VoteClimate: Fabian Hamilton MP: Climate Timeline

Fabian Hamilton MP: Climate Timeline

Fabian Hamilton is the Labour MP for Leeds North East.

We have identified 30 Parliamentary Votes Related to Climate since 2010 in which Fabian Hamilton could have voted.

Fabian Hamilton is rated Good for votes supporting action on climate. (Rating Methodology)

  • In favour of action on climate: 21
  • Against: 1
  • Did not vote: 8

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Fabian Hamilton's Climate-related Tweets, Speeches & Votes

We've found the following climate-related tweets, speeches & votes by Fabian Hamilton

  • 05 Nov 2024: Tweet

    ???????? It was a pleasure to welcome the Deputy Prime Minister of Saint Lucia to Parliament. Caribbean and Commonwealth countries are key partners in our battle against climate change and tackling inequality. Our historic relationship is vital to the future of the region. https://x.com/FabianLeedsNE/status/1853789892574142467/photo/1 [Source]
  • 11 Sep 2024: Tweet

    ????‍♀️ Delighted to host the APPG Cycling & Walking event on active travel. It was a pleasure to welcome @DameSarahStorey to Parliament for an inspiring evening of discussions around how we get young people cycling, in the interests of their health and tackling climate change. https://twitter.com/FabianLeedsNE/status/1833814300802040009/photo/1 [Source]
  • 30 Jul 2024: Tweet

    Tackling Climate Change and Improving Public Health: As a keen cyclist, I’m passionate about active travel. Not only is cycling and walking vital for our physical and mental wellbeing, but active travel also helps to reduce carbon emissions and clean up the air we breathe. [Source]
  • 15 Jul 2024: Tweet

    It was a pleasure to be back at St Paul's Primary this morning. The students never fail to impress me with their knowledge and brilliant questions about our political system, climate change and education. Thank you to the teachers and school staff who do a fantastic job. https://twitter.com/stpaulscps1/status/1812784405619802596 [Source]
  • 02 Jul 2024: Tweet

    ???? Delighted to visit Allerton High School to speak with students about the upcoming General Election. I’m always impressed by the depth of enthusiasm for political issues such as climate change when I visit our local schools. Our future is bright in North East Leeds! https://twitter.com/FabianLeedsNE/status/1808071142030110736/photo/1 [Source]
  • 27 May 2024: Tweet

    @DJCockburn12 Thank you David. Tackling climate change has been a longstanding passion and priority of mine. I’ve consistently voted to protect our environment in parliament. If you’d like to email me to discuss further, please do - campaign@leedsne.co.uk. https://www.theyworkforyou.com/mp/10256/fabian_hamilton/leeds_north_east/divisions?policy=6887 [Source]
  • 08 Mar 2024: Tweet

    Great to speak with BikeBiz about my campaign to restore road justice for cyclists. Active travel is vital to our health and fight against climate change. As co-chair of @APPGCW, I will continue to urge the government to reinstate a seperate budget for cycling and walking. https://twitter.com/FabianLeedsNE/status/1766064950873591994/photo/1 [Source]
  • 04 Mar 2024: Tweet

    ???? Delighted to speak with year 6 students at St Paul’s Primary School. There were some brilliant questions about climate change and my role as their local MP. Our future is bright in North East Leeds! https://twitter.com/FabianLeedsNE/status/1764582870088126879/photo/1 [Source]
  • 28 Feb 2024: Tweet

    ???????? Great to meet with the Colombian Ambassador in Parliament to discuss our shared goals under President Petro of social justice and tackling the climate emergency. It’s up to Labour to restore the UK’s relationship with Latin America after 14 years of Tory neglect. https://twitter.com/FabianLeedsNE/status/1762808726321320201/photo/1 [Source]
  • 28 Feb 2024: Tweet

    RT @MCIATweets: MCIA's A Licence to Net Zero campaign to simplify the licensing regime for powered light vehicles is gathering momentum and… [Source]
  • 22 Feb 2024: Tweet

    Our relationship with Colombia is absolutely vital to our fight against climate change and the protection of human rights in Latin America. Labour is taking the lead where the Tories have neglected for the last 14 years. https://twitter.com/davidlammy/status/1760695616659718647 [Source]
  • 20 Sep 2023: Tweet

    Ditching our country’s commitments to tackling the Climate Emergency sends a worrying signal to our international partners. Rishi Sunak has delivered the worst cost of living crisis in generations and will now add billions in costs to families and damage investor confidence. [Source]
  • 07 Sep 2023: Tweet

    ???????? Feliz Dia da Independência, Brasil! It’s vital that the government helps to unlock Brazil’s economic, cultural and trading potential by working with President Lula to tackle chronic inequality and the climate emergency. [Source]
  • 5 Sep 2023: Parliamentary Speech

    The hon. Member for Dundee West reminded us that July 2023 was the hottest month in history, and said that there is an urgent need for climate finance to fight climate change and that at COP27 an agreement was made on loss and damage finance. He said that financial redress to countries worst affected must be new and additional finance, not redirected from existing budgets. I do not think anybody can disagree with that. He also reminded us that by 2050 it is estimated that there will be 1 billion migrants looking for somewhere else habitable to live because of climate change— [ Interruption. ] Will they all, as the hon. Member for Dundee West asks from a sedentary position, be coming to the UK? Some might argue that; I doubt it very much, but they will be travelling across the globe, seeking refuge. It is important that we stop that happening in the first place. That would be at least one answer to the small boats challenge.

