Post Lockdown steps to aid economic recovery should drive progress to net zero target
An overwhelming majority of Climate Assembly UK members say Government, employers and others should support changes to the economy and lifestyles which help achieve the UK’s net zero emissions target.
The interim briefing from the assembly, Covid-19, recovery and the path to net zero, offers a unique insight into how 100+ members of the public, working to give Parliament and Government an understanding of the public’s views on how the UK should reach net zero, feel about the implications of the coronavirus pandemic and the resulting lockdown for reaching net zero.
Climate Assembly UK’s members are representative of the UK population, and well-acquainted with the sorts of measures required to reach net zero having studied these over a number of weekends. The results in the interim briefing show that:
Assembly member Ibrahim, a GP from Surrey
The 108 members who started out on Climate Assembly UK in January 2020 were selected to represent the UK’s population in terms of demographics and levels of concern about climate change. The Assembly met face to face for three weekends in Birmingham before the final weekend (planned for 20th - 22nd March) was postponed in light of the pandemic and reorganised online across three weekends in April/May.
At the request of assembly members and Parliament, the altered schedule included a brief opportunity to reflect on the impact of coronavirus on tackling climate change. The results of some of their votes and deliberations on the specific question of Covid-19 and the recovery from it are being published today as an interim briefing ahead of the Climate Assembly’s final report, as Assembly Members want their views to influence debate on the steps to recovery now being discussed by policy makers and politicians. Parliament expects a statement from the Chancellor of the Exchequer on economic stimulus before the summer recess. On June 25, the Committee on Climate Change delivers a progress update to Parliament which will focus on the response to the Covd-19 pandemic, and will note the findings of Climate Assembly UK on the matter.
The interim briefing contains two sections; one on economic recovery and one on lifestyle changes. The Assembly members agreed two official assembly recommendations and were able to comment on their reasons for agreeing or disagreeing with each.
The interim briefing from the assembly, Covid-19, recovery and the path to net zero, offers a unique insight into how 100+ members of the public, working to give Parliament and Government an understanding of the public’s views on how the UK should reach net zero, feel about the implications of the coronavirus pandemic and the resulting lockdown for reaching net zero.
Climate Assembly UK’s members are representative of the UK population, and well-acquainted with the sorts of measures required to reach net zero having studied these over a number of weekends. The results in the interim briefing show that:
- 79% of assembly members ‘strongly agreed’ or ‘agreed’ that, “Steps taken by the government to help the economy recover should be designed to help achieve net zero”;
- 93% of assembly members ‘strongly agreed’ or ‘agreed’ that, “As lockdown eases, government, employers and/or others should take steps to encourage lifestyles to change to be more compatible with reaching net zero.”
Assembly member Ibrahim, a GP from Surrey
The 108 members who started out on Climate Assembly UK in January 2020 were selected to represent the UK’s population in terms of demographics and levels of concern about climate change. The Assembly met face to face for three weekends in Birmingham before the final weekend (planned for 20th - 22nd March) was postponed in light of the pandemic and reorganised online across three weekends in April/May.
At the request of assembly members and Parliament, the altered schedule included a brief opportunity to reflect on the impact of coronavirus on tackling climate change. The results of some of their votes and deliberations on the specific question of Covid-19 and the recovery from it are being published today as an interim briefing ahead of the Climate Assembly’s final report, as Assembly Members want their views to influence debate on the steps to recovery now being discussed by policy makers and politicians. Parliament expects a statement from the Chancellor of the Exchequer on economic stimulus before the summer recess. On June 25, the Committee on Climate Change delivers a progress update to Parliament which will focus on the response to the Covd-19 pandemic, and will note the findings of Climate Assembly UK on the matter.
The interim briefing contains two sections; one on economic recovery and one on lifestyle changes. The Assembly members agreed two official assembly recommendations and were able to comment on their reasons for agreeing or disagreeing with each.
- Assembly members discussed whether they felt that steps taken by the government to help the economy recover should be designed to help achieve net zero. In total, 79% of members strongly agreed or agreed with this (42% strongly agreed, 37% agreed, 12% were unsure, 3% disagreed and 6% strongly disagreed).
- Assembly members also discussed whether they felt that government, employers and others should take steps as lockdown eases to encourage lifestyles to change to be more compatible with reaching net zero. In total 93% of assembly members strongly agreed or agreed that such steps should be taken (54% strongly agreed, 39% agreed, 3% were unsure, 3% disagreed and 1% strongly disagreed).