VoteClimate: Sonia Kumar MP: Climate Timeline

Sonia Kumar MP: Climate Timeline

Sonia Kumar is the Labour MP for Dudley.

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

Sonia Kumar 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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Sonia Kumar's Climate-related Tweets, Speeches & Votes

We've found the following climate-related tweets, speeches & votes by Sonia Kumar

  • 4 Sep 2024: Parliamentary Speech

    I pay tribute to the hon. Member for Dudley (Sonia Kumar) for her excellent maiden speech. Indeed, we have heard more than half a dozen excellent maiden speeches today, several of which touched on the climate crisis and the future of children in our country, themes that relate to my amendment. I was touched to hear the passion with which all the new Members spoke about their experiences and commitments.

    My amendment 5 requires the OBR to report on the impact of fiscally significant measures announced by the Government on the UK’s statutory net zero target. The justification for my amendment is that we simply cannot separate the economy and the climate—they are interlinked. To deliver the green economic transformation that we so urgently need, as referenced by hon. Members speaking earlier, every single policy must be aligned with the UK’s net zero target and every Government spending decision should be as well.

    It makes sense to increase the OBR’s remit on net zero to specifically consider the impact of climate risks on economic stability, and how far policies introduced at fiscal events will reduce or increase these risks. Fiscal events, namely Budgets and spending reviews, lock in what is happening in our economy for years to come, even generations, so it beggars belief that they are not properly taking account of climate impacts. Whether those policies are spending on new roads, subsidies and tax breaks for oil and gas, investment in renewables infrastructure or giveaways like a freeze on fuel duty, they all have direct impacts on the UK’s prospect of meeting our net zero targets. Those impacts should be made clear and considered explicitly in the policy-making paper. We need to be thinking about the impacts of today’s economic policies on the prospects for future generations.

    The costs of failing to take an approach that considers climate impacts are eye watering. A 2022 report by the Grantham Institute found that climate change damages to the UK are projected to triple by 2050 and more than double again 50 years later, so climate prudence and fiscal prudence are one and the same thing. Given that the OBR’s main duty is to assess the health of the UK economy and the sustainability of its public finances, it needs to be charged with assessing whether fiscal events are reducing or increasing climate risks to the economy.

    Bringing net zero into the OBR’s mandate is consistent with the Government’s five missions. Indeed, in announcing its clean energy superpower document, Labour said that it will add net zero mandates to all relevant regulators that need it. I would argue that the OBR is a relevant regulator that needs a net zero mandate. That is why I am proposing this probing amendment today. As other Members have mentioned, it would also represent increased transparency around how fiscal policy choices are impacting the UK’s progress towards our net zero targets and help ensure that future Governments also consider that.

    It is also an important stepping stone towards a net zero test, which would assess the aggregate climate and nature impact of every fiscal event. Again, this is something that Labour committed to in opposition. In his winding-up remarks, will the Minister comment on whether he is able to ensure that this test is integrated into the legislation that he is proposing?

    I hope that Labour will use this opportunity to commit publicly to introducing a net zero test in Government, and will take a step towards doing that by backing my amendment.

    Full debate: Budget Responsibility Bill

  • 27 Oct 2022: Tweet

    Rishi Sunak will not attend Cop27 climate summit. This isn’t a PM who is serious about the climate crisis. https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/oct/27/rishi-sunak-will-not-attend-cop27-climate-summit [Source]
  • 06 Nov 2021: Tweet

    'We are unstoppable, we want climate justice!' Absolutely thrilled to be leading the march. Birmingham coming together for such an important cause. #ClimateActionNow #climate #ClimateActionInYourArea #GlobalDayofAction #COP26 https://twitter.com/_SoniaKumar/status/1457013724691243011/photo/1 https://twitter.com/_SoniaKumar/status/1457015518997667840/photo/1 [Source]
  • 26 Sep 2021: Tweet

    'Boris Johnson is in the wrong place, in the wrong time' - Talking about the economy & climate change. @Ed_Miliband #Lab21 #LabourConference2021 https://twitter.com/_SoniaKumar/status/1442058896793874432/photo/1 [Source]
  • 11 Aug 2021: Tweet

    The PM needs to make climate change a priority. Setting a date to ban gas boilers will incentivise the market to produce cheaper alternatives. #toryexcuses #ClimateEmergency #climatechange Johnson poised to backtrack on mid-2030s gas boiler ban - https://www.ft.com/content/0c69af3e-37cf-4dff-8c46-994dcaeecad7?shareType=nongift via @FT [Source]

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