    If nothing is done to mitigate climate change, it will have a devastating effect on human livelihoods. The hon. Member for Dundee West said that loss and damage funding is needed now. He was followed by an extremely powerful speech from my hon. Friend the Member for Rotherham (Sarah Champion), the Chair of the International Development Committee, which I am glad still exists even if the Department has been abolished, because we need to be reminded that development is not just a luxury. It is not something that we cannot afford to do; it is something we have to do, and in the interests not just of the most vulnerable across the world, but of all of us—even in this country. Prolonged drought, she said, in sub-Saharan Africa has put many into further food poverty, and the International Development Committee produced work on the impact of climate change, loss and damage.

    We then heard from my hon. Friend the Member for Brentford and Isleworth (Ruth Cadbury), who also gave a very powerful speech, on an issue that she is passionately committed to. She mentioned her Quaker faith. In my Front-Bench role over these last few years, I have always found the Quakers to be hugely supportive, not just in fighting climate change but in peace and disarmament, the principal role that I currently hold. Sometimes, she said, it seems that charities are ahead of Governments in financing the cost of climate change. She asked what we can do in the United Kingdom to export clean green energy—a very good question, it seems to me.

    We then heard from my hon. Friend the Member for Liverpool, Walton (Dan Carden), who has been elected president of the Inter-Parliamentary Union’s forum of young parliamentarians, which is an incredibly good position from which to campaign for something so vital to all people on earth, but especially younger people. He said that it was a profound injustice that those least responsible for the causes of climate change suffer the greatest damage. It should be the polluters who pay; I do not think anybody could disagree with that.

    Every time I visit a school, the first and most powerful question that I am most frequently asked, as I am sure other Members are—everyone else is nodding—is: “What are you going to do to stop the climate crisis?” Young people are going to inherit the world we leave them. They continuously, repeatedly tell us to do something about it. I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Liverpool, Walton (Dan Carden) on his election.

    I thank my hon. Friend for that intervention, because that is exactly the point. I am now privileged to have two grandsons, the youngest of whom is three and a half years old. He is not quite knowledgeable about climate change yet, but the seven-year-old is. It is something they study at school, and my hon. Friend is absolutely right. At every primary school that we visit—we all do it—the first thing they raise is: “What are you going to do to stop this planet becoming uninhabitable because of our own actions and history?” We have to answer to them. They will inherit the Earth, not us.

    My hon. Friend the Member for Liverpool, Walton went on to say, as other Members did, that Africa will be the biggest continental victim of climate change globally, and—as others also said—that loss and damage support is in our own self-interest.

    I again thank the hon. Member for Dundee West for securing this debate. As we know, the climate emergency is the greatest challenge the world faces. Where are the Government Members, who should also be talking about this? The UN has warned that our planet is on course for a catastrophic 2.8° of warming, in part because the promises made at international climate negotiations have not been fulfilled. As we know, this would have devastating consequences for our natural world, and dangerous and destabilising effects on all countries, not least, as I think the hon. Member and my hon. Friend the Member for Rotherham mentioned, many of the islands of the Caribbean. Indeed, the CARICOM ambassadors have lobbied me as shadow Minister for the Caribbean, which is one reason I am winding up on behalf of the Opposition today.

    This will end up, of course, hitting us in the UK, too. We are seeing the effects already. Global heating will hurt us all. But the truth is that developing countries and people living in poverty are the most exposed to the worst consequences of the climate emergency. At COP27 in Egypt last year, the issue of loss and damage was front and centre of the discussions. Like the UK Government, we supported the recognition of the issue of loss and damage at COP27. The agreement to create a new fund was an important step forward in recognising the consequences of the climate crisis for the world’s most climate-vulnerable countries.

    This is a matter of solidarity, and the reality is that those most likely to be affected by climate change are the least able to afford to adapt to it. Every speaker today has made that point. The UK Government already support poorer countries to cut emissions and to adapt to climate change. Loss and damage, however, is about coping with its disastrous effects. This is not about mitigating or preventing; it is about helping the poorest countries to cope with the effects that have already happened.

    Supporting poorer countries is not only the right thing to do, but in our self-interest. We need all countries to act on climate and reduce their emissions and the destabilising effects of climate breakdown, which will end up coming over here, including, for example, in the risk of climate refugees, as we said.

    It is now 14 years since a promise of $100 billion of finance was made to developing countries to help them to fight the climate crisis. There is growing recognition of the urgent need to reform how multilateral development banks and the international finance system can support climate action and unlock resources. Earlier this year, there was a major summit of world leaders on a new global financial pact, hosted by President Macron, but the Prime Minister chose not to bother turning up.

    We now hear that the Prime Minister is not even planning to attend the UN General Assembly this year, where climate change will be top of the agenda, as it should be. That is a lamentable and short-sighted snub, an illustration of how the Government are squandering Britain’s potential for international leadership. That comes as the Government’s statutory climate advisers warned this month that the Government are missing their targets on almost every front. They said:

    The Minister of State, Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office, the right hon. Member for Sutton Coldfield (Mr Mitchell), has committed to publishing this year how the Government will meet their £11.6 billion climate finance target. During recent FCDO questions in the House, he said that he would do so “probably in September”. I therefore press the Minister present today on whether he is still committed to that and whether he will publish the ODA allocations for international climate finance in 2022-23 and 2023-24.

    We need a Government who can step up on climate action, delivering cheap, home-grown zero-carbon power at home so that we have the credibility to pressure other countries to fulfil their obligations and play their part. A Labour Government would put addressing the climate crisis at the heart of our foreign policy—every single foreign policy. Central that will be Labour’s proposed clean power alliance of developed and developing nations committed to 100% clean power by 2030, just over six years away. That will be a positive version of OPEC, positioning the UK at the heart of the single most significant technological challenge and opportunity of the century. Alongside that, we will push for climate action to be recognised as the fourth pillar of the UN, increase our climate diplomacy in key states and work with international partners to press for a new law of ecocide to prosecute those responsible for severe, widespread or long-term damage to the environment.

