VoteClimate: Lizzi Collinge MP: Climate Timeline

Lizzi Collinge MP: Climate Timeline

Lizzi Collinge is the Labour MP for Morecambe and Lunesdale.

We have identified 0 Parliamentary Votes Related to Climate since 2024 in which Lizzi Collinge could have voted.

Lizzi Collinge 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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Lizzi Collinge's Climate-related Tweets, Speeches & Votes

We've found the following climate-related tweets, speeches & votes by Lizzi Collinge

  • 24 Jan 2025: Parliamentary Speech

    As the Member of Parliament for Morecambe and Lunesdale, I want to highlight how the urgent challenges of climate change and the nature emergency affect my constituency, which is a place of natural beauty and ecological importance. My constituency is also well placed to be part of the solution to the climate and nature emergencies, particularly in clean energy generation and stewardship of the land.

    Morecambe and Lunesdale is especially vulnerable to climate change. Much of the urban areas of Morecambe and Heysham are low-lying, making them prone to future flooding. Villages such as Halton have already seen the devastation caused by extreme weather. Today, I am holding my breath about whether I will get home—I doubt I will—and what damage Storm Éowyn might wreak on my constituency. My constituency is home to farmers whose livelihoods are dependent on the weather. My farms are mainly dairy and livestock; flooding and extreme weather risk not only business damage, but animal welfare.

    Nature is fundamental to our lives and our livelihoods. The health of our environment is essential to our wellbeing. Climate change threatens our ability to give everyone a good life.

    I make a brief declaration of interest: my former employer, CPRE, supports the Bill. Does my hon. Friend agree that the rate of climate change that she is describing in her constituency poses an existential threat to our most loved landscapes, our iconic wildlife species, the pattern of our seasons and some of our most valuable farmland, and that a rapid and just transition is therefore essential for rural communities so that we can hand over our countryside to future generations in some recognisable form?

    I absolutely agree. Climate change does not affect just one part of our life, or just one part of the country or the world; it affects all of us, in every single domain. If we are to have a planet that is habitable by humans, we must take action now. As my hon. Friend says, it must be a fair and just transition.

    We cannot ignore the risks posed by climate change. Severe storms and rising waters are already threatening our homes. The challenges are growing, and we must take action to protect our communities and infrastructure. Locally, we must be resilient; nationally, we must work at a system level to meet the challenge.

    On a practical point, what I love about the current political discussion on climate and nature is that it has moved away from what felt like a morality play about individual choices to be focused on the systematic determinants of climate change and ecological destruction. Back in Morecambe and Lunesdale, our farmers have always played a key role in managing the land and protecting nature. That is now recognised in policy, with support to manage land to promote biodiversity, improve soil health and reduce carbon emissions. Their work shows how agriculture and conservation can go hand in hand. Last year, the now DEFRA Secretary and I visited a farm in Quernmore that is using natural methods to slow upland water flow using marginal land, which in turn prevents lowland flooding. It also had robot cleaners in the milking shed, which was cool.

    Returning to always-on energy, nuclear is the only currently available technology. It provides baseload, but without the carbon emissions. It also provides energy density. It is a good use of land in providing energy. In Heysham, nuclear has provided good, unionised jobs for decades. In fact, Councillor Matthew Black at Lancaster city council spoke just a few days ago about how his family has had connections to the power stations for three generations. His grandad was a crane operator on the build, his dad was a toolmaker—one of many connections that I am sure he has with our Prime Minister —and Matthew was a labourer there in his university summer breaks. I take this opportunity to reach out to Members who are not yet convinced of the need for nuclear in tackling climate change. I urge them to review the evidence, to not be bound to shibboleths and to move forward into the future.

    We have been taking bold steps. We have published the Clean Power 2030 action plan. In our first week in government we lifted the ban on onshore wind. We have consented to nearly 2 GW of solar projects and started a solar rooftop revolution. We have invested in modern technologies, set world-leading targets and reaffirmed our commitment to no new oil and gas. We have phased out coal and confirmed that we will ban fracking. We have set up Great British Energy and the National Wealth Fund. We have appointed world-renowned climate and nature envoys. We are showing global leadership at COP29, and we strengthened the energy regulator to ensure that it properly stands up for consumers. In nature, too, our Government are taking bold action.

    Full debate: Climate and Nature Bill

  • 11 Sep 2024: Parliamentary Speech

    We must ensure that these homes are energy efficient. In the face of both the climate crisis and soaring energy costs, it is imperative that any new housing meets high environmental standards. By doing that, we are not only addressing housing affordability, but preparing our rural areas for a sustainable future.

    Full debate: Rural Depopulation

  • 13 Jul 2024: Tweet

    RT @briarsdelve: I often get asked why, as a socialist committed to net zero, I don’t join the Green Party. This is what Labour has just d… [Source]
  • 25 Mar 2024: Tweet

    RT @vaughangething: Great to welcome @Keir_Starmer to Ynys Môn today to discuss the massive green energy opportunities on the island. Our… [Source]
  • 12 Mar 2024: Tweet

    RT @Ed_Miliband: 2/ The Energy Secretary today posed a false choice between net zero and energy security. She is completely wrong. If we fo… [Source]
  • 08 Oct 2023: Tweet

    @LydiaHislop @BellaSankey We already have a serious nuclear waste problem to solve. Continuing and new nuclear doesn't significantly add to the volume and doesn't change the waste problem we already have. But new nuclear does help solve the climate crisis. [Source]
  • 04 Jul 2023: Tweet

    Great to organise a meeting today with @alanwhiteheadmp and @AgilityEco to discuss how best to deliver @UKLabour's ambitious plans to deliver net zero and millions of warm homes. https://twitter.com/LizziCollinge/status/1676160889693536258/photo/1 [Source]
  • 17 Mar 2023: Tweet

    I've just signed up to this webinar - I urge any other cllrs & MPs to do so too. As a county cllr I don't have much to do with housing but it's increasingly clear that, alongside climate change, it's one of the most important and urgent policy areas and we need to get it right. https://twitter.com/r_earwaker/status/1636762597734187009 [Source]
  • 19 Feb 2023: Tweet

    @RohanSlaughter @primevideouk @GreatDismal I agree! I think sci fi helps you think through the best and worst poss futures and simply the possibility of doing things differently. Sci fi covered the climate change threat extensively and much earlier than mainstream politics. Also, a lot of it is in space and that's cool. [Source]

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