The Scottish Government has to produce a new plan on meeting climate targets by November, but their scientific advisers have told them that Scotland’s 2030 target is now almost impossible to meet. Scotland’s 2019 Climate Act set three targets. By 2030 we were supposed …
Big step forward on controlling grouse moors
This month the Scottish Parliament passed the Wildlife Management and Muirburn Bill into law, marking a very big step forward in curbing the impacts of grouse moors on wildlife and the environment. The new law follows several years of clever, dogged and …
Agriculture and energy sectors need to reduce methane emissions
Action in agriculture and the oil and gas industry could produce rapid reductions in the powerful greenhouse gas methane. 25% of Scotland’s contribution to climate change in 2021 was due to our emissions of methane. Because methane is around 80 …
Fife hydrogen heating trial now completely pointless
UK ministers have resisted an organised backlash against heat pumps and the hype over hydrogen for home heating and are about to confirm targets for heat pump manufacture. The Scottish Government recently confirmed its ambitions on heat pumps with a target to …
A treaty to end fossil fuels
The UK has just left the Energy Charter Treaty supposedly on the grounds that it would hold back action to meet climate targets. The Treaty, dating from 1991, allows fossil fuel companies to sue governments over policies they don’t like. France, Germany, the Netherlands …
Cementing renewables links with Africa
Scotland is working with key partners in Africa to share expertise and learn from each other on renewable energy. In the early 2000s I was invited by the Director in charge of energy policy at the Scottish Executive, as it …
Electric vehicles reaching a tipping point
Despite the UK and Scottish Governments going backwards on their top-level commitments to phasing out the sales of petrol and diesel cars and vans, things are actually going pretty well for electric vehicles. A new analysis shows that someone who bought a …
Never mind the climate crisis
Labour’s botched retreat from their commitments to a massive investment in reducing climate emissions looks doubly bad given its timing. First, in 2021 there was the pledge to invest £28 billion a year in measures to combat climate change. Then, …
Granting new oil and gas licences is insane
Despite the International Energy Agency saying in 2021 that no country should be granting new oil and gas licences, despite the UN Secretary-General saying that investing in new fossil fuel infrastructure is “moral and economic madness” and despite December’s climate …
Renewables energy’s rise and rise
Renewable energy prices are tumbling and installation rates are surging ahead. In almost every part of the world, it is cheaper to install wind and solar than it is to invest in new fossil-fuel power generation. Globally renewable energy grew by a …
Getting a grip on grouse moors
Today, proposed amendments to the Wildlife Management and Muirburn Bill will be debated and voted on by the Scottish Parliament’s Rural Affairs and Islands Committee. Scotland has a chance to outlaw many of the cruel practices of the hunting and shooting …
Record temperatures fail to change world’s course
Globally 2023 was the warmest year ever recorded, fully 1.48ºC warmer than pre-industrial times. Climate scientist tell us we must avoid going over a 1.5°C temperature increase, to avoid the worst impacts of climate change. This is a first target in the 2015 …