    For the sake of every human being on the planet, all the creatures that live on this planet and all of our children, including my two grandsons, Britain should never be a country that absents itself from the world stage, particularly not when it comes to the climate crisis—the biggest long-term issue we face. A Labour Government would certainly once again lead at home and abroad.

    Full debate: Climate Finance: Tackling Loss and Damage

  • 05 Sep 2023: Tweet

    Britain should never be a country that absents itself from the world stage, particularly not when it comes to the climate crisis. Under the Tories, we have a Prime Minister that doesn't bother to show up to talks. Under Labour, we would lead at home and abroad once again. https://twitter.com/FabianLeedsNE/status/1699080089340612788/video/1 [Source]
  • 22 Jun 2023: Parliamentary Speech

    We must of course champion those many excellent British companies that do good work abroad—there are many—but it is also right that we hold them to account for any wrongdoing. Given the tragic stories and experiences we have heard about today, does the Minister agree that British companies should be held to account in British courts for their actions across the world? No company should be able to greenwash its image by painting itself as a net zero leader while at the same time mining the minerals needed for the energy transition in the way that some have done. They simply cannot give with one hand and take away with the other.

    Full debate: Mariana Dam Disaster

  • 8 Mar 2023: Parliamentary Speech

    Our country has a long-standing and historic relationship with the Caribbean. Our friendship with our Caribbean partners and allies is rightly based on mutual respect, trust and shared values, which is especially true for those nations that are members of the Commonwealth. It is really important that we continue to nurture these relationships as Caribbean countries attempt to tackle the existential threats posed by climate change and widespread inequality, and it is vital that the UK plays its part through the United Nations and other international bodies to help ensure that people in the Caribbean can live prosperous lives, free from the threats of violence and poverty.

    I turn now, as the hon. Member for Glasgow North (Patrick Grady) did in his speech, to the crisis engulfing Haiti. As one of the poorest countries in the world and the poorest in the western world, as the hon. Member said, Haiti already faces a barrage of socioeconomic problems, alongside the threat posed by climate change. Labour supports the Haitian people in trying to restore political legitimacy to their country and in trying to bring the dreadful wave of gang violence and kidnappings to an end. There are over 200 gangs operating as the de facto authorities in Haiti, which is having a severe impact on the lives of all the Haitian people, as well as destroying their already significantly limited economic prospects.

    Full debate: Financial Security and Reducing Inequality in the Caribbean: Government Role

  • 10 Jan 2023: Tweet

    A disgraceful waste of money showing that Rishi Sunak is out of touch and does not take the Climate Emergency seriously. If only the Conservatives could get the trains to run on time. https://twitter.com/PippaCrerar/status/1612786109288939520 [Source]
  • 07 Nov 2022: Tweet

    ???????? Brazil can become a key player in the fight against climate change. But the UK’s relationship with the rest of the world has suffered because of the chaos that the Conservatives have presided over. With @LulaOficial, the UK must take the opportunity to engage with Brazil. https://twitter.com/TheHouseMag/status/1589602773745766400 [Source]
  • 07 Nov 2022: Tweet

    RT @TheHouseMag: "Lula’s commitment to attend COP27 also serves as a timely reminder of Rishi Sunak’s failure of leadership on climate issu… [Source]
  • 27 Oct 2022: Tweet

    RT @Ed_Miliband: This is a massive failure of leadership We were the COP26 hosts and now the UK PM will be missing in action What Rishi S… [Source]
  • 19 Oct 2022: Vote

    Ban on Fracking for Shale Gas Bill - Pro-climate vote: Aye - Their vote: Aye
  • 25 Sep 2022: Tweet

    RT @DavidLammy: The climate crisis is the biggest challenge the world faces. It is not a distant threat, but here today, devastating the li… [Source]
  • 06 Sep 2022: Tweet

    RT @CatherineWest1: The catastrophic flooding in Pakistan is a stark reminder of the challenges posed by climate change. As well as provi… [Source]
  • 30 Aug 2022: Tweet

    This is yet more proof of the climate emergency and it’s extremely worrying that Liz Truss has failed to make any significant commitments to tackling it during the Conservative leadership contest. 3/3 [Source]
  • 26 Mar 2022: Tweet

    Pleased to support @wwf_uk at #EarthHourUK. We must do everything possible to support a net-zero future for the sake of our children and every living creature on our planet. https://x.com/FabianLeedsNE/status/1507809618981838849/photo/1 [Source]
  • 18 Feb 2022: Tweet

    Great to visit Chapel Allerton Primary School this morning to speak to Year 5 about climate change, after many of them wrote to me to express their concerns for our planet. Delighted that our young people are taking such a keen interest in the most pressing issue of our time. https://x.com/FabianLeedsNE/status/1494709767599792131/photo/1 [Source]
  • 5 Jan 2022: Parliamentary Speech

    The hon. Member for Strangford (Jim Shannon), in his typically excellent way, told us about the importance of trees—emphasising something we already know—in combating climate change and oxygenating the air that we breathe every day. The UK itself is seriously lagging behind in reforestation and we must seek protection for indigenous tribes in the Amazon. The hon. Gentleman’s constituents, like all of ours, are extremely concerned at the hourly destruction of the forests.

    We then heard an excellent summary from the SNP spokesperson the hon. Member for Dundee West (Chris Law). The destruction of trees and other plants in the Amazon is horrifying, and we must not allow it to continue if the world is to successfully tackle climate change. Just two months after President Bolsonaro signed an agreement at COP26 to end deforestation by 2030, deforestation has hit its highest level in 15 years and continues to go largely unabated. It is clear to me and to all of us that the Brazilian Government’s position is inherently contradictory, with President Bolsonaro continuously encouraging mining and agriculture in the Amazon and trying to pass legislation that allows commercial developments on protected land. Alongside that, his attempts to offer financial incentives to the ancient indigenous tribes to develop their land in the rainforest into soy plantations is completely unacceptable.

