The ministerial team at the newly-created Department for Energy and Climate
Change (ECC) has been confirmed, although the new department's precise remit is
still being finalised.
Mike O'Brien MP, a minister at the Department of Work and Pensions since
2007, and Lord Hunt, parliamentary under secretary at the Ministry of Justice,
have been appointed as ministers working beneath the newly-installed secretary
for energy and climate change Ed Miliband.
It has also been confirmed, Joan Ruddock, parliamentary under secretary at
Defra with responsibility for climate change, will continue as parliamentary
under secretary at the new department.
However, a spokeswoman for the new department said that the precise
portfolios for the new ministerial team had not yet been finalised and it had
not yet been decided if responsibility for energy and climate change would be
split between O'Brien and Lord Hunt.
She added that it was hoped that the new department would be moved into a
dedicated building in Whitehall Place by the end of the week and that its exact
remit would be finalised.
While it is relatively clear that the Department for Business Enterprise and
Regulatory Reform's (BERR's) will be moved wholesale into the new department, it
remains uncertain which components of Defra's work on climate change will be
moved. Initiatives to curb waste levels and climate change adaptation measures
such as flood defence improvements, for example, could easily sit in both
departments.
The spokeswoman for ECC said that despite the creation of the new department,
the government's climate change strategy would continue to stretch across
multiple portfolios and consequently the ECC and Defra would work "very closely
" together regardless of where responsibility for areas such as waste and
climate adaptation end up.
The creation of the new department comes as development charity Oxfam today
published a
100-page
report criticising a previous lack of coherence in the climate change
policies adopted by both the government and many leading businesses.
The report highlights some of the opposing climate change policies adopted by
Defra and BERR, which have repeatedly taken contrasting positions in their
approach to how the UK should meet the EU's targets on renewable energy and
carbon emissions.
Barbara Stocking, head of Oxfam, welcomed the creation of the new department
as an opportunity to bring an end to the conflicting policies. "Too often it has
been a case of the left hand having no idea what the right hand is up to, and
this [new department] must now bring a much-needed cohesiveness to government
policies," she said. "With global climate and energy security at stake, the
government must now demonstrate powerful leadership."
The report also criticised a number of businesses and business groups for
taking contradictory positions in their approach to climate change. In
particular, it accused E.ON and Shell of promoting their green credentials while
pursuing respective plans to build a new coal-fired power station at Kingsnorth
and expand carbon-intensive tar sands operations in North America.
The
CBI
was similarly accused of undermining its own support for the development of a
low carbon economy by lobbying for the building of new coal-fired power stations
and airport capacity.
"Taking decisions now that will increase carbon emissions makes no sense at
such a critical time," said Stocking. "We must switch to low-carbon and greater
energy efficiency if we are to begin to stem the devastating effects of climate
change already being felt by millions of poor people around the world, despite
them being the least responsible."
However, the CBI's director of environment policy, Neil Bentley, defended the
organisation's position. "Business has committed to do what it takes to tackle
climate change and Oxfam describes the targets set by our members as "laudable
and ambitious"," he said. "We would have our head in the clouds, however, if we
did not consider the practical issues of moving to a low carbon economy."
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