Maria Nazarova-Doyle, CFA, our Global Head of Sustainable Investment, shares key insights on how the new UK Labour government can lead the energy transition. With £50 billion needed in the UK annually by 2030 to achieve net zero, attracting private capital is essential. Maria discusses how Labour can leverage lessons from Australia to set clear priorities, bring about investor collaboration, and establish strong policies to make Britain a clean energy superpower. Read the full article here: https://lnkd.in/erJPSzkK #UKgeneralelection #labour #netzero #energytransition #ifminvestors
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Immense opportunities and incentivising investment. How might the new government garner greater #NetZero get-go? A fascinating insight from Mona Dohle in Net Zero Investor earlier this week on how to power-up private sector interest in Net Zero infrastructure. Writing on the approach outlined by new Secretary for Energy and Net Zero, Ed Miliband, they flag the fierce new formula to "double onshore wind, triple solar power and quadruple offshore wind capacity. " as showing potential stability for businesses to get behind on their #NetZeroTransition. Also noting that Pollination Managing Director Patrick Suckling believes support for the new greener government could "trigger significant progress on the road to net zero". So the question remains, where would new investment best cultivate confidence for your organisations #NetZeroJourney? Do you agree that a new office for delivering Net Zero would be a benefit for businesses unlocking opportunities? Does your organisation want to slash it's #Scope3Emissions and zero-in on Net Zero? Get in-touch with the specialists at GreenBridge Associates! Let us know your thoughts below and find the full article here: https://lnkd.in/egMpXHGv #ClimateChange #ClimateResponsibility #Government #Business #NetZero2030 #Investment
Investors eye energy transition opportunities in the wake of Labour landslide
netzeroinvestor.net
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"This Budget was meant to signal to our community that government is serious about investing in us. It was an opportunity to share some of the resources being heavily targeted toward industry and proponents, and to go some of the way to address the power imbalance that exists between industry and First Nations. And it was a moment to implement some of the solutions we have been advocating for around affordability to address energy security. Instead, with this Budget, the government has locked in the economy of the future while replicating the dynamics of the past, including adversarial relationships, delay, unnecessary cost, and impacts on Country" First Nations Clean Energy Network + Karrina Nolan are rightly infuriated at the failure by the Australian government to give Indigenous Australians what they're due in the #budget2024 The most generous cash seems to be flowing towards the mining and energy companies, many of whom are directly and brazenly responsible for injustice, destruction and wrongdoing in Australia. https://lnkd.in/dB99MUsw
First Nations energy exclusion hurts Australia's global emission target
nit.com.au
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With the new Labour Government in place investors are now carefully considering what the new political consensus in the UK could mean for the energy transition. Commenting in Net Zero Investor Pollination’s Head of EMEA Patrick Suckling believes the election results could trigger significant progress on the road to net zero: “This landslide win provides the strongest possible mandate for change, where the incoming government has already made clear that one of the most transformative changes will be to end the backsliding on the UK’s journey to net zero, not least powering the nation with clean renewable energy. With over 90 per cent of global GDP committed to this journey, that is where the UK’s future lies,” he stressed. Read more: https://lnkd.in/egMpXHGv #energytransition #netzero
Investors eye energy transition opportunities in the wake of Labour landslide
netzeroinvestor.net
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We welcome the Chancellor’s plans to speed up grid connectivity and reform planning for renewable energy projects, which could reduce some of the burdens holding back private investment into the low-carbon economy, although it remains to be seen how effective these will be in practice. The size and scale of commitments made today still fall short of a sufficiently comprehensive response to the U.S Inflation Reduction Act, the EU’s Green Deal Industrial Plan, and similar initiatives in other jurisdictions. If the UK is to attract the capital needed to lead the global transition to a more sustainable future, creating jobs and economic prosperity, we must build investor confidence, address greenwashing risks, and tackle more of the UK’s underlying investment barriers. The Chancellor didn’t go far enough. https://lnkd.in/eQq4bQv5
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“Over 60% of Australia's now super-funded critical minerals and hydrogen projects, and the vast swathes of land needed for solar and wind to run those projects, are on land/sea where First Nations have legal rights and interests” We urgently need strategies for an inclusive renewable transition that protects cultural and natural heritage.