    Britain’s place in the world depends on its ability to meet the new challenges the Earth faces. It cannot afford to drag its feet on climate change and the deforestation of the Amazon. When will the Government match the pledges of our allies in Europe, who have acted both on illegal and legal deforestation, not only in the interests of bringing down carbon emissions, but also in protecting species under increasing threat of extinction?

    We are facing a climate emergency. It is time that the Government properly used the UK’s formidable diplomatic influence to challenge President Bolsonaro on the deforestation of the Amazon. The Government’s current proposals are far too weak. It is clear to the Opposition that the Government do not view tackling climate change as the foremost priority of its international and foreign policy after they agreed a trade deal with Australia that had absolutely no environmental or climate safeguards. The UK has a huge part to play in the fight against climate change, and the deforestation of the Amazon is a clear example of where we in this country should be at the forefront of this fight.

    Full debate: Deforestation in the Amazon

  • 05 Jan 2022: Tweet

    The UK must play its part in the fight against climate change and the deforestation in the Amazon is a clear example of where we should be at the forefront. The Conservatives have handed President Bolsonaro a loophole to continue destroying the world's largest rainforest. https://x.com/FabianLeedsNE/status/1478731487675662338/video/1 [Source]
  • 01 Nov 2021: Tweet

    RT @Keir_Starmer: The UK is hosting the biggest ever conference of international leaders on the climate crisis. It's an opportunity our wo… [Source]
  • 14 Oct 2021: Tweet

    RT @Ed_Miliband: Today I set out how Boris Johnson and his government can make Cop26 in Glasgow the success it needs to be, even at this la… [Source]
  • 05 Aug 2021: Tweet

    RT @Keir_Starmer: We need action now, not empty promises. Labour’s Green New Deal would tackle the climate crisis and create a fairer and… [Source]
  • 07 Jun 2021: Vote

    Advanced Research and Invention Agency Bill — New Clause 1 - Human Rights Abuses - Pro-climate vote: Aye - Their vote: Aye
  • 05 Jun 2021: Tweet

    RT @UKLabour: Today is #WorldEnvironmentDay. We can, and we must do more to protect our planet. Labour will tackle the climate emergency… [Source]
  • 26 May 2021: Vote

    Environment Bill — New Clause 24 - Prohibition on burning of peat in upland areas - Pro-climate vote: Aye - Their vote: Aye
  • 22 Apr 2021: Tweet

    If we are to tackle the Climate Emergency, we must demand far more action from our Government. Actions not words m… https://t.co/fX1Fxb1HQ1 [Source]
  • 20 Apr 2021: Tweet

    RT @CatherineWest1: This is a year of immense opportunity for British leadership, particularly on the climate emergency. During Foreign O… [Source]
  • 05 Mar 2021: Tweet

    RT @LabourList: "As the world continues to battle Covid and climate change, the issues of multilateral disarmament and non-proliferation of… [Source]
  • 4 Mar 2021: Parliamentary Speech

    I would like to begin my remarks by welcoming the Chancellor’s announcement that the national infrastructure bank will be based in Leeds. Although that is good news for the Leeds economy, and for jobs in the city and its region, the Government really need to provide clarity on how they will ensure that the bank cannot be used to fund highly polluting projects and that it will fund only renewable-energy based infrastructure that will boost green jobs and ensure it directly addresses the imbalances between the north and the south in that sector. Sadly, yet again, there was no new investment for green recoveries in key industries, including automotive, aerospace and steel. After the mishandling of the pandemic and the economic disaster that accompanied it, a £30 billion green economic recovery fund is now vital in order to create at least 400,000 secure jobs in clean industries.

    It is also disappointing that the green homes grant did not feature in the Chancellor’s remarks yesterday. With more than two thirds of homeowners said to be interested in the grant, the Government have squandered the chance to send a message to the world that we are a leading force in the battle against climate change. If they were serious about global Britain, they would start by throwing their weight behind initiatives that lower people’s bills and save the planet at the same time. We have an unprecedented opportunity in this country for a post-covid green revolution, which could generate thousands of jobs across the whole of the United Kingdom, but, once again, this Government have offered more of the same short-term fixes; it is business as usual and it is simply not good enough.

    Following the last decade of cuts to our public services and a crippling lack of investment, the very foundations of our economy have been weakened. Yet again, this Budget does nothing to resolve the concerns of those working in two or even three jobs just to make ends meet, and it does nothing to solve the housing crisis. The pandemic has shown us what happens when we do not properly fund our NHS. We simply cannot afford to make the same mistakes again, whether in social care or housing, or on the climate emergency.

    How can we trust this Government on the economy? They spent £22 billion on a test and trace system that did not work for months, £2 billion on outsourced contracts that did not deliver, and £7,000 a day on management consultants. After the past year, the NHS and social care should have been at the very heart of the Budget. There are no plans for jobs, no plans to tackle the climate emergency and no plans for the future. The people of our country have sacrificed so much over the last year. They deserve far better than this wretched Government.

