What are five things governments can do to help the environment

By Ed King

A leading business lobby group in the UK has called on the government to pursue the potential of the green economy.

What are five things governments can do to help the environment

CBI Director-General John Cridland. (Source: CBI)

John Cridland, director-general of the CBI said that there was no conflict between going for growth or going green and that this was being misrepresented as a “false choice”.

“The choice between going green and going for growth is a false choice. Green and growth do go together, and the statistics back this up. The UK’s low-carbon and environmental goods and services market is worth more than £120bn a year. That’s equivalent to more than eight per cent of GDP,” said Cridland.

Changes to government policy could generate an additional £20bn for the UK according to research by the CBI. The group said that governments should use policy to boost confidence and competiveness while decreasing complexity.

The group also issued ten steps for governments to boost green business – these were very UK-centric so we have distilled the key points for an international audience.

1. Maintain ambition: Clear and binding emissions targets send a signal to business that you are serious about backing the green sector

2. Support regional and international climate negotiations: We all need to move forward together to really ensure success. The CBI want the UK government to play an active role in developing the EU-Emissions Trading Scheme and ensuring the UNFCCC negotiations get back on track.

3. Establish clear market frameworks: Market signals must have stability and longevity. No business will make substantial investments if they think the government will change their mind at the first whiff of criticism.

4. Stimulate new markets: Work with business to get the best mix of incentives and regulation. We can’t force all high-emitting industries to change their ways, but if the incentives (and the penalties) are right they will start to change.

5. Cut Green Tape: We live in an increasingly complex world where measurements can (and are) made to excruciating degrees. Keep the regulations simple and there’s more chance everyone will comply.

6. Reflect and respect the value of all sectors: The UK still depends on a massive amount of coal to maintain electricity production (42% on latest figures). You can’t change this overnight – so work with those industries and provide them with ‘specific decarbonisation maps’ to make the transition less painful.

7. Build on your country’s strengths: Not every nation state will have the same tools. Some have a stronger manufacturing base, others finance or science. Don’t try and do everything – work with others to generate the best blend.

8. Capture more value from the green economy: Longer term planning and technology ‘mapping’ can ensure the green sector grows as an integrated and efficient part of the economy

9. Finance: An ever vital component that governments have great power over. Ensure mechanisms such as the UK’s ‘Green Investment Bank’ can raise money from the capital markets as soon as possible.

10. Skills: All governments need to address skills shortages. Many renewable organisations are desperate for engineers.

If targets were enough to beat the climate crisis, we would have cause for celebration. The UK, Norway, Sweden and France have written a target of net-zero emissions into law, and 15 others are considering similar legislation or have non-binding targets. Hundreds of cities, regions and individual companies have made similar pledges.

Arguments are raging about whether these targets are good enough. Close reading of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s reports suggests that developed countries need to reach net zero within ten to 15 years if they are to give developing countries some leeway. That’s long before the date most countries have committed to.

Yet this row masks a more fundamental truth: targets are, by definition, a statement of nothing more than intent. In and of themselves, they do not remove a single molecule of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

In fact, there is evidence to suggest that they may even be counterproductive. The UK was the first in the world to introduce binding carbon targets a decade ago – but governments have since dismantled or scaled back many climate policies in recent years. Independent government advisers the Committee on Climate Change have repeatedly warned that the UK is off track to meet future commitments.

Yet whenever government ministers are challenged on climate policy, their response is indignant. Of course, we are serious about tackling climate change, they say, because we have ambitious targets. By this logic, any policy can be countenanced – even if it moves emissions in the wrong direction. In the words of the independent think tank the Institute for Government, targets can be “a low-cost way for the government to give the appearance of vigorous action”.

What are five things governments can do to help the environment

After devoting only two of 97 sentences to the climate emergency in his opening statement outlining his priorities as UK prime minister, Boris Johnson recently insisted that climate change is at the ‘absolute core’ of his government’s actions. Michael Tubi/Shutterstock

If governments are serious about tackling the climate crisis, radical policies are needed to match radical targets. Here are five measures with immediate impacts that would put them on track.

