Alex Kazaglis

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Alex Kazaglis

Alex Kazaglis

This is an extract from an article written by Alex Kazaglis, an Australian economist at the CCC, first published in The Punch. In it he gives his personal view of Australian climate change policy in light of the UKs recent commitment to the fourth carbon budget.

Julia Gillard must find it hard to imagine coalition politics ever resulting in Government commitments to radically reduce carbon emissions. This week, however, the UK Government, run by a Conservative-led coalition presiding over an era of recession and budget cuts, confirmed their commitment to green the UK economy.

UK Cabinet approved a reduction in emissions to around 50 per cent in 2025 in its decision on the “Fourth Carbon Budget”, which is a level of allowable emissions for the period 2023 -27. This builds on the UK’s previous commitments in the nearer term – the first three carbon budgets.

The carbon budget’s framework puts the UK economy on track to contributing its share to keeping warming to under the internationally recognised benchmark of around two degrees Celsius.

The decision implies that the UK will now have to roll-out low carbon and renewable power at scale, efficient vehicles and low carbon heating technologies across much of the UK building stock by the mid to late 2020’s. In short, the UK`s Fourth Carbon Budget is a commitment to reinventing the economy as low carbon by mid century.

It follows a recent decision to introduce a carbon price underpin to support power sector decarbonisation. This will rise to £40/tCO2 in 2020 and further in the 2020’s – much higher than the maximum $40 price being debated in Australia.

To begin to understand why these decisions occurred we need to look to the unique regulatory environment within which the UK operates, which includes a domestic Climate Change Act and a carbon price.

The Climate Change Act sets an overall carbon reduction target for the UK economy – to reduce emissions by 80 per cent by 2050. The Act then obliges the Government to lay out the pathway to achieve a long-term carbon target in detail, and establishes in law an independent body (the Committee on Climate Change) to monitor and report on Government’s progress. Government must respond to the Committee’s progress reports in parliament on a yearly basis.

These elements help to prevent progress toward long term climate goals from falling victim to the short-term demands of party politics and other influential lobbying. By committing to a detailed decarbonisation pathway that begins immediately, the ability for incumbent Governments to delay action to a time beyond their tenure is replaced by legal obligations to stay on track with their long term commitments.

As the CEO of the Committee on Climate Change, David Kennedy said today:  “We have moved into uncharted territory and are going to be watched closely by other countries”. Australia will be one of those that will have a keen interest in how things develop here in the UK.

Read the original article in the Punch

Alex Kazaglis

Alex Kazaglis, CCC Economist

This is an extract from an article written by Alex Kazaglis, an economist at the CCC, first published in The Punch, where he gives his personal view of Australian PM Julia Gilliard’s proposals to create a Climate Change Commission

“The debate during the first weeks of the election campaign has been dominated by the controversy surrounding Gillards proposed “Citizens Assembly”. Gillard needs a body with teeth to tackle climate change

Despite this, it is one of Gillards other proposals that could prove much more important: the creation of a Climate Change Commission to provide “evidence and information about climate change to all Australians”.

At first, the Climate Commission may not appear a compelling and visionary proposal for the future of climate policy. However in the UK a highly successful prototype- the Committee on Climate Change – has begun to create the deep and lasting consensus that Julia Gillard so strongly desires…..”.

Read the full article online

Alex Kazaglis is a Senior Policy Analyst at the CCC. He has a Masters in Environment and Development from the London School of Economics. In his Masters dissertation  he analysed the Committees role, arguing that it is a unique player in the climate change field…

“The CCC is the first institution of its type in the world – an independent statutory body established under legislation (the Climate Change Act, 2008), to provide advice to Government on climate change.

The establishment of the CCC illustrates an acknowledgement by policy makers that the problem of climate change requires a long term and strategic solution, independent of politics and short term election cycles.

Lessons from the first two years of operation of the CCC are potentially important to policy makers in other countries, both in terms of general strategic approaches to climate change policy, and the specific possibility of setting up similar independent organisations.

With this in mind, I recently undertook a masters dissertation to investigate the role of the CCC as an independent body in providing advice on climate change policy.

In providing its first advice on the level of carbon budgets and the 2050 target, and monitoring progress reducing emisisons, the CCC acted as a Knowledge Broker. Such a body is an intermediary between expert knowledge and policy, tasked with translating complex information into policy relevant terms. The CCC has fulfilled this role, assessing and developing a vast evidence base in developing its advice, and translating this to specific and clear recommendations, all of which have been accepted by the Government to date.