The Australian Government has once again kicked the can down the road, locking First Nations out from participating in the economy. That’s Karrina Nolan talking, co-Chair of the First Nations Clean Energy Network. Karrina says there's two significant pieces missing from the Federal government's 2024 Budget. The first is certainty. Investors need certainty to invest. Financiers need certainty to lend. Project proponents need certainty to develop. Communities need certainty to consent. Well-designed government legislation, policy and frameworks can deliver the necessary certainty for clean energy projects to proceed. Legislation that recognises free prior and informed consent, the right to negotiate, land/sea tenure, water rights, cultural heritage and environmental protection would provide that certainty, if it existed. Policy that enables minimum equity requirements and significant First Nations investment in new energy developments, collaboration and participation, partnerships and investment ensuring equity among parties impacted by a project on Country would provide that certainty, if it existed. And compliance frameworks ensuring best practice First Nations-led engagement on energy projects would provide that certainty, if it existed. The second is First Nations people. First Nations participation in and benefits arising from the energy transition was unapologetically ignored in last night's Federal Budget 2024-25. We have been stripped from the equation. Focusing funding on industry subsidies and incentives and building more layers of government, the Budget falls devastatingly short in addressing the urgent and long-term energy security needs of First Nations. Simply, there is nothing in the Federal Budget for First Nations in the clean energy transition. And it's not like the government doesn't get it. Over 60% of Australia's now super-funded critical minerals and hydrogen projects, and the vast swathes of land needed for solar and wind to run those projects, are on land/sea where First Nations have legal rights and interests - and while Native Title or land rights may not apply across the whole country, cultural heritage is tenure-blind, and increasingly, investors too are demanding the certainty that genuine First Nations partnerships can bring. In order to activate investment in Australia's superpower ambition significant additional investment in First Nations capacity, consent, collaboration, co-design and co-ownership needs to be made through loan guarantees and tax incentives, funding criteria and specialist programs. Significant legislation needs to be altered to ensure First Nations consent and cultural heritage, and rights and interests are legally protected as rights holders, not stakeholders. The Australian Government knows all this, but once again has kicked the can down the road, locking First Nations out from participating in the economy. Thanks for publishing National Indigenous Times.
First Nations energy exclusion hurts Australia's global emission target
nit.com.au
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“Investment into energy transitions and infrastructure will help mitigate potential price shocks, reduce reliance on Russian gas, and stimulate economic growth, similar to impact of the US inflation Reduction Act…We want to see decisive actions and clear commitments from the new Labour government regarding the energy transition.” Adam Macdonald, Managing Director – Centrus Read the full article in Professional Wealth Management (PWM): https://lnkd.in/gY-v8YHJ #FinanceWithPurpose #RenewableEnergy #EnergyTransition
Post-election green agenda boosts investment prospects - Professional Wealth Management
pwmnet.com
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The Australian Financial Review has published its list of the most influential figures in the nation's energy transition and Pollination CEO Martijn Wilder AM is front and centre among the cohort of leaders pushing Australia's transition forward. "The thing about a list of the most influential people in energy transition is that everyone is only as good as each other," the AFR argues. "It starts with the politicians and the policy setting the direction. The direction is only as good as industry’s ability to implement it. Industry can only implement it if it has access to capital. And that is only there if the policy settings are right. It is a virtuous circle." #energytransition #netzero #sustainablefinance Read the full list at: https://lnkd.in/gT5jUm6S
Meet the most influential figures in the energy transition
afr.com
