UK climate and nature bill dropped after deal with Labour backbenchers

UK climate and nature bill dropped after deal with Labour backbenchers
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UK climate and nature bill dropped after deal with Labour backbenchers
Author: Helena Horton and Eleni Courea
Published: Jan, 24 2025 15:17

Ministers avoid internal party row by promising potential rebels they will have input into environmental legislation. Ministers have seen off a bill that would have made the UK’s climate and environment targets legally binding, after promising Labour backbenchers that they would have input into environmental legislation.

The deal avoids an internal row over the bill, which was introduced by the Liberal Democrat MP Roz Savage but had support from dozens of Labour MPs. Before Friday’s debate on the legislation, ministers insisted on the removal of clauses that would have required the UK to meet the targets it agreed to at Cop and other international summits. A Labour source said the bill as it stood would have forced the government to renegotiate its international climate change agreements.

At one point it was suggested that Labour MPs who voted for the bill would lose the whip, but a deal was struck late on Thursday and the bill’s Lib Dem and Labour sponsors agreed there would be no vote. There is consternation among some in the Labour party about the chancellor Rachel Reeves’s recent comments that she would prioritise economic growth over net zero, with one Labour MP saying during the debate that “there is no growth on a dead planet”.

Supporters of the bill told the Guardian that Ed Miliband, the energy secretary, had made concessions to Labour backbenchers. These included making a statement on government progress towards international climate and nature targets within six months, a consultation with the bill’s supporters about forthcoming environmental legislation, and more meetings between Miliband and MPs who are concerned about the climate crisis.

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