Berliner Boersenzeitung - UK climate chief could quit as Tory race heats up

EUR -
AED 4.331489
AFN 75.484411
ALL 95.781411
AMD 442.51389
ANG 2.11106
AOA 1081.54614
ARS 1611.127684
AUD 1.655051
AWG 2.117093
AZN 2.005621
BAM 1.954862
BBD 2.374841
BDT 144.999217
BGN 1.967425
BHD 0.44477
BIF 3497.627078
BMD 1.179439
BND 1.499468
BOB 8.148022
BRL 5.8821
BSD 1.179124
BTN 109.741429
BWP 15.799287
BYN 3.350265
BYR 23117.009182
BZD 2.371442
CAD 1.623911
CDF 2724.504903
CHF 0.921478
CLF 0.026573
CLP 1045.844523
CNY 8.039117
CNH 8.032771
COP 4242.159895
CRC 542.835009
CUC 1.179439
CUP 31.25514
CVE 110.5429
CZK 24.343213
DJF 209.609976
DKK 7.472738
DOP 70.17853
DZD 155.847724
EGP 61.817714
ERN 17.691589
ETB 184.758729
FJD 2.593946
FKP 0.876425
GBP 0.869029
GEL 3.166774
GGP 0.876425
GHS 13.032683
GIP 0.876425
GMD 86.686291
GNF 10355.476473
GTQ 9.014599
GYD 246.689576
HKD 9.239126
HNL 31.384413
HRK 7.533428
HTG 154.464596
HUF 363.774882
IDR 20210.576025
ILS 3.549517
IMP 0.876425
INR 109.883342
IQD 1545.06541
IRR 1552289.474886
ISK 143.796514
JEP 0.876425
JMD 186.190688
JOD 0.836184
JPY 187.312049
KES 152.503473
KGS 103.141799
KHR 4735.448673
KMF 493.005752
KPW 1061.464678
KRW 1737.761864
KWD 0.364269
KYD 0.98262
KZT 560.216524
LAK 25909.330794
LBP 105618.784069
LKR 372.068371
LRD 217.311782
LSL 19.260474
LTL 3.482578
LVL 0.713431
LYD 7.471705
MAD 10.898451
MDL 20.192143
MGA 4871.083934
MKD 61.623539
MMK 2476.676915
MNT 4217.162719
MOP 9.513856
MRU 47.071575
MUR 54.59588
MVR 18.234115
MWK 2048.101035
MXN 20.361722
MYR 4.652863
MZN 75.431001
NAD 19.260295
NGN 1594.436567
NIO 43.321176
NOK 11.142021
NPR 175.586286
NZD 1.998424
OMR 0.453492
PAB 1.179124
PEN 3.996532
PGK 5.082787
PHP 70.536332
PKR 329.004376
PLN 4.238209
PYG 7544.381095
QAR 4.299941
RON 5.090812
RSD 117.398976
RUB 88.896898
RWF 1721.981296
SAR 4.425527
SBD 9.492729
SCR 16.6532
SDG 708.843361
SEK 10.834577
SGD 1.499244
SHP 0.880571
SLE 29.07299
SLL 24732.246705
SOS 674.053358
SRD 44.146158
STD 24412.011072
STN 24.94514
SVC 10.317051
SYP 130.482779
SZL 19.260281
THB 37.741936
TJS 11.166191
TMT 4.133935
TND 3.393837
TOP 2.839807
TRY 52.763631
TTD 8.012089
TWD 37.190048
TZS 3073.88051
UAH 51.306589
UGX 4374.901438
USD 1.179439
UYU 47.44724
UZS 14331.366039
VES 562.626546
VND 31069.378285
VUV 140.747328
WST 3.254472
XAF 655.636944
XAG 0.01485
XAU 0.000244
XCD 3.187493
XCG 2.125063
XDR 0.816249
XOF 655.17717
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.325763
ZAR 19.275971
ZMK 10616.371626
ZMW 22.549992
ZWL 379.778955
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • BCC

