VoteClimate: Laura Kyrke-Smith MP: Climate Timeline

Laura Kyrke-Smith MP: Climate Timeline

Laura Kyrke-Smith is the Labour MP for Aylesbury.

We have identified 0 Parliamentary Votes Related to Climate since 2024 in which Laura Kyrke-Smith could have voted.

Laura Kyrke-Smith is rated n/a for votes supporting action on climate. (Rating Methodology)

  • In favour of action on climate: 0
  • Against: 0
  • Did not vote: 0

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Laura Kyrke-Smith's Climate-related Tweets, Speeches & Votes

We've found the following climate-related tweets, speeches & votes by Laura Kyrke-Smith in the last 90 days

See Full History

  • 18 Nov 2024: Tweet

    RT @AnnelieseDodds: I was at #COP29 last week making the case for measures to achieve our aim of a world free from poverty on a liveable pl… [Source]
  • 29 Oct 2024: Tweet

    Yesterday I shared @RESCUEorg @RESCUE_UK data on the 16 most climate-vulnerable and conflict-affected countries in the world, like Sudan, Syria & Myanmar. I was pleased to hear Development Minister @AnnelieseDodds' commitment to climate finance for adaptation in these places. https://x.com/laurakyrkesmith/status/1851148889169990084/video/1 [Source]
  • 28 Oct 2024: Parliamentary Speech

    My constituents understand the urgency of addressing our national housing crisis. The statistics speak for themselves: nearly 1.3 million households are on social housing waiting lists, including 6,000 in Buckinghamshire, and young people under 30 today are less than half as likely to own a home as young adults in the 1990s. Equally, many of my constituents understand the need for investment in renewable energy, whether it is onshore wind or solar panels, to get us on track for clean, secure and more affordable power by 2030, but they and I are conscious of the tension between the need for planning reform, whether for the purpose of building houses, energy or other infrastructure, and the need to protect our natural environment. How do we navigate that tension? Let me make three points based on Aylesbury’s experience.

    There is too much to say in the time we have available tonight, but I will pull out three particularly important ways to help set up our farmers for success. First and foremost, we have to ensure the long-term financial sustainability of British farming. The environment land management schemes have been unclear, difficult to navigate and poorly tailored to different contexts—in the case of Ledburn farm, to the heavy clay land. As a result, the uptake has been low, but farmers remain in need of that support and we have to find a way to make it easier to access. Equally, farmers are forging ahead and finding ways to diversify their income, but there is much more we can do to support that—for example, by making it much easier to change the use of existing farm buildings, or to develop lower-grade agricultural land, if it creates renewable energy sources or affordable housing for farm workers.

    Full debate: Agricultural Land: Protection

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