Why Labour should be wary of waging a war on nature
Should Labour really value its economic ambitions over its environmental duty? | The Guardian

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A plane over houses near Heathrow Airport, west London.
30/01/2025

Should Labour really value its economic ambitions over its environmental duty?

Helena Horton Helena Horton
 

On the face of it, Rachel Reeves and Liz Truss have almost nothing in common. One is the Labour chancellor, the other a hard-right former Tory prime minister most recently seen courting Donald Trump stateside. While Reeves has taken a very cautious approach to fiscal policy, vowing to rule with an “iron fist”, Truss did the opposite; ignoring the experts to announce a series of unfunded tax cuts, crashing the economy and spectacularly torpedoing her short-lived premiership.

But listen to Reeves’ growth speech on Wednesday, and to other recent comments she has made, and you might think she had employed Truss as a ghostwriter. Gone are the days Reeves spent in opposition, vowing to be the “first green chancellor” and vowing that climate targets would be the heart of her policies. Now, she is pursuing growth at any cost.

More on that, after this week’s most important reads.

In focus

Chancellor Rachel Reeves as she delivers a speech on the country economic growth.

Reeves even went so far as to tell those at the World Economic Forum meeting in Davos last week that growth is more important than net zero – despite the UK having a legally binding target set in 2008 to reach net zero carbon emissions by 2050.

This puts into context her commitment to expand Heathrow, Gatwick and Luton airports – against the recommendations of the Climate Change Committee. If the expansions go ahead, it shows that, for this Labour government, economic growth certainly does trump net zero. This is also illustrated by government plans to massively expand artificial intelligence capacity in the UK, seemingly with little regard for the huge water and energy needs it is predicted the industry will need.

Farcically, when Reeves was asked by the Times whether she had a preference between bats and great crested newts, Reeves replied: “Neither, because I want growth.”

Liz Truss has made similar comments, criticising net zero as a drag on economic growth, branding nature charities an “anti-growth coalition” and planning to deregulate in investment zones, allowing for development that rode roughshod over environmental concerns. Similarly, the Labour government is looking at creating areas with fewer constraints on planning, where environmental laws have less heft.

They are also bringing changes to the planning system, which would mean developers can build without providing an environmental impact assessment for their project. Such assessments aim to stop developments damaging the environment, and make mitigation of any damage part of the planning consent. In future, however, developers may be given the go-ahead to build if they pay into a general nature restoration fund.

Keir Starmer also seems to be taking lessons from Truss. The prime minister vowed to weaken the powers the public have to bring judicial reviews regarding the environment when they think that an infrastructure project is breaking the law. As a former director for public prosecutions, Starmer should know that it is rare for the courts to hear cases that do not have any merit. But it appears he thinks judges, as well as fish, newts and environmentalists, are getting in the way of growth.

Recently, the prime minister singled out a veteran nature campaigner as an environmental “zealot” who was getting in the way of growth because of his two-year campaign to stop a road being built in Norfolk, accusing him of “self-righteous virtue signalling” and vowing to stop the courts from hearing such cases. But this is not an issue with the courts or judiciary – it’s the result of laws Starmer has voted for and campaigned to keep, such as the Environment Act 2021 and the EU-derived environmental laws put at risk by Truss in her short-lived premiership.

If Reeves and Starmer really want to clear a path for industrial development and economic growth at all costs, they will have to amend or repeal these laws. That would require their MPs to vote in favour of removing protections for beautiful landscapes and precious wildlife in their own constituencies.

This is perhaps why they are choosing to blame newts, judges and nature campaigners instead – another lesson they may have taken from Truss’s time in power was when she tried to force her MPs to vote in favour of fracking. They didn’t fancy causing uproar – and earthquakes – in their constituencies, and the ensuing rebellion and chaos was the nail in the coffin for her time as prime minister.

Though Starmer and Reeves have a huge majority, they should be wary of waging a war on nature. The British public and their MPs will not put up with it for long.

Read more:

The most important number of the climate crisis:
428.2
Atmospheric CO2 in parts per million, 28 January 2025
Source: NOAA

Climate hero – Juan Guillermo Garcés

Profiling an inspiring individual, suggested by Down to Earth readers

74-year-old Juan Guillermo Garces.

Born into a Colombian farming family, Juan Guillermo Garcés was encouraged to start fires. “Whoever was first to cut down the forest, whoever was first to destroy nature, would become the land’s owner,” according to governmental rules promoting the expansion of farming in his home country, he tells Anastasia Austin.

After a fire at 17 almost claimed the lives of Garcés and his brother, he had a change of heart. “In an attempt to undo the damage he caused in his youth, the 74-year-old created the Rio Claro nature reserve, a 3,000-hectare (7,400-acre) oasis teeming with wildlife. Today, Garcés’s reserve marks him as one of Colombia’s most successful environmental protectors,” Austin reports in this stunning profile, with photographs by Douwe den Held.

If you’d like to nominate a climate hero, email downtoearth@theguardian.com

Climate jargon – Overshoot

Demystifying a climate concept you’ve heard in the headlines

Greenland’s melting ice sheets.

The period of time in which the Earth’s temperature continues to rise above the 1.5C limit agreed in the 2015 Paris agreement. Modelling suggests this overshoot will last for years if not decades before the temperature stabilises at 1.5C.

For more Guardian coverage of climate mitigation, click here

Picture of the week

One image that sums up the week in environmental news

Atlantic Puffins fighting over sandeels on the Isle of May, Anstruther, Scotland, UK

Credit:Kay Roxby/Alamy

Atlantic Puffins fighting over sandeels, their favourite food, on the Isle of May, Scotland. This week the EU argued the UK’s ban on catching the tiny fish, celebrated by conservationists, amounts to discrimination against Danish fishers.

For more of the week’s best environmental pictures, catch up on The Week in Wildlife here

 
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