    0.1700

    81.72

    +0.21%

  • NGG

    0.0000

    88.95

    0%

  • CMSD

    0.1700

    22.83

    +0.74%

  • BCE

    0.3500

    23.85

    +1.47%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    12.92

    0%

  • RELX

    0.4600

    34.71

    +1.33%

  • CMSC

    0.1500

    22.64

    +0.66%

  • RYCEF

    0.5900

    17.79

    +3.32%

  • RIO

    -0.3300

    98.87

    -0.33%

  • VOD

    -0.0300

    15.62

    -0.19%

  • GSK

    0.2400

    59.18

    +0.41%

  • BTI

    -1.1800

    57.51

    -2.05%

  • AZN

    2.1400

    204.38

    +1.05%

  • BP

    -0.2700

    46.17

    -0.58%

UK climate chief could quit as Tory race heats up
UK climate chief could quit as Tory race heats up / Photo: DANIEL LEAL - POOL/AFP

UK climate chief could quit as Tory race heats up

Britain's climate minister has indicated he may resign as some Conservative leadership contenders equivocate on the government's net zero target, ahead of a crunch TV debate Sunday and the final rounds of voting by MPs this week.

Text size:

The intervention by COP26 president Alok Sharma came as a poll of Tory rank-and-file members, who will have the final say out of the two finalists, gave a surprise double-digit lead to outsider Kemi Badenoch.

Foreign Secretary Liz Truss was second, narrowly ahead of former grassroots favourite Penny Mordaunt and ex-finance minister Rishi Sunak, according to the unscientific poll by the ConservativeHome website.

Badenoch, a former junior minister with no cabinet experience, is running on an "anti-woke", right-wing platform and has said net zero amounts to "unilateral economic disarmament" by Britain.

"Green levies", backed by Sunak to help pay for the legally enshrined aim of achieving net-zero carbon emissions by 2050, have also been questioned by Truss and Mordaunt as Britons struggle with a cost-of-living crisis.

But with Britain facing record-breaking temperatures this week, Sharma told Sunday's Observer newspaper that the target was "absolutely a leadership issue", as the candidates wage an acrimonious battle to succeed scandal-tainted Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

"Anyone aspiring to lead our country needs to demonstrate that they take this issue incredibly seriously, that they're willing to continue to lead and take up the mantle that Boris Johnson started off," the minister said.

Asked if he could resign if candidates showed weakness on net zero, Sharma said: "Let's see, shall we? I think we need to see where the candidates are. And we need to see who actually ends up in Number 10 (Downing Street)."

- 'Back-burner' amid heatwave -

Under Sharma's chairmanship, nearly 200 countries pledged at a UN summit in Glasgow last November to speed up the fight against rising temperatures, after two weeks of marathon negotiations.

But India and China weakened the language of the final text to retain high-polluting coal, forcing tears and an exasperated apology from Sharma as he brought down the gavel.

Asked about Sharma's threat, Truss supporter and former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith told Sky News: "I'm sorry he feels that."

Truss still backs the principle of net zero but "we have to just put that slightly on the back-burner whilst we make sure people don't suffer" from surging inflation, he said.

Asked whether she also still backed net zero, Mordaunt said on BBC television: "Yes, but it has to not clobber people."

However, campaigners note that the green taxes make up a small fraction of overall energy bills in Britain, which have shot up on the back of Russia's war in Ukraine.

And they say the current heatwave gripping Europe is a reminder that climate change is an existential threat.

- Trans 'smears' -

The debate has ripped open Conservative tensions about the direction of economic and environmental policy under whoever succeeds Johnson when the winner is announced on September 5.

International environment minister Zac Goldsmith tweeted that with wildfires hitting Europe and temperature records being smashed, "it's worth reflecting that there are still politicians being elected who think protecting our planet isn't cost effective".

Climate change barely figured in the first TV debate among the Conservative contenders on Friday. But Sharma will have the opportunity to grill them when he chairs a hustings organised by environmentalist Tory MPs on Monday.

After that, all the party's MPs will hold another round of balloting to eliminate the bottom-placed candidate -- likely to be backbencher Tom Tugendhat -- before arriving at the final two in the coming days.

They will be reflecting on the outcome of the second TV debate, airing on the ITV network from 7:00 pm (1800 GMT) on Sunday, after Mordaunt came under concerted attack from Badenoch and Truss in the first one.

Mordaunt, who was briefly Britain's first woman defence secretary before she was fired by Johnson, pushed back against claims that she was lying over her position now about rights for transgender women -- a hot-button issue on the Tory right.

"There's a number of smears going on in the papers," she told the BBC.

(O.Joost--BBZ)