VoteClimate: Tulip Siddiq MP: Climate Timeline

Tulip Siddiq MP: Climate Timeline

Tulip Siddiq is the Labour MP for Hampstead and Highgate.

We have identified 19 Parliamentary Votes Related to Climate since 2015 in which Tulip Siddiq could have voted.

Tulip Siddiq is rated Good for votes supporting action on climate. (Rating Methodology)

  • In favour of action on climate: 13
  • Against: 0
  • Did not vote: 6

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Tulip Siddiq's Climate-related Tweets, Speeches & Votes

We've found the following climate-related tweets, speeches & votes by Tulip Siddiq

  • 12 Nov 2024: Parliamentary Speech

    The hon. Member also asked about climate change. The EBRD’s aim is for more than 50% of its total investment in 2025 to be towards green projects, reducing net annual greenhouse gas emissions by at least 25 million tonnes. Since 2006, the EBRD has invested €49 billion in more than 2,600 green projects, which are expected to reduce carbon emissions by 124 million tonnes yearly. I thank the hon. Member for his constructive comments and his questions.

    Full debate: Draft European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (Further Payments to Capital Stock) Order 202...

  • 12 Nov 2024: Tweet

    RT @SadiqKhan: Honoured to be named one of @TIME 100’s most influential and innovative climate leaders. As Mayor, I’ll continue working to… [Source]
  • 24 Oct 2024: Tweet

    Financial services will be critical for achieving net-zero, alongside this Government's National Wealth Fund & new green infrastructure projects. Thanks to @RhianMariThomas & @IngridHolmes7 from @GFI_green for a good meeting about sustainable finance and for their work on this. https://x.com/TulipSiddiq/status/1849398334647136393/photo/1 [Source]
  • 03 Sep 2024: Tweet

    Great to meet with Hideaki Takase from @MUFGEMEA. Financial services firms like MUFG are at the heart of this Government’s growth mission and will play a vital role in the transition to Net Zero. https://twitter.com/TulipSiddiq/status/1831007558737268787/photo/1 [Source]
  • 14 Jun 2024: Tweet

    Labour will make the UK the green finance capital of the world. Our financial services industry has a major role to play in mobilising trillions of pounds to tackle climate change. Labour will also work with the banks to provide private finance to accelerate home upgrades. 3/5 [Source]
  • 30 May 2024: Tweet

    Make the UK the global centre of green finance, delivering a world-leading regulatory framework for net-zero, and partner with the financial services sector to decarbonise British homes. 4/6 [Source]
  • 22 Feb 2024: Tweet

    This week I spoke at the launch of @IPPR & @GFI_green’s fantastic report on net zero, supported by @cityoflondon & @InvestmentAssoc. As set out in my financial services review earlier this month, Labour shares the sector’s ambition to make the UK a world leader in green finance. https://twitter.com/TulipSiddiq/status/1760630315427811759/photo/1 [Source]
  • 18 Oct 2023: Tweet

    I was delighted to attend a roundtable with the CEOs of the UK's mid tier banks today, hosted by @paragonbankuk. The sector will be a key partner of a future Labour Government in supporting SMEs to grow, the global competitiveness of the UK, and the transition to Net Zero. https://twitter.com/TulipSiddiq/status/1714684457947410488/photo/1 [Source]
  • 10 Oct 2023: Tweet

    RT @Policy_Exchange: ???? @TulipSiddiq lays out the key challenges for a Labour government: “climate change at this point poses the biggest ec… [Source]
  • 21 Sep 2023: Tweet

    I had a great time on @itvpeston last night, discussing net zero, HS2, election slogans and more with @georgiaharisonx and @racheljanetwolf. https://twitter.com/TulipSiddiq/status/1704825968257388815/photo/1 [Source]
  • 20 Sep 2023: Tweet

    RT @Peston: If you want to know the good, bad and different of Rishi Sunak’s scaled-back climate change commitments, watch #Peston at 9 her… [Source]
  • 11 Jul 2023: Parliamentary Speech

    I acknowledge and indeed welcome the fact that in some areas the Government are rather belatedly starting to follow Labour’s lead, but what has taken them so long? Where was the urgency, the ambition and the drive? Can the Minister explain why there was nothing at all in the Chancellor’s speech on green finance? That complacency puts our status as a net zero financial centre at risk.