1. A task for all departments

Responsibility for climate action should not be assigned to an individual ministry. The Prime Minister’s Office or the Treasury (and equivalent offices around the world) should be tasked with the job of coordinating climate action across all areas of government, requiring each ministry to demonstrate progress.

The UK’s transport ministry, for example, is currently able to assume that increases in transport emissions will be offset by reductions elsewhere in the economy. With the proposed setup, it would be required to show how its policies would contribute to emissions cuts.

2. Bring the public to the fore

The second is to involve and engage people in the transition to zero-carbon. My research has shown that politicians have attempted to impose climate policies through stealth, shying away from open discussion and assuming that experts know best. This is profoundly undemocratic, and likely to backfire.

Climate action should be seen as a constant negotiation between citizen and state – a social contract. Research shows that people are willing to make changes in their own lives if they see this as part of a wider national effort to cut emissions.


Read more: To tackle the climate crisis we need more democracy, not less


More use of participatory forms of politics, such as Citizens’ Assemblies, could help to develop climate strategies which engage, rather than ignore, the population. We also need to work closely with communities who would otherwise stand to lose from climate action, such as coal miners and oil workers, to give them a “just transition” away from carbon. That means comprehensive support, not just a vague promise of green jobs.

3. Symbolic policies

Third, and linked, governments should implement what public opinion expert Deborah Mattinson calls “symbolic policies”. These are policies with tangible impacts that also raise the political profile of climate action. They galvanise citizens and send businesses a clear message about what investment climate to expect in the future, catalysing radical, rather than incremental, change.

A right to generate and sell renewable energy at home or in the community might be one such policy. A ban on advertising petrol and diesel cars, which many countries are phasing out anyway, would be another. A green jobs guarantee, as proposed by the US’s Green New Deal, would also catch the eye. Finally, with careful messaging, personal and business carbon allowances could be both highly effective at reducing emissions and surprisingly popular.

4. Keep it in the ground

Fourth, a strategy for the climate emergency must make explicit and tangible commitments to the transition away from fossil fuels. It is clear that the global commitment to limiting warming to 1.5℃ requires us to leave most known fossil fuel reserves untouched. The banner-friendly activist slogan “Keep it in the ground” is an accurate representation of the best scientific evidence.

What are five things governments can do to help the environment

Grounded in science. Rena Schild/Shutterstock

Until now, most climate strategies have been silent on this point. The UK and Norway congratulate themselves on net-zero targets, yet both have plans to continue oil and gas extraction. Governments must impose a moratorium on fossil fuel exploration, end the £300 billion in tax breaks they give annually to fossil fuel industries, and use the spare cash to help workers and industries transition to a clean energy revolution.

5. Set carbon capture aside

Last, any national strategy must separate out the contribution of negative emissions technologies from its net zero targets. The theory is that carbon emissions that cannot be avoided will be counterbalanced by these technologies.

But, as research from myself and colleagues at Lancaster University show, relying on these technologies – whose feasibility is not yet known – distracts resources away from reducing how much carbon we emit. Creating distinct targets and funding for carbon capture will ground the sector to what it can realistically hope to remove from the atmosphere, and stop the wilder, unfounded promises that limit ambition for climate action.

I would never argue against setting climate targets. They are necessary – but far from sufficient. We must guard against politicians hiding behind distant and possibly empty promises, and demand climate policy that impacts the carbon ledger here and now.


What are five things governments can do to help the environment

This article is part of The Covering Climate Now series
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What is the government doing about the environment?

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Reduce, Reuse, Recycle..
Walk, Bike (run, skate, move yourself!).
Ride the bus to work (or carpool).
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Change a Light Bulb..
Buy a fuel efficient car (or hybrid vehicle).
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