he raised the issue in his phone call with Trump during his state visit to the UK remainsย unknown.
Johnson is nevertheless still closely tied to the UK‘s climate science denial network, having received a ยฃ25,000 donation from Terence Mordaunt, a director of the Global Warming Policy Forum, the campaign wing of the UKโs principal climate science denial group founded by Lord Nigel Lawson. First Corporate Shipping, which Mordaunt co-owns, donated to both Johnson and Hunt’s leadership campaigns, openDemocracy recently revealed.
Michaelย Gove
Another front-runner, Michael Gove, has made some bold statements on the need to tackle climate change since becoming Environment Secretary in 2017. Thatโs perhaps to shake off an image he obtained while Education Secretary as something of an anti-climate actionย advocate.
Gove gave a speech to environmental charity WWF shortly after his appointment as Environment Secretary in which he said he โdeeply regretted President Trumpโs approach towards the Paris Agreement on Climate Changeโ and has linked last summerโs heatwave to climate change. Like Johnson, he has also backed a โnet zeroโ by 2050 emissionsย target.
But while Education Secretary, back in 2013, Gove caused outcry when he announced plans to exclude climate change from the geography national curriculum. The Energy Secretary at the time, Liberal Democrat Ed Davey, later wrote that Gove โcouldnโt help playing to the Tory climate-scepticย audience.โ
A year later, Gove said he had โread with concernโ a report by Nigel Lawsonโs climate science denying group the Global Warming Policy Foundation (GWPF), which accused โactivistโ teachers of trying to turn pupils into โfoot soldiers of the green movement.โ A spokesperson for Gove said at the time: โSchools should not teach that a particular political or ideological point of view isย right.โ
Gove is linked to other pro-Brexit, free market thinktanks based in and around 55 Tufton Street, too. An undercover investigation last year revealed Shanker Singham the director of international trade and competition at the Institute of Economic Affairs, a stoneโs throw from Tufton Street, regularly speaks withย Gove.
Singham, a former Washington lobbyist who has โunparalleled accessโ to UK ministers, ties to multiple US organisations known for promoting climate science denial, including the Koch-funded Heartland Institute and the Heritage Foundation.
Gove is also a board member of the New Culture Forum, a group led by former UKIP London Assembly leader Peter Whittle which aims to change cultural debates they believe are dominated by โthe leftโ, which is based in 55 Tuftonย Street.
Andreaย Leadsom
Andrea Leadsom, perhaps the person who can be credited with firing the starting gun on the Tory leadership battle in earnest with her cabinet resignation, has a chequered past when it comes to action on climateย change.
Leadsom told the now defunct All Party Parliamentary Group on Unconventional Oil and Gas that when she took up her role as Energy and Climate Minister in May 2015 she had to ask whether climate change was real, being unsureย herself.
She said at the time that she was now โcompletely persuadedโ about the reality of climate change, however, and has announced that one of her priorities as Prime Minister would be to declare a โclimate emergency,โ arguing that the โclean growth technology sector is fast growingโ and could be โbigger than the whole financial services sector.โ Leadsom also supports reducing UK emissions to โnet zeroโ byย 2050.
Leadsom was something of an advocate for fossil fuels during her stretch at the former Department of Energy and Climate Change, though, where she enthusiastically worked to promote fracking in the UK, saying it was an opportunity โnot to beย missed.โ
In a meeting with coal and steel industry representatives in February 2016, she assured them that the planned phase-out of coal by 2025 was โvery much a consultation at this stageโ and that Carbon Capture and Storage technology โhas a potentially important role in the long-term decarbonisation of the UK.โ
And back in 2008, the American Legislative Exchange Council paid for Andrea Leadsom to visit Washington and Chicago to attend meetings with the fossil fuel funded lobbyย group.
Dominicย Raab
Raab was one of the first MPs to declare his intention to run in the leadership contest and has caused alarm with his suggestion of shutting down parliament to guarantee the UK leaves the EU on 31 October, with or without aย deal.
The former Brexit Secretary has close ties to a number of pressure groups advocating a โno dealโ Brexit, along with some of the UKโs most prominent climate scienceย deniers.
He previously served on the political advisory board of Leave Means Leave, alongside fellow Conservative MP Owen Paterson, who has frequently spoken at events organised by the Global Warming Policy Foundation, where his brother-in-law and hereditary peer Matt Ridley sits on the advisoryย board.
Raab has also written numerous articles for the Taxpayersโ Alliance website, which campaigns for a low tax economy and forms part of the pro-Brexit, anti-climate network of free market groups based in and around 55 Tufton Street.