    Finally, the hon. Lady talked about green finance. This Government are doing a copious amount on green finance; only yesterday my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero met some of the world leaders in green finance, and earlier this year we published an ambitious green finance strategy, continuing the UK’s progression to being one of the world’s first net zero-aligned financial centres.

    Full debate: Financial Services Reforms

  • 26 Jun 2023: Parliamentary Speech

    Finally, I will address Lords amendment 5 on sustainability disclosure requirements, and the Government amendments tabled in lieu of Lords amendment 7 on expanding the regulatory principle on net zero emissions, and in lieu of Lords amendment 36 on forest risk commodities. We welcome once again that the Government have finally U-turned and acknowledged concerns that our regulatory system must play a role in protecting nature and ending deforestation. However, as I am sure the Minister will agree, that can only be the first step in ensuring that the transition to net zero and the protection of nature are primary considerations across the financial system. The Treasury’s review of deforestation must be meaningful and put forward concrete proposals. The Government cannot continue to kick the can down the road.

    The hon. Gentleman raises an extremely important issue. He will know that huge efforts are being made to clamp down on financial fraud. It has been an insoluble issue over many decades, and of course, with advances with technology and so on, scammers and financial fraud continue to be a big problem, but that does not detract from the fact that the UK is hugely successful in financial services. I predict that the UK will also be hugely successful in green financial services around the world, enabling the net zero transition to take place using UK expertise and exports in that crucial area.

    Full debate: Financial Services and Markets Bill

  • 16 May 2023: Parliamentary Speech

    That is why a Labour Government’s first mission will be to secure the highest sustained growth in the G7 and to create well-paid jobs in every part of the country. We want to achieve that through an active partnership with business and our modern industrial strategy, while our green prosperity plan will drive bills down and let British businesses and workers compete in the global race for the jobs and industries of the future. The US has passed the Inflation Reduction Act, and the EU has its own Net Zero Industry Act. The UK has fallen behind. In contrast, the Labour party’s economic plan will get the UK growing again. Our new deal for working people will ensure that they benefit from that growth by boosting living standards and wages across the country.

    Full debate: Corporate Profit and Inflation

  • 3 May 2023: Parliamentary Speech

    Wherever we look, it is the same story—housebuilding is at a record low, inward investment in transport is in decline, and Britain is falling behind on green energy. But we do not need to continue down this path of managed decline, because Labour has a plan to get the economy growing and to drive the investment and infrastructure that we so desperately need. The Labour party is committed to overturning the senseless ban on onshore wind and to the radical reform of planning rules, to drive growth and build affordable homes.

    Full debate: Funding for Major Infrastructure Projects

  • 28 Oct 2022: Parliamentary Speech

    Co-operative and mutual societies have never been more important in the UK’s economy and public life. More than 7,000 co-operatives are operating across the UK, with a combined turnover of almost £40 billion, and some 200,000 people earn their livelihoods directly through co-operatives. They trade in sectors as diverse as agriculture, renewable energy, retrofitting, the creative industries, manufacturing, wholesaling, retail and finance. Many Members have cited examples from their own constituencies. Co-operatives have also proven resilient in the face of hardship. The pandemic was an incredibly difficult time for many British businesses, but the co-operative and mutual sector grew by an impressive £1.1 billion in 2020, despite the economic challenges resulting from the national lockdowns.