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The Australian Government has once again kicked the can down the road, locking First Nations out from participating in the economy. That’s Karrina Nolan talking, co-Chair of the First Nations Clean Energy Network. Karrina says there's two significant pieces missing from the Federal government's 2024 Budget. The first is certainty. Investors need certainty to invest. Financiers need certainty to lend. Project proponents need certainty to develop. Communities need certainty to consent. Well-designed government legislation, policy and frameworks can deliver the necessary certainty for clean energy projects to proceed. Legislation that recognises free prior and informed consent, the right to negotiate, land/sea tenure, water rights, cultural heritage and environmental protection would provide that certainty, if it existed. Policy that enables minimum equity requirements and significant First Nations investment in new energy developments, collaboration and participation, partnerships and investment ensuring equity among parties impacted by a project on Country would provide that certainty, if it existed. And compliance frameworks ensuring best practice First Nations-led engagement on energy projects would provide that certainty, if it existed. The second is First Nations people. First Nations participation in and benefits arising from the energy transition was unapologetically ignored in last night's Federal Budget 2024-25. We have been stripped from the equation. Focusing funding on industry subsidies and incentives and building more layers of government, the Budget falls devastatingly short in addressing the urgent and long-term energy security needs of First Nations. Simply, there is nothing in the Federal Budget for First Nations in the clean energy transition. And it's not like the government doesn't get it. Over 60% of Australia's now super-funded critical minerals and hydrogen projects, and the vast swathes of land needed for solar and wind to run those projects, are on land/sea where First Nations have legal rights and interests - and while Native Title or land rights may not apply across the whole country, cultural heritage is tenure-blind, and increasingly, investors too are demanding the certainty that genuine First Nations partnerships can bring. In order to activate investment in Australia's superpower ambition significant additional investment in First Nations capacity, consent, collaboration, co-design and co-ownership needs to be made through loan guarantees and tax incentives, funding criteria and specialist programs. Significant legislation needs to be altered to ensure First Nations consent and cultural heritage, and rights and interests are legally protected as rights holders, not stakeholders. The Australian Government knows all this, but once again has kicked the can down the road, locking First Nations out from participating in the economy. Thanks for publishing National Indigenous Times.
First Nations energy exclusion hurts Australia's global emission target
nit.com.au
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It would be fascinating to map out energy policies, progress on decarbonisation and the impact of GDP and trade for different countries over the next decade..... maybe I can get AI to do it.... anyway another one to note: The new UK government want to achieve a zero carbon power system by 2030 and become a green energy super power. https://lnkd.in/gAc4vhhx
New Labour government: is the UK back in the race to net zero?
sustainablefutures.linklaters.com
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HOW WILL UK GREEN GROWTH PLAY OUT? With The Labour Party Party forming the new UK government following the #GeneralElection last week, those interested in #sustainability will be interested in how the promises of the manifesto translates into physical action. There already was a diversity of opinion about a #GreenAgenda, from sceptics and deniers, to evangelists and everywhere in between. Interestingly there’s less disagreement about the more political aspects of #EnergySecurity not least as a result of the invasion of Ukraine and the fallout of the situation in Palestine. The mitigation however has delivered different answers from pumping more oil from the #NorthSea, to accelerating #renewable #energy generation. Opponents of the “more oil” lobby point out that N Sea oil goes into a regional/global market, and not directly into the UK, most going to refineries on the European mainland and elsewhere. Those supporters of sustainability highlight that building the #infrastructure IN the UK mean less dependency OUTSIDE the UK. One area that has been addressed very quickly is the removal of the moratorium on #OnshoreWind development. This is the #sustainable #energy part of sweeping changes to infrastructure planning in general. The halt was placed some years ago as local opposition (AKA #NIMBY) to turbines won support in Westminster. With the last government rolling back commitments, there is a loud call going out to pull the timetable forward, back to the original dates and more. Other areas being focussed on are #solar, not least using acres and acres of commercial rooftops to create electricity locally (#LocalPowerPlan), more insulation help, reversal of the #ICE end date and accelerating #EV and other alternatives, and questions about #HS2 (which the Chancellor Rt Hon Rachel Reeves less than an hour ago stated would not be reinstated until the funding for it can be found). The new government’s commitment on appearing and demonstrating #FiscalResponsibility is underlined by the apparent drive to create growth in the green sector, to provide new jobs in country, and reduce cash going out of the country to pay for energy, thereby being able to fund new waves of investment. It’s going to be interesting to watch how this unfurls. https://lnkd.in/eDFtEi3A
Labour win a 'landslide for green economy’
renews.biz
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