Treasury takes important first steps toward a resilient recovery, must be followed up by policy commitments in Budget

 

Reacting to the Chancellor of the Exchequer’s Summer Economic Update today, Signe Norberg, Public Affairs Manager of the Aldersgate Group, said: “The Government faces a significant challenge to the get the economy and employment going again, and in the words of the Chancellor, the UK must have “a green recovery with concern for the environment at its heart”. The UK has a huge opportunity to put the economy on track for a resilient and long-term recovery by aligning it with the UK’s climate and environmental goals [1]. The £3bn investment package focused on energy efficiency spending in 2020/2021 can support rapid and regionally spread out job creation, as well as deliver important social and environmental benefits by having better homes and driving cost-effective emission cuts. These benefits could be significantly amplified if similar support continues to be provided in the years ahead.”

Signe Norberg added: “Building on today’s positive first steps, long-term policy commitments now need to be made by the time of the Spending Review and the Autumn Budget in order to genuinely deliver long-term and transformative change. This needs to include fiscal incentives, clear regulatory standards to mandate high levels of energy efficiency performance in buildings, a phase out of petrol and diesel vehicle sales around 2030, a UK Emissions Trading Scheme with a carbon price in line with the UK’s net zero target and product standards to drive down the embedded carbon in industrial goods. [2]”

[1] On 12 June 2020, the Aldersgate Group published a policy briefing, Seize the Moment, setting out a wide range of nature restoration and low carbon projects which could deliver rapid job creation across multiple regions of the UK whilst also improving the resilience of the economy and putting the UK on track for its climate and environmental goals. The report is available here.

[2] The Aldersgate Group will be releasing on 15 July economic analysis commissioned from the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics. The report will highlight the key lessons learnt from recoveries from past financial crises, set out what a successful recovery plan should look like and examine what should be the role of environmental and climate issues within that.