    Full debate: Income Tax (Charge)

  • 03 Mar 2021: Tweet

    RT @LeedsCC_News: By 2023, we'll have installed external wall insulation to nearly 1800 council homes since declaring a climate emergency.… [Source]
  • 16 Jan 2021: Tweet

    RT @lisanandy: As the host of both G7 and COP26, this year will be decisive for UK diplomacy on climate change https://t.co/cvuqAL5aIN [Source]
  • 13 Jan 2021: Vote

    Financial Services Bill — Schedule 2 - Prudential regulation of FCA investment firms - Pro-climate vote: Aye - Their vote: Aye
  • 26 Nov 2020: Tweet

    On this day in 2008, the Labour Government introduced the Climate Change Act. But the Conservatives are failing to… https://t.co/KyPYx0GZcP [Source]
  • 16 Nov 2020: Vote

    Pension Schemes Bill [Lords] — Clause 124 - Climate change risk - Pro-climate vote: Aye - Their vote: Aye
  • 10 Nov 2020: Tweet

    We need a Green Economic Recovery to: ✅ Create 400,000 new, clean jobs ✅ Tackle the climate emergency and the job… https://t.co/UxfUghDwL8 [Source]
  • 16 Oct 2020: Tweet

    It’s fantastic to see young people leading the way in the campaign against climate change, especially locally. Es… https://t.co/vYrqMBMPRM [Source]
  • 12 Oct 2020: Vote

    Agriculture Bill — After Clause 42 - Contribution of agriculture and associated land use to climate change targets - Pro-climate vote: No - Their vote: No
  • 29 Sep 2020: Vote

    United Kingdom Internal Market Bill — New Clause 6 - Economic development: climate and nature emergency impact statement - Pro-climate vote: Aye - Their vote: Aye
  • 22 Apr 2020: Tweet

    For several decades, Climate Change has posed the largest threat to human civilisation. After the Coronavirus cris… https://t.co/du7nEquq8F [Source]
  • 05 Feb 2020: Vote

    Transport - Pro-climate vote: Aye - Their vote: Aye
  • 04 Feb 2020: Tweet

    RT @EmilyThornberry: Today in the House, I challenged the government on Boris Johnson's hypocrisy over climate change: talking about tackli… [Source]
  • 28 Jan 2020: Parliamentary Speech

    The hon. Gentleman made some important points. The world faces its greatest challenge in trying to preserve this extraordinary area of our planet. He said that unless something is done about climate change, we will suffer hugely—a point also made by the hon. Member for Sleaford and North Hykeham (Dr Johnson). The hon. Member for North Wiltshire also spoke about the all-party parliamentary group for the polar regions, which would not exist without him. He has done remarkable things to get that group set up and ensure it has the impetus to do things and visit those regions. I congratulate him on that excellent work—long may it continue.

    The hon. Member for Sleaford and North Hykeham said that the effect of climate change in Antarctica would be irreversible if we allowed the ice to continue to melt at the current rate. That would lead to an unprecedented rise in sea levels, which, as the hon. Member for North Wiltshire pointed out, could drown us here in the Palace of Westminster, never mind most of London and a lot of the United Kingdom.

    Full debate: Antarctica: Science and Diplomacy

  • 9 Jan 2020: Parliamentary Speech

    What we have seen in recent weeks has been nothing short of a catastrophe, for not just Australia but the whole world, and I wholeheartedly share the Minister’s words of sympathy and solidarity with our close friends for what they are going through at the moment. But when the fires are finally extinguished, it would be remiss of us if we did not discuss the underlying causes of these unprecedented events; 2019 was the second hottest year on record, and the past five years fill the top five positions as the hottest years on record. Any group of individuals who can look at those figures and continue to deny that global warming and climate change are real issues are equivalent to those people who still insist that the world is flat. Yet, sadly, such individuals include the current President of the United States, Donald Trump; the current President of Brazil, Jair Bolsonaro; and— I say this with great regret, given what his country is currently experiencing—the current Prime Minister of Australia, Scott Morrison. There is something bitterly sad about the fact that those three leaders have all seen raging wildfires in their countries over the past year—in California, in the Amazon and now on the eastern coast of Australia.

    So the question we all face is how we address the challenge of climate change, how we keep the Paris agreement on track and how we stop our world reaching the point of no return on global warming, where events such as those we are currently seeing in Australia become the new normal. Facing a challenge of that scale, we have to recognise one thing—that what we do alone in the UK will make not a jot of difference to the global problems we all face.

    Climate change.

    Of course, the hon. Member asked about climate change. On that, the most important thing is that we are going to be chairing COP26, so we have ambitious climate change targets for all countries going forward. When I go on trips to other countries, I am looking forward to asking all of them how ambitious they are going to be. On money, specifically, we are increasing our international climate finance offer from £8.5 billion between 2016 and 2020 to £11.6 billion over the period 2021 to 2025, in order to help developing countries take action.

    It is a pleasure to see you in your place, Madam Deputy Speaker. It has been very hard watching Australia burn in the past few weeks. I am fortunate, in that most of my friends and family are concentrated in the west and so are suffering less, but my thoughts, my love and my heart go out to all of those who are in harm’s way across the continent. It is difficult for most people here to appreciate the size of the fires and to appreciate the size of Australia to begin with. These fires have covered an area twice the size of Wales. The fire front in one state, New South Wales, is thousands of miles long. There is always a bushfire season, but not like this. As has been pointed out by others today, Australia is not alone; 4 million hectares of Siberian forest burned a few months ago, and there were fires in Greenland, Alaska and Canada too. Again, fires in the Arctic are normal, but not on this scale, and now the ground itself is starting to burn. In both hemispheres, climate change is driving this. Philip Higuera from the University of Montana describes it is a switch: reach the tipping point and Arctic tundra burns. So although kind words and support for those battling the fires are very moving and of course greatly appreciated, they are just one thing—action to address this climate emergency is another.

    There will not be any slowdown in burn rates unless we reverse the causes, so I must ask: when will we see real action from this Government on the climate emergency? The Environment Bill that flickered briefly in the last Parliament missed and hit the wall. Will we see something of substance in this Parliament? The science is 250 years old, the term “greenhouse effect” was coined nearly a century ago, even Thatcher called for climate action and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change warns us of the dangers repeatedly, yet the UK stands virtually still on this issue. That must change. There must be no more woolly words and no more waffle—it is time for real climate action. When will we see a ban on fracking, incentives for renewable energy production and a roll-out of electric vehicle charging stations? Where is the support for electric aviation and VAT exemptions for home insulation—not a reduced rate but exemptions? Why are we not seeing urgent action? In short, if the Government want to do something about the fires in Australia, in the Arctic and on England’s moors in years to come, they must do something now about the climate emergency.