    Full debate: Co-operatives, Mutuals and Friendly Societies Bill

  • 22 Oct 2022: Tweet

    RT @UKLabour: Labour has a plan to cut bills, make the UK energy secure, grow our economy, and tackle the climate crisis. Only a Labour go… [Source]
  • 19 Oct 2022: Vote

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

    RT @thefabians: From Tulip Siddiq MP - ‘To protect financial resilience in the long term we must invest in green energy solutions that firm… [Source]
  • 7 Sep 2022: Parliamentary Speech

    Finally, turning to the points that have come from the Opposition Benches, it is striking how little the Bill has to say about green finance. We of course welcome clause 25, which formalises the responsibilities of the FCA and PRA under the Climate Change Act 2008—introduced, I remind the House, by the last Labour Government—but the Government promised much more radical action. Indeed, we were promised that the UK would become the world’s first net zero financial centre, but instead, we are falling behind global competitors.

    Full debate: Financial Services and Markets Bill

  • 11 May 2022: Tweet

    RT @thefabians: "Recovering from Covid-19, the cost of living crisis and the climate emergency are huge challenges that we must face togeth… [Source]
  • 23 Feb 2022: Tweet

    RT @Georgia_Gould: Brilliant to see work underway to decarbonise Swiss Cottage library with new windows, insulation, & air source heat pump… [Source]
  • 03 Feb 2022: Tweet

    RT @RachelReevesMP: In the future, our Climate Investment Pledge will insulate homes, invest in renewables and nuclear, and reform our brok… [Source]
  • 14 Dec 2021: Parliamentary Speech

    It is no coincidence that the co-operative movement emerged when it did. It was at a time of great industrial upheaval, and people recognised the common bonds that united them and their shared interests. We are approaching a different type of industrial revolution as we decarbonise our economy. As my hon. Friend the Member for Plymouth, Sutton and Devonport (Luke Pollard) said, more co-operative ideas and practices are needed to make the best use of our resources, which will be crucial for the green transition.

    In 2021, our two parties advocate not only for co-operative shops owned by the customers, but for the whole mutual sector. Co-operatives and mutual societies have never been more important for the UK’s economy and public life. The hon. Member for Wycombe talked about more than 7,000 co-operatives operating across the UK with a combined turnover of almost £40 billion. Almost 235,000 people earn their livelihoods directly through co-operatives. Again, the hon. Member talked about the sectors that they trade in, which are as diverse as agriculture, renewable energy, the creative industries, manufacturing, distribution, wholesale, retail and finance.

    Full debate: Co-operatives and Mutual Societies

  • 13 Dec 2021: Vote

    Subsidy Control Bill — Schedule 1 - The subsidy control principles - Pro-climate vote: Aye - Their vote: Aye
  • 9 Dec 2021: Parliamentary Speech

    I agree with the hon. Member for South Cambridgeshire that the biggest challenge facing the UK is the climate crisis and the transition to a green economy. I also agree with him that the Treasury Committee needs proper support, because it is the most important Committee in the House. Labour has committed to £28 billion a year of capital investment every year until 2030 to support the green transition.

    Full debate: Financial Services: UK Economy

  • 03 Dec 2021: Tweet

    In Parliament this week, I called on the Government to put climate change at the heart of our children's education. Labour has announced plans for 400,000 green jobs, and it’s essential that we enable young people to develop the skills for these employment opportunities. https://x.com/TulipSiddiq/status/1466778044903923714/video/1 [Source]
  • 1 Dec 2021: Parliamentary Speech

    I thank the hon. Member for Eastbourne (Caroline Ansell) for making such a passionate speech and for securing an interesting and timely debate on how natural history is a central part of children’s education. Having two small children myself, it is something in which I am very interested. The Labour party believes that natural history, and the damage to the natural world brought about by climate change, must be at the heart of every child’s learning. Indeed, with global temperatures continuing to rise, we have a duty as legislators to introduce our nation’s children to the beauty and wonders of nature, and to ensure that they understand our planet, our place and our dependency on the natural world. Currently, however, only 17% of teachers report that climate change is taught at schools in core subjects other than science and geography. That is why it is so important that nurseries, schools and colleges are supported to instil a love of nature in future generations and to educate children about natural history, how climate change has impacted on that history, and how the damage can be reversed.

