REVEALED: The scandalous climate bill that will give Labour UNCHALLENGED power to pursue net zero that's going under the radar
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The 'climate and nature’ bill will require the UK by law to implement net zero
The shocking details of a bill giving the government unprecedented power to pursue net zero and other eco-goals have been revealed.
The ‘Climate and Nature Bill’, which will have its second reading on Friday, will legally bind the UK government and the Secretary of State for Energy to achieving net zero and a slew of other green targets described by some as ‘national self-harm'.
The legislation, which is being led by Lib Dem MP Roz Savage, will give Labour legal cover to rigorously pursue climate targets.
Critics say it has the potential to erode personal freedoms under the guise of addressing climate crises and could devastate rural economies, enforce invasive carbon tracking and strip property rights from rural folk.
The legislation states ‘the Secretary of State must achieve the following objectives’, which include reducing greenhouse gas emissions to net zero, taking responsibility for ‘offshored’ emissions via exports and imports, and preventing the world from warming by 1.5 degrees.
It also states the Secretary of State must ‘ensure the end of the exploration, extraction, export and import of fossil fuels by the United Kingdom as rapidly as possible,’ inviting concerns the UK may harm its energy security in pursuit of green credentials.
Other objectives include ‘fulfilling the Paris Climate agreement,’ ‘halting and reversing the degradation and loss of nature in the United Kingdom and overseas’ and ensuring ‘nature is visibly and measurably on the path of recovery.’
Critics have argued the government could use the bill as legal cover to seize farmers’ land for rewilding projects, harming the UK’s food security and destroying rural economies.
Roz Savage, Lib Dem MP and leader of the Climate and Nature Bill
HoC Official Portrait
It could also provide legal cover for land requisitions for vast solar panel farms, scores of wind turbines and other green energy producing infrastructure across Britain’s countryside.
Sceptics also highlight the potential skyrocketing of energy prices as the UK government is legally required to move away from fossil fuels to expensive green energy.
Hikes to energy prices, which have already happened under Labour, would tip many businesses and families struggling with the cost of living over the edge.
GB News’ Bev Turner critiqued the bill, stating: “It may open the door to nefarious forces grabbing land, houses, money, and frankly all your freedoms under the emergency of—you guessed it—saving the planet.
“In a nutshell, the CAN bill could force rewilding of farmers' fields. It could see costs driving farmers off their land. It could collapse food production and therefore entire rural economies.
“The rapidly forced end of fossil fuels will push energy prices through the roof, leaving families in the cold and shutting down businesses.
“Affordable holidays and everyday travel will become luxuries. Restrictions and taxes could make personal mobility impossible.
“Property rights would be taken away, with homeowners and farmers potentially losing control of their land and homes under vague conservation and sustainability goals.
“The UK will be torn apart by these policies, while countries like China and India will dominate, leaving us weak and dependent.”
It comes after Donald Trump promised to scale up the US’s fossil fuels industry, telling the world America was going to ‘drill, baby, drill’, a move that has buoyed the energy industry in the US.
The bill has split opinion however, and has received widespread support from MPs, faith leaders, businesses, seventeen union leaders and eco cheerleaders Dale Vince and Chris Packham.
Outlining the case for the bill, Roz Savage said: “This legislation is designed to address the environmental challenges we face while recognising and supporting the crucial role of our farming communities.
“What sets this bill apart is its holistic approach. It goes beyond our current commitments, pushing for a reversal of biodiversity loss by 2030, not just halting it. This is as crucial for our farmlands and woodlands as it is for our marine environments.”
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OBJECTIVES IN FULL
As laid out by Zero Hour, the campaign for the Climate and Nature Bill, the bill's objectives include:
The proposed legislation will also require itself to have a ‘positive impact’ on ‘local communities with a high deprivation’, ‘young people’ and ‘people with protected characteristics’ like religion, race, transgender status and age.
The bill was supported by some big names when it was first introduced in March 2024 such as Caroline Lucas (former Green Party leader), Ed Davey (Liberal Democrat leader) and Colum Eastwood (Leader of the Social Democratic and Labour Party).
Roz Savage has been approached for comment.