    We have the chair of COP26 with Italy, so we are absolutely taking climate change as the No. 1 priority. In every embassy around the world, every ambassador and every high commissioner has it as their No.1 priority to talk to other Governments and encourage greater and more ambitious targets for those countries. In particular, we will continue with the Paris agreement and make sure that those commitments are guaranteed going forward. President Claire O’Neill, late of this parish as the Member for Devizes, recently met other energy Ministers at COP25 in Madrid to bang the drum and make clear that this is our No.1 priority.

    When the fires are extinguished, there is going to have to be a moment for learning lessons and drawing the links between these incidents and climate change. Our Government should take a leading role, but we would be better able to do so if we had not ourselves just announced that a review of the net zero carbon target had been put off until autumn. Will the Minister speak to her colleagues in the Treasury about bringing that review forward?

    I was really quite shocked that in her statement the Minister did not mention climate change once; it is surely the context in which all this is happening. When my hon. Friend the Member for Leeds North East (Fabian Hamilton) did raise the issue very eloquently, the Minister had to rummage in her folder to find something to say. The fact is that Australia is the largest emitter per capita of any major nation, yet its Government are still not committed to decarbonisation. The COP25 talks were a complete failure, and we have not even had a written ministerial statement on them. When are the Government going to step up to the plate, show leadership, talk to Australia and say that it has to get with the agenda?

    Please forgive me for suggesting that talk is cheap. Australia is a signatory to the Paris agreement and is committed to a 26% to 28% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions on 2005 levels by 2030. In addition—because there are intelligent people in this room—a number of Australian states have already committed to net zero by 2050. Ahead of COP26, we will look forward to working with all Paris agreement signatories to increase global climate ambition in line with that agreement.

    It is great to hear of how much work is going on behind the scenes in Parliament, but I stress again that is a No.1 Government priority and all our embassies are on it. It is a great honour to host COP26 with our Italian friends, and it will be the success that it needs to be.

    Those are wise words from my hon. Friend. The UK policy on climate change has been dramatic: we are setting out legally binding targets to eliminate climate change by 2050; we have been the fastest in the G20 to decarbonise since 2000; and since 1990 we have reduced our emissions by more than 40% while growing our economy by two thirds. We can get the message out to other countries that it can be done and it does not affect the economy. Exactly as my hon. Friend said, National Grid’s use of energy from renewable sources is leading the way as a great example to others.

    The suffering in Australia is almost unimaginable. Scott Morrison has finally committed around AU$2 billion for bushfire recovery, but that is dwarfed by the AU$29 billion that the Australian Government spend on fossil fuel subsidies every year. Public money is in essence being spent to turbocharge the climate emergency. We do it here in the UK, too: we spent around £10 billion on fossil fuel subsidies last year. Will the Minister agree that it is time to stop throwing money on the fire? Will she commit to ending public financial support for the fossil fuel industry?

    The upcoming foreign policy review is important. Can the Minister confirm that climate change will feature in that review? If it is not going to, may I suggest that the Foreign and Commonwealth Office consider it as part of its global review?

    I thank my hon. Friend—a candidate to be Chair of the Foreign Affairs Committee—for that interesting question. As I have tried to stress and am more than happy to say again, climate change is the No. 1 priority for all our embassies across the world, and is part of our plans now and going forward.

    The huge scale of the fires must leave us in absolutely no doubt of the urgent and radical action that is needed on climate change, so I was also absolutely shocked that I did not hear the Minister even mention the words “climate change” in her statement. Yet, behind the scenes, UK Export Finance schemes are handing out billions of pounds of taxpayers’ money to develop fossil fuel projects, locking countries into high-carbon energy for decades to come. Will this Government put their money where their mouth is and end UK Export Finance’s support for fossil fuels?

    The hon. Lady asks a very intelligent question. The answer is that I cannot give her that assurance right now. We have green finance deals and ocean deals. We are so committed to helping countries around the world to move on to renewable energy projects, and I think that is the way forward.

    Would the Minister and her Department work with the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association? Prime Ministers come and go—as we know in this country—but, as the hon. Member for Hornsey and Wood Green (Catherine West) said, parliamentarians tend not to. Could we urge the CPA to work closely with Australian Members of Parliament to make them much more aware of the problems of climate change in their country, as well as in the world?

    I am grateful to the Minister for her statement. I speak as someone whose mother grew up in Western Australia. I have family living in Victoria and in New South Wales, so I feel the pain of that country maybe as much as other Members of this House. The reality is that when friends speak, they also speak with some honesty. Prime Minister Morrison has ignored the climate issue for a number of years, as other Members have pointed out. The Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting is coming up later this year. I accept that it is not part of the Minister’s responsibility, but may I ask her to make representations to the relevant Minister, the Foreign Secretary and Prime Minister to prioritise climate change as part of that meeting? We must learn lessons. The situation in Australia should be a warning that the world is burning, and the Commonwealth must play a much more significant role in tackling the impact and realities of climate change.

    I spent one of the happiest years of my life living in Melbourne, and would be the last person to criticise Australia. However, my friends who live in Australia are very concerned about the current Government’s lack of appreciation of the impact of climate change on the disaster they are now facing. What can the Minister and the Government do to persuade their sister party in Australia to take the science of climate change seriously?

