Boris talks a lot about climate change, but will he spend the money?
12:15 pm - October 17th 2010
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The Mayor’s latest draft of his Climate Change Mitigation and Energy Strategy was published last Friday without so much as a whisper in the press.
This worthy wishlist sets out how London could cut its carbon dioxide emissions by 60% by 2025, creating tens of thousands of jobs in the process.
But there are snags:
1. Both the Mayoral and Government responsibilities are divided into “committed actions” (in policy) and “other actions” (where they have no plans). Of the emissions reductions, 62% come from largely unfunded “committed actions” whilst 38% of the emissions reductions come from as-yet unannounced policies. In other words, we still don’t have the slightest idea how over one third of the reductions will be achieved, and the ambitious plans set out in the strategy are only a bare minimum.
2. The Mayor claims he has “committed over £100 million over four years … of which £71 million is from the LDA”. But his record isn’t very rosy: in 2008/09 he pledged to spend £18m on climate change but only managed £5m. In 2009/10 he raised his game, promising £26m of projects and delivering a little over £10m.
If I generously assume he won’t cut budgets any further, I can only find a £60m spend from the London Development Agency over his full four year term.
3. The strategy puts the bill for London at £40bn of investment, including £14bn to deliver the Mayor’s contribution. The Mayor has tried to suggest that this will mostly come from private finance, but he still needs substantial public funding.
To take three examples:
- Insulating homes – the Mayor needs £134m of public funding to pay for councils to roll the excellent RE:NEW scheme out, including £55m over the next two years. The money pays for experts going door to door, street by street and for extra subsidies to make the insulation free. These costs cannot be recovered from energy bill savings, and without the funding the project can’t go ahead.
- Electric vehicle infrastructure and subsidy – the plans for electric cars rely on the Government scaling up its electric car grant for consumers from £230m to £800m, but in August the Government announced it was only guaranteeing an initial investment of £40m. The Mayor is also relying on at least £22.6m of public investment to install charging points around the city, pivotal to his plans to get 100,000 electric vehicles onto London’s roads.
- Better transport – the strategy isn’t up to scratch on encouraging people out of their cars and onto their feet, bikes and buses. But even the modest (and declining) bus subsidy and investment in cycling (excluding the high-profile hire bikes) are likely to be prime targets for “savings”.
I will be the first to congratulate the Government, Mayor and London’s councils if this strategy is left intact following the Comprehensive Spending Review.
But if the cuts bite deep, Londoners can have little hope of serious action to upgrade our homes, cut traffic and capture the potential for a low carbon economy.
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This is a guest post. Darren Johnson is chair of the London Assembly and deputy chair of the Business Management and Administration Committee. He represents the Green Party.
· Other posts by Darren Johnson AM
Story Filed Under: Blog ,Environment ,London Mayor
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Reader comments
“Boris talks a lot about climate change, but will he spend the money?”
The headline shows everything that’s wrong with the current environmental policy. It’s going like the NHS, measured by how much money we put in, rather than how we do in terms of outcome (in this case, reduced CO2 emissions).
If you want to reduce CO2 emissions, then let’s measure how we do on that – and let’s not use cash sums as some kind of proxy.
What have London council tax payers got to do with global warming I’m really not sure.
If there is money to be made in Low Carbon industries then fair enough.
But I don’t think that the idea of Londoners (or any other particular group of people) paying more for services and in taxation to ”lead the way” world wide as an example of how to go green, would ever be an argument that would be popular on the doorstep.
I don’t think Boris can do more than pay lip service to this issue.
Reactions: Twitter, blogs
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Liberal Conspiracy
Boris talks a lot about climate change, but will he spend the money? http://bit.ly/bcrGQI
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Pucci Dellanno
RT @libcon: Boris talks a lot about climate change, but will he spend the money? http://bit.ly/bcrGQI
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Boris Watch
RT @libcon: Boris talks a lot about climate change, but will he spend the money? http://bit.ly/bcrGQI
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Paul Tran
Boris talks a lot about climate change, but will he spend the …: But his record isn't very rosy: in 2008/09 he p… http://bit.ly/abbhRL
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Scott Redding
RT @BorisWatch: RT @libcon: Boris talks a lot about climate change, but will he spend the money? http://bit.ly/bcrGQI
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Naadir Jeewa
Reading: Boris talks a lot about climate change, but will he spend the money?: The Mayor’s latest draft of his Cli… http://bit.ly/as6nKe
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Alan Perryman
RT @BorisWatch: RT @libcon: Boris talks a lot about climate change, but will he spend the money? http://bit.ly/bcrGQI
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phineon
Boris talks a lot about climate change, but will he spend the … http://bit.ly/ajrPHl
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Tom Chance (work)
Blog on London's new draft climate change strategy by @DarrenJohnsonAM http://t.co/VxTbq2d
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Lewisham Green Party
RT @GLATomChance: Blog on London's new draft climate change strategy by @DarrenJohnsonAM http://t.co/VxTbq2d
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Darren Johnson
My analysis of London Mayor's Climate Change plans & the lack of budget http://bit.ly/bfTxZd
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Southwark Greens
The Mayor has a "worthy wishlist" to tackle climate change, but will any of it survive the cuts? http://t.co/VxTbq2d
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