The Presiding Officer (Tricia Marwick): Good morning. The first
item of business is a debate on motion S4M-02156, in the name of Stewart
Stevenson, on climate justice.
09:15
The Minister for Environment and Climate Change (Stewart Stevenson):
I
welcome the proposed amendments to the motion from both the Labour
Party and the Scottish Green Party. I believe that, unless the debate
takes an unexpected turn, we should be able to support both amendments.
In
December, I represented Scotland on the United Kingdom delegation to
the United Nations framework convention on climate change summit in
Durban. It was the second year in which a Scottish minister had been
part of the delegation to the UNFCCC. The First Minister and Mary
Robinson, former President of Ireland and former United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights, sent a joint message to the UNFCCC
calling for climate justice to be reflected in the outcome of the talks,
which should witness a collective global raising of ambition on both
climate change mitigation and climate justice.
I will return to
the climate justice theme of today’s debate in a minute or two, but
first I will update the Parliament on the outcome of the Durban
conference. In July last year, the First Minister wrote to the Prime
Minister supporting higher global ambition on tackling climate change,
saying in particular that it was essential that we work towards European
Union agreement to a second commitment period for the Kyoto protocol,
given that the first commitment period comes to an end in 2012. David
Cameron expressed gratitude for the Scottish ministers’ support and
acknowledged that Scotland has a good example to share with European
colleagues of low-carbon investments and policies creating jobs and
growth.
A second Kyoto commitment period should be an interim
step towards a single, legally binding agreement on all parties to
deliver the necessary global action to tackle dangerous climate change.
Clearly, we were delighted that at Durban the EU did indeed pledge a
second commitment period for Kyoto and that, in return, it gained a
timetable from the major emitter nations for a new global agreement on
climate change to be negotiated by 2015 and ratified by 2020. That is a
tremendous example of Scottish political support across all the parties
contributing to influencing an outcome on a global environmental issue
of the first importance.
In addition, in the months prior to
setting off for Durban and in support of United Kingdom influencing
efforts, I met a wide range of European ministers from, among other
countries, Germany, France, Spain, Denmark, Poland, Romania, Bulgaria,
Slovenia, Slovakia, Latvia, Estonia, Malta and Hungary to promote the
evidence from Scotland on the jobs, investment, trade and growth
potential of the low-carbon economy in order to assist in moving
thinking within the EU towards increasing the drive for green growth.
In
Durban, as part of the UK delegation, which included two UK secretaries
of state and a minister of state, I took part in speaking engagements
and meetings with the business sector, states and regions, Governments,
non-governmental organisations and members of the European Parliament to
promote Scotland as a model of international best practice on climate
change and to promote our messages about the economic potential of low
carbon. I am very grateful for the support of Scottish NGOs and young
people in Durban in promoting the positive messages about Scotland.
Over
the past two years, international recognition of Scotland as a country
pursuing high ambition on climate change and the low-carbon economy has
undoubtedly increased markedly. We have a presence on the international
climate stage, and we were struck this year by how many countries are
beginning to echo Scotland’s messages, in particular the need to provide
certainty in a framework for investment to drive low-carbon growth.
Durban
has been widely hailed as a success for EU climate diplomacy, and its
leadership position is underpinned by progressive EU countries such as
Scotland setting high climate change ambitions. The fact that 120
countries formed a coalition behind the EU’s roadmap was key to securing
the Durban platform agreement, which keeps the major emitter nations at
the negotiating table and now has a timetable. Agreement was also
reached in Durban on the establishment of the green climate fund.
However, although the overall result was far better than expected, we
acknowledge that concerns remain about the shortfall in pledges to limit
global warming to 2°C.
Returning to the climate justice theme of
today’s debate, I note that on the radio this morning Alan Miller and
Mary Robinson suggested that this is the first ever parliamentary debate
worldwide on the concept. All of us in the chamber are playing a role
in that first.
What is climate justice and why does it matter?
The Mary Robinson Foundation—Climate Justice aims to secure global
justice for the many victims of climate change who are usually
forgotten: the world’s poor, disempowered and marginalised. By the way, I
should point out that that does not exclude people in our own
communities. This is not simply an international issue.
The following definition, provided by the foundation, captures the essence of the climate justice agenda:
“Climate
Justice links human rights and development to achieve a human-centred
approach, safeguarding the rights of the most vulnerable and sharing the
burdens and benefits of climate change and its resolution equitably and
fairly.”
Such an approach to combating climate change focuses on
people, is informed by science and seeks both to protect the vulnerable
by supporting developing countries to increase their resilience to the
impacts of climate change and to ensure that they have access to the
benefits that come from the developed world’s transition to a low-carbon
economy.
What is the global problem that the climate justice
agenda seeks to put right? Speaking in Edinburgh last September, Al Gore
set out his belief that clear evidence from events in Pakistan, China,
South Korea and Colombia shows that climate change is directly
responsible for extreme and devastating floods, storms and droughts. He
said that nearly every climate scientist actively publishing on the
subject now agreed that there was a causal link between carbon emissions
and the increase in intense and extreme weather events across the
globe. Via television and the internet, we are all familiar with the
effects of extreme weather events, but those events are experienced in
all-too-vivid reality—and all too often—by those in developing
countries.