    My sympathies are with the hon. and learned Lady’s friends who are out there right now. It is without doubt clear that the UK and Australia have their own approaches to climate change. As chair of COP26, the UK looks forward to continued discussions in the run-up to that conference. We hope to work with Australia and others to increase their ambition in line with the Paris principles. I stress again that, because of Australia’s federal system, there is a really interesting dynamic there right now, whereby states are already saying that they will be decarbonise by 2050—the same as us—so all is not necessarily painted as black as we think.

    Does the Minister agree that in the year that the UK hosts COP26, we need to re-embolden our climate diplomacy? One practical suggestion might be about coupling industrial strategy with climate diplomacy on decarbonising power generation, because in Australia 75% of power generation is still dependent on coal. Indeed, when I was in Australia for my honeymoon, Prime Minister Scott Morrison was waving coal around in its House of Commons. Can we share our expertise and lessons learned in the UK?

    The hon. Gentleman makes a really interesting suggestion. Interestingly, DFID official development assistance money is being used particularly in Brazil to look at decarbonising its energy production. We cannot use ODA money for Australia because obviously it is a first-world nation, but perhaps we can find another way through the prosperity fund or something like that. We will take that idea away. We are always happy to receive good ideas.

    As others have said, these devastating bush fires have been exacerbated in both extent and intensity by the consequences of global warming. The Minister has already intimated this, but could she confirm that in the light of this catastrophe, UK foreign policy will make international co-operation on efforts on decarbonisation its highest priority?

    That is absolutely key. As has been alluded to, COP25 was perhaps not as successful as it might have been— [ Interruption . ] Well, we have to be kind. We therefore have every incentive to make COP26 a success. Part of that will be using the expertise that we have in emerging countries to help them to make the step change to renewable energies and decarbonising. It is a really exciting time for this country to take those measures to help other countries. Exactly as the hon. Gentleman says, this is the No. 1 priority for all our embassies around the world.

    Absolutely. I cannot thank the hon. Gentleman enough for that very good question. We all know that we need to have that canopy of trees to help with decarbonising for the whole of the world, so it is important to give any assistance we can with that. I am sure that my civil servants are now going to blanch, because he has given me a good idea. We have great relationships with Kew, which has world experts in planting, seeds and whatever else might be needed. I will to ask to see what connections and suggestions Kew might have, subject to Australia asking for such help. That was a great question and I thank the hon. Gentleman.

    While we sympathise with those caught in this environmental disaster, we know that this is a climate change emergency issue. The last six years have been the six hottest on record, which underpins the problem we have. In the 2020 climate change performance index, Australia is ranked bottom, with the US ranked second from bottom. We know that the US has pulled out of the Paris agreement. We keep hearing about the new global UK, so can the Minister advise what influence she has in those two countries and what climate change policy changes the UK is pushing for with them?

    I thank the hon. Gentleman for his question. He has moved to where one of the microphones is, so I heard his question, which is great. With regard to the conversations we have been having, our embassy and our consuls general are talking all the time to the Australian state and the federal states, some of which are already declaring that they will decarbonise by 2050. I think that we are pushing at an open door. Australia has not resiled from the Paris agreement. We will keep them there, and we will ask them to be more ambitious. On every visit that I make as Minister for Asia and the Pacific, whether it be to Singapore or Seoul, it is part of my brief to ask the country to be more ambitious.

    Full debate: Australian Bushfires

  • 09 Jan 2020: Tweet

    RT @Geri_E_L_Scott: 'Climate change deniers like Donald Trump and Scott Morrison are the same as flat-earthers,' says Leeds MP @FabianLeeds… [Source]
  • 03 Dec 2019: Tweet

    RT @EmmaBarnesWrite: "Crucially, our diplomacy will ensure Britain properly tackles the climate emergency... we must use our precious influ… [Source]
  • 23 Nov 2019: Tweet

    RT @LeedsNE_CLP: The Labour Manifesto sets out plans to address the #ClimateEmergency Vote @FabianLeedsNE #VoteLabour for future generati… [Source]
  • 21 Nov 2019: Tweet

    RT @labourpress: Labour will create one million green jobs to tackle climate change and reboot British industry https://t.co/ocD1PDmDbY [Source]
  • 19 Nov 2019: Tweet

    RT @UKLabour: You can’t trust Boris Johnson when he says he’ll fight climate change: #ITVDebate https://t.co/LVvBD8LsIw [Source]
  • 17 Nov 2019: Tweet

    You can’t trust the Tories on the environment. Climate Change and the threat it poses to our communities must be ta… https://t.co/4mC1s4QgKc [Source]
  • 08 Nov 2019: Tweet

    RT @UKLabour: We will tackle the #ClimateEmergency and create good, green jobs rebuilding the towns, cities and communities held back after… [Source]
  • 07 Nov 2019: Tweet

    RT @UKLabour: We will tackle the #ClimateEmergency and create hundreds of thousands of good, green jobs rebuilding the towns, cities and co… [Source]
  • 23 Oct 2019: Tweet

    In May, Labour led parliament in declaring a climate emergency. Today I stand with over 300 MPs to demand our pensi… https://t.co/THoBUl2M65 [Source]
  • 09 Oct 2019: Tweet

    Labour takes the #ClimateEmergency seriously. It’s time for a Green Industrial Revolution. We'll increase UK offsho… https://t.co/41Xo97L0qv [Source]
  • 01 Aug 2019: Tweet

    RT @jeremycorbyn: If Boris Johnson doesn't ban fracking we will not meet our net zero emissions target by 2050. https://t.co/XjszqabzjE [Source]
  • 25 Jun 2019: Vote

    Delegated Legislation — Value Added Tax - Pro-climate vote: No - Their vote: No
  • 01 Jun 2019: Tweet

    RT @CllrJaneDowson: 'Labour Roots' event this afternoon at Leeds Becket Uni. Panel is Barry Gardiner, Youth strike for Climate Change, Frac… [Source]
  • 4 Feb 2019: Parliamentary Speech

    Along with climate change, nuclear conflict and the devastating environmental impact that it could unleash are two of the most pressing threats to our lives and the future of every living creature on this planet. The suspension of the INF treaty is a sure sign of a dangerous breakdown of trust between the two nations with the vast majority of the world’s nuclear warheads. This has serious implications for future negotiations, including those on extending the new strategic arms reduction treaty, or New START, which is due to expire in 2021. What we see may be the beginning of a new arms race, even more dangerous and unpredictable than the one we saw during the cold war. We now live in a multipolar world in which the US and Russia no longer have a monopoly on the weapons proscribed in the INF treaty, even if they have the majority of warheads.