    I know that the hon. Member for Eastbourne was a teacher, and I believe she is married to a teacher, so she is well versed on the teaching world. I am sure she will join me in celebrating the efforts of all teachers who try to teach sustainability as much as possible. Like me, she is also a school governor, as I think are many MPs. We recognise that schools are trying and doing their best to teach as much as possible. For example, there is the work of the Eco-Schools green flag programme, which is supported by many of the schools in my constituency and others, as well as by nurseries and colleges. It consists of seven steps that educational institutions can take to engage their students on climate change and the natural world, including putting environmental issues in learning plans and choosing texts that explore those issues in subjects such as English. I must admit that that did not happen when I was at school, and I wish it had.

    Sadly, despite the fantastic work that is taking place in many parts of the country, many children are still being denied an environmental education. I looked at some of the recent research from the youth-led Teach the Future campaign, which revealed that 70% of UK teachers have not received adequate training to educate students on climate change. It also found that 41% of teachers say that climate change is rarely or never mentioned in their school. Perhaps most shockingly, just 5% say that climate change is integral to many aspects of the curriculum and teaching in their school, which is deeply concerning.

    The hon. Member for Eastbourne referred to a report commissioned by the Treasury, “The Economics of Biodiversity”, which warns that the absence of the natural world in our children’s education is a risk to future prosperity. In a time of extreme climate change in which we have seen a loss of biodiversity, it is essential that young people have the knowledge and tools to tackle the climate crisis, because long after most of us have gone, our children will still be here. That is why I once again ask the Minister to carefully consider the report that the Treasury commissioned, and to look at what it recommended.

    I also agree with the hon. Member for Meon Valley (Mrs Drummond)—I hope I pronounced her constituency correctly. When I speak to schoolchildren, as I often do when visiting local schools, climate change is the one issue they passionately care about and will bring up without fail every time I address a school assembly. It is important to ensure that every child, not just those who choose to study for a particular GCSE, understands the challenges facing our planet and our society. That would require the natural world to be integrated across the whole curriculum, not just in science and geography lessons or a natural history GCSE, but in all subjects, from English literature to history and others.

    We must support schools and educators to do that if we want to see a genuine difference in the way natural history is taught. Embedding natural history, biodiversity and climate change within the curriculum will require new training for teachers and teaching assistants, which is why the Labour party has committed to giving all teachers a right to continuing professional development, with £210 million extra a year for CPD. That funding could be used to deliver training on the climate and the natural world, and I hope that is something the Government will also consider.

    The Labour party has also announced plans for 400,000 green jobs, and it is essential that we enable young people to develop the skills for those employment opportunities. That has to start in schools and colleges, and climate change and green skills should be a priority for schools as well as for further and higher education, a point made by the hon. Member for Strangford (Jim Shannon)—I think he had to go, but obviously no Westminster Hall debate is complete without his contribution, so I had to mention him.

    I have a series of questions for the Minister that I hope he will answer. How are the Government working to ensure that natural history and climate change are embedded across the education system? What are the Government doing to ensure that teachers receive adequate training to educate students on climate change? We cannot just tell them to do it; we have to help and support them. How will the Government ensure that outdoor learning is a key part of children’s experience at school? That question is particularly important in the light of the statistics I talked about relating to covid-19. What steps are the Government taking to ensure that young people are gaining the skills they need at school and college to prepare them for the green economy?

    Ensuring that the future generation value and respect their natural environment will be fundamental in the struggle to reverse the climate crisis, so I wholeheartedly welcome this important debate on how best to secure that end. I urge the Minister, who I know is willing to listen, to reflect on today’s discussion to ensure that the natural world and climate change are at the heart of children’s education and learning.

