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4 in 5 UK energy professionals urge resilient green recovery

08/07/2020

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Britain’s energy professionals have added their voices to growing calls to ‘build back better’ post COVID-19, according to the Energy Institute’s Energy Barometer 2020.

They fear that without immediate policy steps from the Government, the UK’s 2030 and 2050 greenhouse gas emission reduction targets will be missed; this could also undermine the UK’s credibility as the host of the COP26 discussions in Glasgow next November.

The annual survey is based on responses from more than 350 UK professionals selected to represent views from oil and gas through to renewables and energy efficiency. It is the first since the UK upped its ambition to net zero and the first to factor in the challenges and opportunities left in the wake of COVID-19 and the global lockdown.

Steve Holliday FREng FEI, EI President and former CEO of National Grid, said:

“Our members from all walks of energy are crystal clear on two big takeaways for ministers and industry leaders in this year’s Energy Barometer. First, despite progress so far in decarbonising electricity, the UK is way off track for getting to net zero by 2050. More ambitious policies are needed and fast.

“Second, there’s an appeal for the UK to turn the discontinuity caused by the pandemic into the moment we get real about the climate threat, the shape of our future economy and our responsibility to the world.”

Dr Robert Gross FEI, EI Council Member and UKERC Director, said:

“There is sound advice here for ministers looking to stimulate Britain’s economy in a way that averts future risk. Most immediately, the economic, environmental and social co-benefits of upgrading our existing housing stock have never been clearer. But nor can we afford to delay bold decisions on low-carbon heat and transport which are essential for the trajectory to net zero.”

Chris Stark, Chief Executive of the Committee on Climate Change commented on the findings:

“The overwhelming support from energy professionals for a resilient recovery from COVID-19 should give ministers confidence to act. Decisions in the coming months will shape our economic recovery – and bend the path of future UK emissions.

“The dissatisfaction of energy professionals about current policies for net zero is a frustration we share. This is the year to put that right, as the world’s gaze falls on the UK, in the Presidency of the next UN climate summit in Glasgow, 2021.”

Key findings of Energy Barometer 2020:

UK professionals overwhelmingly support the ‘build back better’ agenda

The Government must take action immediately to set the trajectory to net zero; 70% believe it is currently not doing enough

Two-thirds of EI members believe the energy industry is not doing enough either, but change is expected, in particular for oil and gas

Citizen pressure is a key driver of the low-carbon transition

Notes for editors

  1. For media enquiries, please contact Nick Turton on 020 7467 7103 or nturton@energyinst.org
  2. The Energy Barometer 2020 can be viewed at www.energyinst.org/barometer/2020
  3. A free EI LIVE Energy Barometer launch webinar is taking place on Thursday 9 July at 9am with EI President Steve Holliday FREng FEI, EI Council Member and UKERC Director Rob Gross FEI and EI CEO Louise Kingham OBE FEI. Spaces are still available, register here.
  4. The Energy Institute (EI) is the chartered professional membership body bringing together expertise for urgent global challenges.
    Our ambition is for energy to be better understood, managed and valued. We gather and share essential knowledge about energy, provide the skills that are helping us all use it more wisely, and develop the good practice needed to keep it safe and secure.
    We articulate the voice of energy experts, taking the know-how of around 20,000 members and 200 companies from 120 countries to the heart of the public debate.
    Professionals in energy have changed the world before and now they are changing it again. The EI exists to support them and anyone who wants to better understand or contribute to tackling these urgent global challenges.