logo
Eco loon Ed Miliband sent aide on gas-guzzling 46-hour trip to Brazil to check out hotel despite green drive

Eco loon Ed Miliband sent aide on gas-guzzling 46-hour trip to Brazil to check out hotel despite green drive

The Suna day ago

ED Miliband's Net Zero department sent a health and safety inspector on a lavish 10,000-mile round trip – to check the hotels were up to scratch.
At least one civil servant got gas-guzzling flights to Brazil and back to scout out the British delegation's accommodation for an upcoming summit on climate change.
3
3
3
The taxpayer-funded expedition was branded a 'jolly in the jungle' while the Energy Secretary was accused of hypocrisy for sending his staff 10,000 miles by plane.
Civil servant John Gaunt posted sightseeing snaps on social media of his 'incredible experience' in the northern Brazilian city of Belem.
He was carrying out 'H&S checks' on local hotels ahead of the UN's COP30 summit in November.
Mr Gaunt, who is thought to have travelled from Heathrow via Lisbon, said he 'never dreamt I'd be travelling this far'. He added: 'Sometimes life deals you a good hand.'
He revealed the journey there took 23 hours, with the same expected on the way back.
The official was merely following orders, but critics attacked Mr Miliband's department for the trip which is estimated to have clocked up 11,500kg of carbon emissions.
The UK also has an embassy and officials based in the South American country. Mr Miliband has previously come under fire for racking up a £40,000 bill on domestic flights during Labour's first six months in power.
The former party leader has long campaigned to constrain aviation as part of his finger-wagging green drive. He has also vowed to block airports such as Heathrow expanding if they do not meet the UK's emissions targets.
Last night Reform UK deputy leader Richard Tice blasted: 'In an effort to 'save the planet', Jet Ed sent a civil servant to Brazil to do a job that could've been completed with a simple Google search.
'His lunatic obsession with Net Zero seems to give him the moral superiority to waste your money.
Ed Miliband won't turn Britain into a 'clean energy superpower', he'll put UP energy bills, destroy jobs and we'll have blackouts says Julia Hartley-Brewer
'The flying green hypocrite has spent over £40,000 on flights in just six months, racked up a carbon footprint more than 12 times that of the average Briton, and outspent his Tory predecessor tenfold.
"All this travel to promote an agenda that will do nothing to reduce global carbon emissions, while raising energy bills for hardworking Britons and further damaging small businesses and economic growth.'
Shadow Energy Secretary Andrew Bowie said: 'Red Ed's jetsetting civil servants have just been exposed for their jolly in the jungle.
As per usual, it's one rule for them and another for hardworking families being asked to tighten their belts. Labour need to start practicing what they preach because it's plane hypocrisy.'
UN COP conferences have been criticised as a waste of time, often ending in weak deals. Oil-rich nations are accused of using them to push their agendas rather than tackle environmental concerns.
Tory ex-COP President Alok Sharma was nicknamed 'Airmiles Alok' due to his extensive international travel for climate talks.
A Department for Energy and Net Zero spokesperson said: 'It is in Britain's national self-interest to attend international summits.
'Any carbon footprint is dwarfed by the carbon prize of delivering our agenda. The health and safety of our staff, while attending these events, is paramount.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Senate Republicans seek to end EV tax credit by September 30
Senate Republicans seek to end EV tax credit by September 30

Reuters

time2 hours ago

  • Reuters

Senate Republicans seek to end EV tax credit by September 30

June 28 (Reuters) - U.S. Senate Republicans late Friday released a revised a tax and budget bill that would end the $7,500 tax credit on new electric vehicle sales and leases on Sept. 30 as well as the $4,000 tax credit for used EVs. The prior proposal would have ended the credit for new and used sales 180 days after the bill was signed into law and immediately ended the credit for leased vehicles not assembled in North America and meeting other requirements. Republicans have taken aim at EVs on a number of fronts, a reversal from former President Joe Biden's policy that encouraged electric vehicles and renewable energy to fight climate change and reduce emissions.

Countries should keep their statehood if land disappears under sea, experts say
Countries should keep their statehood if land disappears under sea, experts say

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Countries should keep their statehood if land disappears under sea, experts say

States should be able to continue politically even if their land disappears underwater, legal experts have said. The conclusions come from a long-awaited report by the International Law Commission that examined what existing law means for continued statehood and access to key resources if sea levels continue to rise due to climate breakdown. Average sea levels could rise by as much as 90cm (3ft) by 2100 if climate scientists' worst-case scenarios come true, and recent research suggests they could even exceed projections. This is particularly important for small island developing states because many face an existential threat. But as well as the direct loss of land, rising sea levels cause flooding, threaten drinking water supplies and make farmland too salty to grow on. Having waded through international law and scholarship and analysed state views and practices, legal experts concluded that nothing prevents nations from maintaining their maritime boundaries even if the land on which they are drawn changes or disappears. These boundaries give countries navigation rights, access to resources such as fishing and minerals, and a degree of political control. There is also general agreement that affected nations should retain their statehood to avoid loss of nationality. Legal experts say these conclusions are essential for maintaining international peace and stability. Speaking at the UN Oceans conference in Nice, Penelope Ridings, an international lawyer and member of the ILC, said the commission's work was driven by the 'fundamental sense of injustice' that sea level rise would be felt worst by the most vulnerable states, which had also contributed the least to the problem. Research has found that a third of present-day sea level rise can be traced to emissions from the 122 largest fossil fuel producers and cement manufacturers. The Pacific nation of Tuvalu has been particularly vocal in its concerns. Sea levels on its nine islands and atolls have already risen by 4.8mm and are expected to get much higher over the coming decades. Australia was the first country to recognise the permanence of Tuvalu's boundaries despite rising sea levels. In 2023, it signed a legally binding treaty committing to help Tuvalu respond to major disasters and offering special visas to citizens who want or need to move. Nearly a third of citizens have entered a ballot for such a visa. Latvia followed with a similar pledge of recognition. At the oceans conference, the Tuvaluan prime minister, Feleti Teo, said his citizens were determined to stay on their land for as long as possible. The government has just finished the first phase of a coastal adaptation project, building concrete barriers to reduce flooding and dredging sand to create additional land. Teo noted that the US$40m scheme was 'very expensive' and it had taken years to secure money from the Green Climate Fund. He urged Tuvalu's development partners to be 'more forthcoming in terms of providing the necessary climate financing that we need to be able to adapt. And to give us more time to live in the land that we believe God has given us and we intend to remain on'. Ridings said it was now up to states to take the commission's work forward. Sign up to Down to Earth The planet's most important stories. Get all the week's environment news - the good, the bad and the essential after newsletter promotion Bryce Rudyk, a professor of international environmental law at New York University and legal adviser to the Alliance of Small Island States (Aosis), said the ILC had been very responsive to small states, which have traditionally not had their voices heard in matters of international law but are increasingly at the forefront of legal advances on climate change and marine degradation. In recent years, Aosis and the Pacific Islands Forum have both declared that their statehood and sovereignty, as well as their membership of intergovernmental organisations such as the UN, will continue regardless of sea level rise. The international court of justice, which will issue a highly anticipated advisory opinion on climate change in the coming months, was petitioned by Aosis to affirm this.

Photos of the Cholita Paceña contest that honors Aymara women
Photos of the Cholita Paceña contest that honors Aymara women

The Independent

time3 hours ago

  • The Independent

Photos of the Cholita Paceña contest that honors Aymara women

From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging. At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story. The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it. Your support makes all the difference.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store