    The hon. Gentleman also raised perfectly legitimate concerns, which I think we all share, about the broader range of challenges for the multilateral system. We will continue to work closely with the US across a wide range of multilateral organisations and issues. He touched on climate change, for which I have Foreign Office responsibility and on which we work closely—if not necessarily as closely as we would like with the federal Administration—with a number of important state governors and others.

    Full debate: Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty

  • 25 Oct 2018: Parliamentary Speech

    The right hon. Gentleman will be aware that the Government also have concerns about the Paris climate change agreement, and we think it greatly to be regretted that the US decided to withdraw from it. I reiterate that it is important to recognise that the US has not yet withdrawn from this treaty, and it is the work of allies—particularly here on the European continent, and not least the big three of the United Kingdom, Germany and France—to try to exert as much pressure as possible in that regard. The easiest way to resolve this matter is to ensure that the bilateral arrangement that has been in place for 31 years is adhered to by one of the parties that is not doing so. In a way, this is frustration boiling over, and as I have pointed out, this is not something new to the Trump Administration; this high-profile issue goes back almost half a decade, including during the Obama Administration.

    Regrettably, both Trump and Putin seem committed to tearing up the international rules-based order. What specific initiatives does the Minister anticipate the UK taking with the European Union to bolster the international rules-based order, so that we can ensure that there is a focus on reducing nuclear weapons, but also on tackling other global issues such as climate change?

    Full debate: Nuclear Treaty: US Withdrawal

  • 18 Dec 2017: Parliamentary Speech

    My hon. Friend the Member for Battersea (Marsha De Cordova) made a very powerful contribution. She talked of the harrowing footage that CNN showed, which shocked us all. She said that her constituents were extremely upset because many of them have that collective memory of slavery, and that she was shocked it was still happening in 2017. She said that these practices are, of course, not new and that this exploitation of the vulnerable has grown under the political turmoil. She also mentioned that climate change had a role in migration, as other hon. Members have done. She asked whether the Government could make their feelings felt on ending the arbitrary detention of migrants in Libya, and also talked of a vicious cycle of abuse.

    Full debate: Enslavement of Black Africans (Libya)

  • 06 Sep 2016: Vote

    Finance Bill — VAT on Installation of Energy Saving Materials - Pro-climate vote: Aye - Their vote: Aye
  • 09 May 2016: Vote

    Housing and Planning Bill — Planning obligations and affordable housing - Pro-climate vote: No - Their vote: No
  • 03 May 2016: Vote

    Housing and Planning Bill — Neighbourhood right of appeal - Pro-climate vote: No - Their vote: No
  • 26 Oct 2015: Vote

    Finance Bill (Ways and Means) (Payment of Corporation Tax) — Chapter 5 — Supplementary provisions - Pro-climate vote: Aye - Their vote: Aye
  • 08 Sep 2015: Vote

    Bill Presented — Devolution (London) Bill — Clause 45 — CCL: removal of exemption for electricity from renewable sources - Pro-climate vote: No - Their vote: No
  • 04 Dec 2013: Vote

    Recall of Elected Representatives — Schedule 4 — Application and modification of emissions limit duty - Pro-climate vote: No - Their vote: No
  • 04 Jun 2013: Vote

    Energy Bill — Clause 133 — Financial provisions - Pro-climate vote: Aye - Their vote: Aye
  • 04 Jun 2013: Vote

    Energy Bill — Clause 10 — Direction to offer contract - Pro-climate vote: Aye - Their vote: Aye
  • 04 Jun 2013: Vote

    Energy Bill — Clause 1 — Decarbonisation - Pro-climate vote: Aye - Their vote: Aye
  • 03 Jun 2013: Vote

    Communities and Local Government — Clause 42 — Duty not to exceed annual carbon dioxide emissions limit - Pro-climate vote: No - Their vote: Aye
  • 19 Dec 2012: Vote

    Charities Act 2011 (Amendment) — Energy Bill - Pro-climate vote: Aye - Their vote: Aye
  • 17 Oct 2012: Vote

    Relationship, Drug and Alcohol Education (Curriculum) — New Clause 22 — Interpretation of the green purposes: duty to assess impact on the Climate Change Act 2008 - Pro-climate vote: Aye - Their vote: Aye
  • 11 Jun 2012: Vote

    Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Bill - Pro-climate vote: Aye - Their vote: Aye
  • 9 Feb 2011: Parliamentary Speech

    Spending a relatively small amount now could, however, help to prevent catastrophe in the future. With climate change making rainfall in these islands ever more unpredictable, the River Aire will burst its banks sooner or later and drown our city. Not only will thousands of homes be affected, but millions, if not billions, of pounds of business activity will be halted, and thousands of hard-working citizens will have their jobs or their lives ruined—all for the want of the flood defences that could have been built, but which the Government cut because the deficit simply had to be repaid in four years, rather than five, six or even seven. [ Interruption. ] Sorry, does the hon. Member for Shrewsbury and Atcham (Daniel Kawczynski) want to intervene?

    Full debate: Flood Risk Management

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