Implementation critical, warns environment coalition

Revisions to the Climate Bill put in place foundations for effective climate action but more ambition is needed on implementation and on securing public engagement, according to a coalition of leading Irish environmental groups.

Stop Climate Chaos (SCC) acknowledged the potential for the Bill published on Tuesday “to shift Ireland’s approach to climate change from rhetoric into action”.

It was also encouraged by the progress in establishing “robust governance mechanisms to ensure coordination and accountability across Government”. The fact that carbon budgets explicitly cover the whole economy and all greenhouse gas emissions, especially methane, “is particularly welcome”, it added.

It warned, however, that net-zero 2050 targets were increasingly inconsistent with climate science, as they provided no guarantee of holding global warming to below 1.5 degrees.

“Some weaknesses in the Bill mean that there is a degree of discretion available to Ministers in sticking to the carbon budgets, and there are no penalties if targets are missed, or if the budgets are exceeded. The burden of failure will simply be passed down to the next government and the next generation of Irish citizens,” it said.

SCC policy co-ordinator Sadhbh O’Neill acknowledged the revised Bill seemed more robust in relation to 2030 and 2050 targets, while “the new carbon budgeting process can focus minds and ensure that all sectors play their part in reducing emissions”.

She added: “We should be clear however that this is just the starting line. Targets are only as good as the actions taken to meet them, and the upcoming national action plan needs to outline the changes that will deliver rapid and sustained emissions reductions of 7 per cent every year.”

SCC had campaigned for faster and fairer climate action for over a decade, alongside a growing network of civil society organisations and activist groups, she noted. “Our campaigning and advocacy work has driven home the message to political leaders that the public is watching, the climate movement is growing and that people will not stand by while the planet burns,” Ms O’Neill said.

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