    Full debate: Natural History GCSE

  • 10 Nov 2021: Tweet

    RT @COP26: .@walkwithamal, a 3.5m puppet of a young Syrian refugee that has travelled 8,000km from the Syrian border, arrived at #COP26 for… [Source]
  • 01 Nov 2021: Tweet

    RT @TulipSiddiq: Everyone is rightly focused on the important COP26 summit, but just a reminder that my constituent Richard Ratcliffe is st… [Source]
  • 01 Nov 2021: Tweet

    Everyone is rightly focused on the important COP26 summit, but just a reminder that my constituent Richard Ratcliffe is still camped outside the Foreign Office on hunger strike demanding action to #FreeNazanin. Thank you to @itvnews for coming to cover this today. https://x.com/TulipSiddiq/status/1455177169987063808/photo/1 [Source]
  • 27 Oct 2021: Parliamentary Speech

    I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Nottingham East (Nadia Whittome) for securing this important debate, which is also very timely, as everyone has mentioned. I pay tribute to her for the work she has done to highlight the importance of embedding climate change and sustainability in everything we do, including education, and for all the organisational work she has done for this campaign, not least bringing a delegation of young, bright people from the Teach the Future campaign to Parliament yesterday. I am delighted that some of them are in the Public Gallery: Scarlett, Stella, Tess, Yasmin and Charlie are very welcome to Parliament, but we also need them to educate us, as many Members have said during today’s debate.

    My hon. Friend made many good points, but I particularly want to pick up on one of them, which was about how the education system is not preparing children for climate change. It is failing them, which is a damning verdict on the education system that we are living with, and of what the future holds for a lot of our children. I also want to take a minute to say that my hon. Friend may be generation Z, she may be the youngest Member of the House, and she only joined in 2019, but we can already see the impact of all the work she has undertaken. When Opposition Members start paying tribute to her for her work on the Environmental Audit Committee—that does not always happen in this House—we realise the strength of her capabilities, so I give her a huge “Well done” for having secured this important debate.

    My fellow millennial Member, my hon. Friend the Member for Sheffield, Hallam (Olivia Blake), talked about the importance of teaching not just young people, but adults as well, about climate change and sustainability. That point was echoed by the hon. Member for Twickenham (Munira Wilson), who said that a lot of adults do not even know what we are talking about—I know that I could do a crash course on this topic as well.

    Turning to the topic at hand, many Members from both sides of the House who spoke today talked about how we need to do more to embed climate change within the curriculum. When I go to my local schools, teachers and school leaders are already aware of that need, and some amazing work is going on around the country to engage with pupils about climate change. However, the onus cannot just be on them, which is another point that has been made in the debate. The Government, and we as politicians, have to help them.

    One example of that is the Eco-Schools green flag programme, which many schools, nurseries and colleges are a part of. It consists of seven steps that education institutions can take to focus their communities of pupils and staff on the climate emergency, including putting environmental issues in learning plans and choosing texts in subjects such as English that will explore those issues. That work has been supported by education unions, who to their enormous credit have been pushing the Government to recognise that we are in a climate emergency, and that we have to pay more attention to it and put it at the top of our agenda. I pay tribute to the National Education Union, the National Union of Students and the University and College Union in particular for all their hard work on this issue, including promoting Climate Learning Month in the run-up to COP26, which as we all know starts next week.

    If we are going to transform education, we must support our educators to do so. Embedding climate change within the curriculum will mean new training for teachers and teaching assistants. At Labour conference, the shadow Education Secretary, my hon. Friend the Member for Stretford and Urmston, announced that we would give all teachers a right to continuing professional development, with £210 million extra per year for CPD, which could certainly be used to deliver this kind of training. I would like the Minister to pick up on this issue and say whether that proposal is something his Government might consider.

    What does concern me—I wonder whether the Minister will answer this—is that at a time when we need to be upgrading our school buildings as part of our national effort to get to net zero carbon emissions, since 2010 the capital spending on schools has been cut by 44%. That worries us. As my hon. Friend the Member for Salford and Eccles (Rebecca Long Bailey) said, our education system must prepare children and young people for the jobs of the future, which will be shaped by our transition to net zero.

