King Charles to give ‘call to arms’ Cop28 opening
statement, says PM
Rishi Sunak’s attendance comes after he scaled back
pledges to help the UK reach net zero by 2050
@alethaadu
Fri 1 Dec
2023 07.56 CET
King
Charles will give a “call to arms” in his Cop28 climate summit opening
statement, Rishi Sunak has said, expressing delight over the monarch’s record
championing the issue.
Sunak said
it was a “proud moment” for him to witness Charles deliver his speech on
Friday, which “speaks volumes about our type of leadership as a country”.
“We’ve got
our head of state there, delivering a call to arms in the opening statement,
which speaks volumes about the respect that he’s got on this issue around the
world.
“We’ve got
the head of government there with me, and we’ve got our chief diplomat there
and the foreign secretary. There are very few countries that will be able to
say what I’ve just said.”
Speaking to
reporters, the prime minister attempted to shut down any insinuation that
Downing Street had interfered with the monarch’s speech and movements. Last
year, Charles, a climate enthusiast, was unable to attend Cop27 after Sunak
spent weeks deliberating over whether he would attend the summit for even one
day.
The prime
minister’s spokesperson had earlier said that Sunak and the king’s Cop28
diaries were designed to “complement not duplicate”.
Cop28 is
the first time that countries will assess progress towards this goal in what is
being called the “global stocktake”.
Sunak’s
attendance comes after he scaled back a host of pledges designed to help the UK
reach net zero by 2050, vowed to “max out” the UK’s oil and gas reserves by
granting new North Sea drilling licences, and faced accusations from former
colleagues of being uninterested in the environment.
In
September, he delayed the ban on new diesel and petrol cars to 2035, watered
down plans to strip out polluting gas and oil boilers, and scrapped the
requirement for energy efficiency upgrades for homes, arguing that hitting
climate targets should not burden the public.
The prime
minister committed to attend the climate conference after criticism of his
initial decision not to go to Cop27 in 2022 led to a last-minute U-turn.
Sunak
insisted the UK was a “world leader” in tackling the climate crisis, as he
rebuffed claims the UK was no longer a serious partner at Cop based on his
weakening of the UK’s green pledges.
Before
attending the summit, he was accused of sending out the wrong signals on
tackling the climate emergency as he headed to the summit in Dubai after saying
his revised net zero targets showed he was “not in hock to the ideological
zealots”.
The prime
minister outlined plans to allocate about £1.6bn of climate finance during the
summit and claimed that the UK would exceed its target of spending £11.6bn over
the five years to 2026.
He faces
accusations from charities and non-governmental organisations that the UK is on
track to meet the target only by changing the way it calculates climate aid –
and otherwise would fall far short of the total.
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