Raab has, however, backed the proposed โnet zeroโ by 2050 emissions reductionย goal.
Jeremyย Hunt
Probably best known for introducing a controversial new contract for junior doctors during his time as Health Secretary, the now Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt is another candidate with a mixed record when it comes to climateย change.
Hunt supports a target of โnet zeroโ emissions by 2050 and, writing in The Observer recently, said he had โspent countless hoursโ on the UKโs bid to host the 2020 UN climate summit, COP 26, touting the conference as a chance to โuse our convening power for good on this most important ofย issuesโ.
And on an official visit to Africa in May, Hunt warned that climate change could have a โcatastrophic impact on hundreds of millions of people across Nigeria, the Sahel and more widely across Africa, and indeed the world, hitting the poorest and most vulnerable theย hardest.โ
It’s slightly surprising, then, that one of Huntโs major financial backers turned out to be Terence Mordaunt, a director of the climate science denying Global Warming Policy Forum, who has given ยฃ25,000 to Boris Johnson‘s leadership bid,ย too.
Hunt has also been a strong supporter of fracking in the UK, arguing in a post on his website that the โsafe development of shale gas will be good for jobs, good for our energy security, and help the UK to decarbonise itsย economyโ.
Steveย Baker
Baker has said he will stand in the Conservative leadership contest if none of the other candidates sign up to a no-deal Brexit plan drawn up byย Eurosceptics.
An arch-Brexiteer and former Brexit Minister, Baker wrote a post for ConservativeHome in 2010 entitled โThe greatest threat to civilisation is not climate change but bad economics.โ In the article, he said: โClimate science does appear to be subject to uncertainties and climate change appears to be a problem we face in the medium to longย term.โ
Following the 2015 general election, Baker co-founded Conservatives for Britain, an anti-EU pressure group within the Conservative Party which he currently co-chairs. Its president is Nigel Lawson, whose climate science denying Global Warming Policy Foundation is based at 55 Tufton Street.
As Brexit Minister, Baker also met regularly with Shanker Singham of the Institute of Economic Affairs, whose director Mark Littlewood admitted to an undercover reporter from Greenpeaceโs investigative unit last year that he had been used as a โslight shillโ to hide some of Singhamโs meetings with Baker.
ย
Other Cabinetย Members
Liamย Fox
International Trade Secretary Liam Fox insists he takes climate change seriously, tweeting in April that there is a โclear scientific consensus on climate change, which I fully respect.โ But he also has a patchy history of translating such words intoย action.
Fox appointed two trustees of climate science denial campaign group, the Global Warming Policy Foundation to his five-member โBrexit committeeโ in 2017: Lord Peter Lilley and Ruth Lea.
And in February he assured an oil and gas conference that they could rely on the governmentโs continued support: โWe must focus on a low carbon future but the simple fact is that for the moment, we do require fossil fuels to deliver secure and affordableย energy.โ
Fox has close ties to fossil fuel funded lobby groups advocating deregulation and promoting climate science denial in the US. He gave the 10th โMargaret Thatcher Freedom Lectureโ at the Heritage Foundation in 2018 and met with the Exxon-funded American Enterprise Institute during a 2017 trip to the US.
Foxโs Atlantic Bridge thinktank, which was forced to dissolve in 2011 following a Charity Commission investigation, also had a formal partnership with the American Legislative Exchange Council, known for pushing template bills across the US which undermine environmentalย protections.
Fox is not currently in the running for Conservativeย leader.
Philipย Hammond
Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond has not declared his intention to replace Theresa May, but could yet prove an important ally to manyย candidates.
Hammond may push for action on climate change at international finance meetings โ and has shown no signs of being a climate science denier โ but he provoked criticism from climate campaigners in a recent letter to the PM, saying the UKโs efforts to cut emissions to โnet zeroโ by 2050 could cost ยฃ1ย trillion.
The Shadow Energy and Climate Minister Alan Whitehead hit back calling the intervention a โcalculated attempt to delay or haltโ the target becoming law. Whitehead argues the figure is based on a โfundamental misreading of the costs of climate action against benefits, or indeed impacts of inactionโ, confusing government spending for investment which generates aย return.
And 10 Downing Street disowned Hammondโs analysis, saying the governmentโs plans would cost no more than the UKโs existing plans to reduce greenhouse gasย emissions.
Photo credit: Number 10/Flickr/CC BY–NC–ND 2.0 Updated on 08/06/2019 to include statement from Andrea Leadsom on climate emergency as well as support for net zero emissions goal, alongside Johnson, Gove and Raab. Updated again on 21/06/2019 to include news of Terence Mordaunt donations and section on Jeremyย Hunt.
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