The general election in Scotland is inevitably seen through the bifocal lenses of Brexit and independence, regularly morphed into a single telescope of ‘constitutional crisis’. But alongside thatย ever-present theme is the emergent consciousness of climateย breakdown.
With world leaders gathering in Madrid right now for the annual UN climate talks, particular attention is being put onย Scotland as the host of next yearโsย meeting.
While plenty of attention has been lavished on climate-related campaign promises across the UK, less attention has been paid to plans to deal with Scotlandโs particularย circumstances.
So, what are Scotlandโs parties promising regarding transitioning away from North Sea oil, addressing fuel povertyย and making a mark ahead of COP26 inย Glasgow?
Labour
Scottish Labour’s pitch is clear, claimingย โthe most radical, hopeful, people-focused, fully-costed plan in modern times.โ And the manifesto has tackling the climate emergency at itsย heart.
It claims to have a โยฃ100billion investment plan for Scotland,โ announcing that โthis is our chance to tackle the climate emergency, to end food bank use and to rewrite the rules of the economy so it works for everyone โ not just theย billionaires.โ
At the manifesto launch in the Gorbals, Glasgow, Scottish Labour leader Richard Leonard said: โThis battle for what kind of society we are is also about whether we tackle the climate emergency or we deny the climate emergency, which is not just about this generation but about futureย generations.โ
โAnd as we make the transition from the carbon economy to the net zero-carbon society, we ask the question โ do we have a plan, including jobs, or do we leave it to the forces of theย market?โ
Labourโs manifesto proposes a massive expansion of onshore wind power, which would see Scotland contributing at least 60 percent of the sectorโs capacity across Britain. It also promises 50,000 new โgreen jobsโ and a โwindfall taxโ on oil companies to ensure that โcompanies that knowingly damaged our climate will help cover theย costs.โ
Another stand-out policy is the idea to create a new UK National Energy Agency to own and maintain the national grid infrastructure, with a Scotland-specific operator with statutory responsibility for decarbonising electricity and heat and reducing fuelย poverty.
Read the Scottish Labourย manifesto.
Read moreย of DeSmog’s UK General Election 2019ย coverage
SNP
The SNP uses its manifesto to showcase the Scottish Government’s Climate Change Act, which it believes to be world-leading. โEarlier this year the CCC advised Scotland that Scotland could reach net-zero by 2045 – five years ahead of the UK,โ it pointsย out.
It promises that SNP MPs will demand the UK meetย its Paris Climate Agreement responsibilities and stick to future EU emission standards, regardless of its position within the EU.
The party also proposes a Green Energy Deal to encourage investment in renewable energy schemes, and promises โfully operational carbon capture utilisation and storage facilitiesโ, and support for EVs.
Both Labour and the SNP reference the need for a just transition for fossil fuel workers into new, green,ย industries.
Labour promises a new ยฃ250 billion โGreen Transformation Fundโ to finance that transition, while the SNP proposes establishing a Scottish National Investment Bank that it says will prioritise financing the zero-carbonย transition.
Conservatives
The Conservatives argue that โconservation is and always has been at the heart of Conservatismโ.ย The biggest spending commitment in the partyโs manifesto is to fix pot-holes in the road,ย however.
The party claims that it will deliver on target of net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050,ย establish a ยฃ500m Blue Planet Fund,ย use the ยฃ1 billion Ayrton Fund to develop affordable and accessible clean energy,ย build the first fully deployed carbon capture storage cluster by 2025,ย and support the development of hydrogen and nuclear fusionย energy.
Many of the pledges are UK policy re-fashioned into their Scottish manifesto, which contains just a page of text about โfighting climateย change.โ
Read the Scottish Conservativesย manifesto.
Liberalย Democrats
Theย Scottish Liberal Democratsโ manifesto has much to say on tackling climate change, however โ though itโs difficult to discern anything that is specific to Scotland. Indeed, their own coverage of theirย manifesto launch doesn’t mention the environment atย all.
The Liberal Democratsโ plans include an emergency programme to insulate all Britain’s homes by 2030 (the manifesto simply says the โUK government will work with the Scottish govt to provide the resourcesโ), and ensure 80 percent of electricity is generated by renewables by 2030 (Scotland produced 75 percent from renewables inย 2018).
The reluctance to devolve more power to Scotland fits with the thrust of the Lib Demsโ manifesto, which starts with: โStop Brexit. Stopย Independence.โ
As Scottish leader Willie Rennieย writes:ย
โTogether, the plans provide a long term, sustainable and successful Scotland, inside the UK. Central to this is the mounting evidence that the SNP are distracted byย independence.โ
โThe starting point is simple. It means no independence referendum. Fullย stop.โ
Read the Scottish Liberal Democratsโย manifesto
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Scottish Greenย Party
Unsurprisingly, the Scottish Greensโ manifesto is by far the boldest of the parties โ perhaps because the first past the post electoral system means they have no chance of getting an MP elected inย Scotland.
The Scottish Greens promise to โtransform the Scottish economyโ in the shape of its โGreen New Dealโ, which includes rewriting the countryโs City Deals to focus on the climate emergency, introducing a four-day week, and campaigning for Scotlandโs place inย Europe.
The party is not standing candidates in Dundee, Perth, Angus and North East Fife to allow the SNP the best chance of defeating theย Conservatives.
Scottish Greens co-leader Patrick Harvie boasted of his partyโs commitments while claiming other parties could not be trusted to address the climate crisis. He said, โother parties have made commitments to address this crisis in their manifestos, but their actions do not match their words,โ pointing to Labour opening a new coal mine in Cumbria, the Lib Dems voting against giving councils power to lower emissions, and the SNP taking cash from oil and aviationย companies.ย
Co-leader Lorna Slater said an independent Scotland, which the party supports, could be a leading light in climate actionย worldwide:
โOur Scottish Green New Deal reports have revealed the urgent action the Scottish Government could do now to tackle the climate emergency, to secure thousands of jobs, an integrated public transport system and warm homes forย all.โ
โBut with the powers held by Westminster, we could do so much more. This election is an opportunity to push for a written constitution and citizenโs assemblies, but as an independent European country, Scotland could be an agile leader in the global effort to tackle the climateย emergency.โ
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