UK Legislation: taking the Climate Change Bill forward - progress
The Climate Change Bill was introduced in Parliament on 14 November 2007 and completed its passage through the House of Lords on 31 March 2008. It will shortly go to the House of Commons for consideration. The aim is to receive Royal Assent by summer 2008.
The Bill has been revised to reflect House of Lords amendments. An updated Impact Assessment has been produced to accompany the revised Bill in preparation for the Commons stages:
Background
The UK Government is committed to addressing both the causes and consequences of climate change and has therefore introduced a Climate Change Bill. The Bill will create a new approach to managing and responding to climate change in the UK through: setting ambitious targets, taking powers to help achieve them, strengthening the institutional framework, enhancing the UK’s ability to adapt to the impact of climate change and establishing clear and regular accountability to the UK, Parliament and devolved legislatures
The Government announced on 18 February 2008 that a review of the target to reduce the UK's CO2 emissions by at least 60% by 2050 will become a statutory duty under the Climate Change Bill and has provided details of the terms of reference for that review. This is one of several amendments tabled by the Government to strengthen the Bill as it moves towards completing its passage through the House of Lords. Other amendments tabled include measures to strengthen compliance with the target, increase accountability and transparency and expand the remit of the Committee on Climate Change.
The debate on climate change has shifted, from whether we need to act towards how much we need to do by when, and the economic implications of doing so. The time is therefore right for the introduction of a strong legal framework in the UK for tackling climate change. The Climate Change Bill is the first of its kind in any country.
The proposed Bill provides a clear, credible, long-term framework for the UK to achieve its goals of reducing carbon dioxide emissions, and will ensure that steps are taken towards adapting to the impacts of climate change.
The draft Bill was published on 13 March 2007 for pre-legislative scrutiny and public consultation. On 29 October 2007 the Government published its response to the parliamentary scrutiny and public consultation in the Command Paper Taking Forward the UK Climate Change Bill. The Command Paper set out how the Climate Change Bill will be strengthened and made more transparent
Command Paper and related documents
Government's response to the parliamentary scrutiny and public consultation on the Draft Climate Change Bill
- Command Paper: Taking Forward the UK Climate Change Bill (on TSO Official Documents website)
- Speech by Rt Hon Hilary Benn MP - Britain’s Low Carbon Future: what the Climate Change Bill means for our daily lives
- Defra news release
- Written Ministerial Statement
- Summary of responses to the public consultation on the draft Climate Change Bill (PDF 100 KB)
- Pre- legislative scrutiny findings (on UK Parliament website):
- Report of the Joint Committee (PDF 1 MB)
- Report of the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee (PDF 350 KB)
- Report of the Environmental Audit Committee (PDF 2 MB)
- Short summary of the Bill's aims and provisions (PDF 25 KB)
Impact assessments and analysis
- Impact Assessment at introduction into Parliament (House of Lords), November 2007(PDF 200 KB)
- Macro analysis of long run costs of climate change mitigation targets – examining the impacts set by the Bill's emission reduction targets
Key provisions of the Bill
Targets
Committee on Climate Change
Enabling Powers
- The Bill contains enabling powers to introduce new trading schemes, such as the Carbon Reduction Commitment, through secondary legislation. This increases the policy options which Government could use to stay within budgets and meet emissions targets, while maintaining the need for thorough analysis , consultation and scrutiny of proposals before a new scheme is intoduced.
Reporting requirements
Adaptation to the impact of climate change
Other measures to reduce emissions
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Page last modified: 4 April 2008
Page published: 13 March 2007
