Scotland 'failing' in tackling climate change

A report warns Scottish ministers must up their game when it comes to cutting emissions

Author: Paul ReillyPublished 7th Dec 2022
Last updated 7th Dec 2022

Scotland's "trend of failure" when it comes to meeting targets to reduce greenhouse gas emissions will continue without "urgent and strong action" from ministers, a report has warned.

Independent advisers the Climate Change Committee (CCC) noted that while Scotland had "ambitious" milestones - including the target of cutting emissions by 75% by 2030 - there was "no clear delivery plan on how they will be achieved"

Extremely challenging

The target of reducing emissions by that amount by the end of the decade goes further than the CCC advised - with the expert body saying in its latest report that "this remains extremely challenging".

While emissions fell in 2020, the CCC was clear that this reduction was "largely due to travel restrictions during the Covid-19 pandemic".

However, it warned that annual targets currently set for the rest of the 2020s will be "much harder to achieve as emissions rebound".

Failed targets to continue without urgent and strong action

The CCC, in its latest progress report to Scottish Parliament, noted: "Scotland has failed to achieve seven out of 11 of its targets to date.

"The trend of failure will continue without urgent and strong action to deliver emissions reductions, starting now."

As the report was released, Lord Deben, the CCC chairman said that, while Scotland had set "some of the most stretching climate goals in the world", achievement of these was "increasingly at risk without real progress" towards the annual targets already set by ministers.

The CCC report was clear that "Scotland is still not delivering on key milestones" in areas such as home energy efficiency and peatland restoration.

It stated: "A quantified plan is urgently needed. The Scottish Government urgently needs to provide a quantified plan for how its policies will combine to achieve the emissions reduction required to meet the challenging 2030 target.

"The plan must detail how each of Scotland's ambitious milestones will be achieved."

Falling behind rest of the UK

On the switch to electric vehicles (EVs), the report noted Scotland planned to end sales of new petrol- and diesel-powered vehicles by 2030 - with this going further than UK plans.

But the CCC said sales of EVs "are lower than the UK as a whole" and are "off track".

And while Scotland has the "laudable aim" of reducing the number of kilometres travelled by car by 20% on 2019 levels by 2030, the report described this as "challenging" adding current plans "lack a full strategy with sufficient levers to deter car use".

On energy efficiency in homes, meanwhile, the report said that there was a "lack of regulations and incentives in place to drive improvements to energy efficiency".

The report went on to state that while "Scotland has ambitions to decarbonise buildings much faster than the UK as a whole" there were "not yet adequate policies in place to deliver low-carbon heat and energy efficiency improvements at the required rate".

Although tree-planting rates in Scotland are higher than in the rest of the UK, the CCC said these had "plateaued" and were "off track" to meet the target of planting 18,000 hectares a year by 2024-25.

Peatland restoration rates are also below target, with the report saying these were at "less than half of Scotland's own target of 20,000 hectares per year" - with this target itself described as being "much less ambitious" than the CCC's recommended level of 45,000 hectares per year.

The report noted there were some policy areas reserved to Westminster which impacted on emissions, saying that "finding a way to cooperate effectively with the UK Government in these areas is key".

But it added: "For key sectors in which policy is significantly devolved, our indicators show that progress towards meeting these milestones is not happening fast enough, and policies and plans are not yet sufficient to speed things up to the required rate."

Climate campaigners react

Mary Church, the head of campaigns at Friends of the Earth Scotland, said the report "is a scathing judgement on Scottish Government progress towards meeting our legally binding targets".

She said: "The Scottish Government must urgently scale up its plans to cut climate pollution within the next decade."

Ms Church urged ministers to "abandon the dangerous fantasy that techno-fixes like carbon capture and storage are going to save the day and start focusing on the real solutions to the climate crisis".

She said this "means investing in public transport and improving our public spaces to take cars off the road, rolling out mass energy efficiency schemes and renewable heat, all of which will have the added benefit of tackling the cost of living crisis as well as cutting emissions".

Youngsters staging climate protest in Glasgow

Meanwhile, Fabrice Leveque, climate change lead at WWF Scotland, said there needed to be "urgent, ambitious new efforts to transform how we heat our homes, and new policies to reduce farming emissions" - adding that without these Scotland's claim to be a climate leader "is in jeopardy".

He insisted: "It's now time to have a laser focus on helping all of us in Scotland cut our emissions as fast as possible, bringing environmental, social and economic benefits to all."

Progress has been made says Scottish Government minister

Net Zero Secretary Michael Matheson said the report was "a timely reminder of the scale of the challenge faced by Government, industry and civil society if we are to reduce Scotland's emissions and play our role in limiting global warming".

He said: "We fully acknowledge it will require truly transformational action across our society and economy, driven by government, as part of a national effort to tackle the climate emergency.

"Progress has been made - Scotland is already more than half way to net zero - but we are now entering the most challenging part of the journey to date, with a need to halve our emissions again within the next eight years."

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