    The leader of the Labour party has described climate change as

    and from this debate it sounds like many Members agree. Tackling climate change is at the heart of our agenda and our manifesto as we move forward. However, the reality is that those who are most affected by the impact of climate change are those who are going through schools, colleges, nursery and early years education right now. We must act more strongly if we are to stem the tide of climate decline and protect the younger generations from catastrophic consequences. I really hope that the warm words we are hearing from the Government are finally translated into tangible progress at COP26 next week.

    That is why embedding learning about climate change and sustainability into our curriculum and our education system is vital; that is why this debate is vital; that is why we must equip young people with the skills they need to work in the green industries of the future. Far more innovation is needed from the Government when it comes to education and skills. It is crucial if we, as a country, want to leave the world in a transition to net zero. I hope that the Minister has been listening to the many important points raised in this very good debate. I also hope that the Minister will meet my hon. Friend the Member for Nottingham East, as she requested.

    Full debate: Sustainability and Climate Change (National Curriculum)

  • 27 Oct 2021: Tweet

    Today I spoke in Parliament about the urgent need to tackle the climate emergency and embed climate change and sustainability in everything we do as a country, including in education. Young people are crying out for change, and for their sake we must heed their call and act now. https://x.com/TulipSiddiq/status/1453432701135032324/photo/1 [Source]
  • 20 Oct 2021: Tweet

    We cannot address the climate crisis without real action from cities - @SadiqKhan’s leadership as chair of @C40cities will inspire and deliver progress around the world. https://www.lbc.co.uk/news/climate-change-sadiq-khan-to-be-named-new-chair-of-c40-cities-at-cop26/ [Source]
  • 25 Jul 2021: Tweet

    RT @LukePollard: My thoughts are with those affected by the flash floods in London and the South East. At a time of climate crisis we will… [Source]
  • 21 Jun 2021: Tweet

    RT @PARLYapp: The education secretary has turned a question about teaching climate change into a tribute to Margaret Thatcher [Source]
  • 07 Jun 2021: Vote

    Advanced Research and Invention Agency Bill — New Clause 1 - Human Rights Abuses - Pro-climate vote: Aye - Their vote: Aye
  • 26 May 2021: Vote

    Environment Bill — New Clause 24 - Prohibition on burning of peat in upland areas - Pro-climate vote: Aye - Their vote: Aye
  • 13 Jan 2021: Vote

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

    Pension Schemes Bill [Lords] — Clause 124 - Climate change risk - Pro-climate vote: Aye - Their vote: Aye
  • 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
  • 05 Feb 2020: Vote

    Transport - Pro-climate vote: Aye - Their vote: Aye
  • 25 Jun 2019: Vote

    Delegated Legislation — Value Added Tax - Pro-climate vote: No - Their vote: No
  • 14 Mar 2016: Vote

    Energy Bill [Lords] — New Clause 8 — Decarbonisation target range - Pro-climate vote: Aye - Their vote: Aye
  • 14 Mar 2016: Vote

    Energy Bill [Lords] — New Clause 3 — Carbon capture and storage strategy for the energy industry - Pro-climate vote: Aye - Their vote: Aye
  • 26 Oct 2015: Vote

    Finance Bill (Ways and Means) (Payment of Corporation Tax) — Chapter 5 — Supplementary provisions - Pro-climate vote: Aye - Their vote: Aye
  • 3 Jun 2015: Parliamentary Speech

    11. In 2011, British climate scientists said that the famine in Somalia was caused in part by low rainfall, to which climate change contributed. Does the Secretary of State agree that tackling climate change as a single, stand-alone target should be included in the SDGs, or will the Government continue to treat it as an afterthought? ( 900070 )

    Full debate: Oral Answers to Questions

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