Ahead of the General Election on 12 December, the main parties have now published their manifestos, setting out their environmental policy stances should they take the reins at number 10.
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Delivery of a ten-year emergency programme to cut greenhouse gas emissions and phase out emissions from the remaining hard-to-treat sectors by 2045.
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Set a new legally binding target to reduce net greenhouse gas emissions to zero by 2045.
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Establish a Department for Climate Change and Natural Resources.
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Guarantee an Office for Environmental Protection that is “fully independent” of government. and possess powers and resources to enforce compliance with climate and environmental targets.
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Introduction of a Zero Waste and Resource Efficiency Act to ensure that the UK moves towards a circular economy. This will include:
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banning non-recyclable single-use plastics within three years
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an “ambition” to end plastic waste exports by 2030.
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extending the forthcoming EU “right to repair” legislation for consumer goods.
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introducing legally binding targets for reducing the consumption of key natural resources.
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extending deposit return schemes for all food and drink bottles and containers.
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establishing a statutory waste recycling target of 70% in England; extend separate food waste collections to at least 90% of homes by 2024; “strengthen incentives” to reduce packaging and reduce waste sent to landfill and incineration.
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Create one million UK jobs to “transform industry, energy, transport, agriculture and building while restoring nature”.
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A “Green New Deal” to achieve the “substantial majority” of emissions reductions by 2030
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Delist from the Stock Exchange Change any company that fails to contribute to tackling the climate and environmental emergency.
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A £250 billion “Green Transformation Fund” dedicated to renewable and low-carbon energy and transport, biodiversity and environmental restoration.
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Introduction of a Climate and Environment Emergency Bill setting out in law robust, binding new standards for decarbonisation, nature recovery, environmental quality and habitats and species protection.
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Bring services – from bin collections to management of local leisure centre – back in-house within the next Parliament.
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On waste and recycling:
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Make producers responsible for the waste they create and for the full cost of recycling or disposal.
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Learn from Wales’ recycling example, and “back bottle-return schemes”.
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Build three new steel recycling plants and upgrade existing production sites.
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Invest in three new gigafactories and four metal reprocessing plants.
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Invest in a new plastics remanufacturing industry and end exports of plastic waste.
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Move forward with the Environment Bill that will “guarantee” to protect and restore the natural environment after leaving the EU.
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Establish a new independent Office for Environmental Protection and introduce legal targets, including for air quality.
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Introduce a £640 million new Nature for Climate fund.
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Introduce a new levy to increase the proportion of recyclable plastics in packaging.
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introduce extended producer responsibility, so that producers pay the full costs of dealing with the waste they produce, and boost domestic recycling.
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ban the export of plastic waste to non-OECD countries, consulting with industry, NGOs and local councils on the date by which this should be achieved.
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increase penalties for fly-tipping, make those on community sentences clean up their parks and streets.
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introduce a deposit return scheme to incentivise people to recycle plastic and glass.
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Deliver on the “world-leading” target of Net Zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.
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establish a new £500 million Blue Planet Fund to help protect our oceans from plastic pollution, warming sea temperatures and overfishing, and extend the Blue Belt programme to preserve the maritime environment.
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The first Budget will “prioritise the environment”:
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invest in R&D; decarbonisation schemes; new flood defences, which will receive £4 billion in new funding over the coming years; electric vehicle infrastructure, including a national plug-in network and gigafactory; and clean energy.
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Press for the introduction of an Ofgem database of people who have not switched suppliers alongside a national free switching service to help them do so.
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Demand the UK accelerates its action to tackle climate change and introduce tougher targets.
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Call for a reduction in VAT on energy efficiency improvements in homes
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Work towards a target of planting 60m trees annually in the UK by 2025, with 30m of these in Scotland.
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Ensuring that, from 2024, all new homes must use renewable or low carbon heat.
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Invest in the Environment: in addition to planting millions of trees to capture CO2, it says it will “promote a global initiative at the UN”.
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“Recycle our own waste” and make it illegal for it to be exported across the world to be burnt, buried or dumped at sea.
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Become 100% self-sufficient in renewable energy by 2030.
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create tens of thousands of “highly skilled green collar jobs”.
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secure “robust, independent governance” and accountability processes to uphold the law and stand up for the environment.
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establishment of a new Ministry for the Future. As well as surveying the broad policy environment, the Minister will be tasked with taking a long-term view of the environment.
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Develop a package of environmental and fiscal reforms to aid the transition to a greener economy.
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Plaid Cymru will commission a national inventory of green energy potential in Wales.
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tackle the issue of plastic waste by banning single-use plastics, developing sustainable alternatives and increasing recycling targets.
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place Wales at the forefront of the circular economy and ensure a Zero Waste Wales by 2030 through a combination of legislation and policy initiatives, such as Deposit Return Schemes, extended producer responsibility and use of planning laws, levies and tax-making powers.
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Increase financial support for farmers
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Ensure agriculture is afforded protection in post-Brexit trade deals
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A new fisheries bill for the UK to take back control of our territorial waters
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Meet the net zero carbon neutral target for Northern Ireland by 2050
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Ban all new petrol and diesel car sales by 2035
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encourage tree-planting and make agro-forestry a “realistic and viable option for farmers and landowners with the necessary re-skilling programmes to enable them to re-focus their land use”.