Of course, there are examples of such severe effects
being felt in the developed world, too; I think, in particular, of the
increased death rate among older people in France during an unexpectedly
very hot summer a couple of years ago. In the Pakistan floods of 2010,
20 million people were affected; several hundred thousand homes were
damaged or destroyed; 6 million people were left without access to clean
water; and 3.5 million children were at risk of contracting deadly
water-borne diseases. An increase in extreme weather events, driven by
climate change, will further drive widespread climate injustice.
Al
Gore praised Scotland’s leadership on climate change and the First
Minister has received the South Australia international climate change
leadership award. It is important that we capitalise on Scotland’s
enhanced international profile on climate change to make the case for
those on the front line of climate impacts. In his speech to the Central
Party School in Beijing in December, the First Minister joined Mary
Robinson in championing climate justice and highlighted in particular
the gender dimension to the issue. In situations of poverty, women
suffer more than men from the effects of climate change. In the less
developed world, it is generally women who travel increasing distances
to forage diminishing quantities of wood and who go further to get water
for their families and villages. We must take account of the fact that
the impacts are differential.
As I said at the outset, the First
Minister and Mary Robinson sent a joint message to the UNFCCC, calling
for climate justice to be reflected in the outcome of the Durban talks,
and the First Minister has also urged world leaders to make this year
the year of climate justice.
Our actions go beyond simply
championing a concept. For the past two years, we have been
strengthening Scotland’s support for developing countries on climate
change. The Scottish partnerships that were announced in Copenhagen and
CancĂșn support developing countries on renewable and clean energy
through, for example, the Inter-American Development Bank and the Global
Carbon Capture and Storage Institute. Our international development
fund has supported the University of Strathclyde’s work on community
solar power in Malawi. To coincide with the Durban conference, the
Cabinet Secretary for Culture and External Affairs and I announced the
next call for project proposals to the international development fund
for renewable projects of a value of up to £1.3 million in the countries
of Zambia, Rwanda and Tanzania. Most recently, the Cabinet Secretary
for Culture and External Affairs announced a significant contribution to
our efforts on climate justice—a £1.7 million programme of renewable
energy activity in Malawi, one of the world’s poorest countries, to help
set it on the road to green growth.
I will say a bit more about
our support on climate change mitigation, in particular through the
Scottish Government’s international development fund, which is already
bringing Scotland’s world-renowned knowledge and expertise in the area
of renewable energy generation to communities in vulnerable countries
such as Malawi. In a fast-developing world, it would be easier for
countries such as Malawi to adopt high-carbon solutions to their energy
needs, but it is imperative that, as they aspire to western standards of
living, they benefit from our knowledge and go straight to cleaner,
low-carbon energy, rather than duplicating our processes and causing
further damage to the climate. In addition, that will give them the
opportunity to acquire leading-edge skills that may well, in time,
surpass those in what we term the developed world.
As I have
mentioned, a great example of that is the work that is being done in
promoting sustainable energy and providing access to reliable
electricity in rural areas of Malawi as part of the University of
Strathclyde’s renewable energy acceleration programme, which the
Scottish Government awarded more than £1.7 million in February. The
programme has multiple benefits, including those of reducing poverty and
tackling climate change, which are two of the key themes of climate
justice. The project will enable disadvantaged communities to be
empowered to address their own energy needs and to develop their own
renewable energy projects, which will provide access to more reliable
electricity for rural towns and villages. In the comfort of the western
world, we forget how little reliable electricity there is in the less
developed world.
By providing research technology, collaboration,
educational and training support and entrepreneurship, the University
of Strathclyde will work with the people of Malawi to develop their
renewable energy capabilities and climate change policies, thereby
putting Malawi on the path to green growth. In addition, the programme
will provide support at an institutional level in Malawi to support the
formation of policies, including Government policies, for renewable and
community energy projects. Our approach and expertise fit with the
European Commission’s priorities as set out in “An Agenda for Change”,
as well as the work of the United Nations high-level group on
sustainable energy for all.
In addition to providing increased
support for climate change mitigation, we have already recognised the
need to enhance our support for climate adaptation. In our manifesto
last year, we committed to establishing an international climate
adaptation fund. Given the clear link between the need for adaptation in
developing countries and climate justice, I can announce today that we
are renaming that commitment as Scotland’s climate justice fund and that
we will launch the fund in the next few months.
I said to the
Parliament in December, ahead of the Durban talks, that we believe that
action is needed now to grasp the opportunities that are presented by
higher ambition on emissions reduction to drive and incentivise
investment in new low-carbon markets, and to deliver our energy
security, environmental and climate justice objectives. I hope that the
Parliament agrees that Scotland can make a meaningful contribution to
championing and delivering for climate justice worldwide.
I move,
That
the Parliament understands that it is poor and vulnerable people in
developing countries who are most affected by climate change and are
least equipped to respond to it; supports Scotland acting as an
international model of best practice on climate change and promoting the
moral, environmental and economic reasons for action by other
countries; strongly endorses the opportunity for Scotland to champion
climate justice, which places human rights at the heart of global
development, ensuring a fair distribution of responsibilities, and
welcomes the Scottish Government’s commitment to ensuring respect for
human rights and action to eradicate poverty and inequality, which are
at the heart of Scotland’s action to combat climate change both at home
and internationally and strengthening Scotland’s support for developing
countries on climate change as part of Scotland’s international profile.
09:29