We held a TaPP workshop on 21st April 2023 to discuss what the pursuit of Net Zero means for UK trade policy and this report provides a summary of the discussions.
The UK is committed to meet its Net Zero target (that is, reduce emissions by 100% compared to 1990 levels) by 2050. The UK government has proudly claimed that it is the first major economy to commit do so as a matter of national law, though progress has been slow thus far. Internationally, the UK has been active supporting the pursuit of Net Zero commitments through the UNFCCC and elsewhere. At COP27 last year, ISO launched the ISO Net Zero Guidelines, commissioned by the Our 2050 World collaboration which is convened by the UK’s national standards body, the BSI. Meanwhile, the most recent UK government redesign has seen the creation of a new Department for Energy Security and Net Zero, at least symbolically stressing its importance for the current government. And it is not only the UK that is framing its climate policy through Net Zero – the EU’s new Net-Zero Industry Act will form a key part of its Green Deal Industrial Plan.
What does the pursuit of Net Zero mean for UK trade policy? Which policy areas are mostly keenly engaged in Net Zero, and what opportunities and risks do Net Zero policies present for the UK both at home and abroad?
To consider these questions, our workshop included TaPP members and selected invitees, with special interventions from Andrew Lang (University of Edinburgh), Kateryna Holzer (University of Eastern Finland), Aik Hoe Lim (World Trade Organization), Markus Gehring (University of Cambridge), and Emily Faint (BSI).
The report concludes with specific proposals from the co-directors for the UK.