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Britain to Miss its 2020 Renewable Energy Targets

Posted by September 9, 2016

Britain is set to miss its 2020 European renewable energy targets, a parliamentary committee report said on Friday, setting a poor example for less wealthy countries as the world tries to rein in global warming.
 
Britain has a target to meet 15 percent of its energy needs from renewable sources by 2020, but had achieved just over 8 percent by the end of 2015.
 
"The UK will miss its 2020 renewable energy targets without major policy improvements," said Angus MacNeil, chair of the cross-party Energy and Climate Change Committee.
 
Britain's electricity sector is on course to meet its expected contribution to the target but energy used in transport and for heating homes and buildings is well behind what is needed, the committee report said.
 
The renewable target is a legally binding commitment set by the European Union.
 
"Our priority is providing secure, affordable and clean energy for families and businesses. Renewable energy already makes up around 25 percent of our electricity and we're on track to hit our overall targets," a spokeswoman for the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS) said.
 
Britain could be fined if it misses the target, although Britain's decision earlier this year to leave the European Union means the status of such targets is unclear.
 
However, the lawmakers said a lack of clarity should not deter the country from trying to meet the goal.
 
"We agreed our 2020 renewable energy targets as part of the EU but they still have many merits, even as the UK Government prepares for Brexit," MacNeil said.
 
"If the UK reneges on these targets, it will undermine confidence in the Government's commitment to clean energy and the climate targets agreed in Paris," he said.
 
Last year, more than 190 countries agreed at climate talks in Paris to limit increases in global temperatures to well below 2 degrees.
 
Britain has been seen as a leader in efforts to fight climate change and has a domestic target to cut emissions by 80 percent compared with 1990 levels by 2050.
 
"The latest Climate Change Performance Index shows the UK is the second best country in the world on tackling climate change," the BEIS spokeswoman said.
 
 
 (Reporting by Susanna Twidale)

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