We are seeing the long term affects of austerity

UK school building programmes have been “systematically underfunded” by this Government, Barry told Salma El-Wardany on BBC Radio London on the 4th of September 2023.

Barry appeared on the show to discuss the aerated concrete (or RAAC) crisis, which has seen several schools closing buildings at risk of collapse, with many more potentially under threat.

Over the “past 13 years, this Government has skimped, tried to penny-pinch on the things that are most important in life” and now we are feeling the consequences, argued Barry.

Hundreds of students at London school forced from classrooms due to discovery of risky concrete

Barry Gardiner spoke to Ellen O'Dwyer of iNews on the issue of aerated concrete in schools.

St Gregory’s Catholic Science College, in the borough of Brent, is trying “desperately” to get portacabins in place for the new term but help from the Department of Education has not been quick enough, Barry Gardiner, Labour MP for Brent North, said.

The school is among hundreds that have reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (RAAC) in some of their buildings, a lightweight concrete, used between the 50s and mid-90s, that risks collapsing.”

Read the full article on the iNews website here.

The state of school buildings in the UK is "atrocious" and the Government won't take responsibility

On the 1st of September 2023 Barry spoke to Jumoké Fashola on her BBC Radio London Show to discuss the issue of areated concrete, or RAAC, in schools.

The maths block at St Gregory's Catholic Science College in Brent has been found to have RAAC and has therefore been closed. Thanks to the hard work of St Gregory’s and the local council, students will still be able to study their lessons, but not in the maths block.

Barry tabled a written question back in July asking the relevent Minister to provide the information of schools that are at risk of RAAC. The Minister’s response “batted away” the question, argued Barry, claiming that the Government has not “taken responsibility when they should have done.”

Nadine Dorries is right about one thing "levelling up has been discarded"

On the 27th of August 2023 Barry appeared on a GB News Panel hosted by Arlene Foster to discuss Nadine Dorries’ resignation and Labour’s tax policy.

“The Prime Minister really has a case to answer” in the wake of Dorries’ letter, argued Barry, as she levied several substantive policy critiques of Rishi Sunak.

Barry further argued that “if you’re going to tax people, put the emphasis on the wealthy, not on the poor” in a an attempt to alleviat the suffering caused by the cost of living crisis.



Why have the Tories failed so badly on illegal immigration?

On the 4th of August, Barry appeared on the Lee Anderson show to discuss immigration and shoplifting.

“The number of asylum seekers in 2010 was 22,000. Last year, it was 89,000. You've had 13 years to sort this problem out”, Barry argued, “why have you failed so badly?”.

The same goes for shoplifiting. Under the Conservatives “the figures went up to 382,000. That's about 80 to 100,000, more than it was under Labour”. This is why Labour have pledged to put 13,000 more police on the streets to keep Britain safe.

We can't let the Tory cost of living crisis hold back our climate fight

Barry appeared on Camilla Tominey’s GB News show on the 30th of July to discuss banking regulation and the expansion of Ulez.

“I am a huge supporter of Ulez”, stated Barry, “it is a public health issue”. Pointing out that it was originally Boris Johnson’s policy, and it was Grant Shapps who eagerly pushed for its expansion.

“Don't take the politicians word for it. Listen to what the British Heart and Lung Foundation are saying. Listen to what all the doctors are saying. Listen to what the medical experts say. They say it's 4500 deaths a year that are caused prematurely by air pollution, and it can be solved by Ulez” - Barry.

Climate change is a war - we need to start treating it like one

We need to mobilise on a war footing to combat climate change.

On the 28th of July Barry appeared on BBC Newsnight alongside Carla Denyer, co-leader of the Green Party and Conservative MP Mark Garnier to discuss the urgent need for action on climate change.

“If you want to protect familiies against rising oil and gas prices, you have to insulate their homes and invest in renewable power”.

Barry argues that in 25 years time “people are going to turn around to their politicians and say why didnt you do something about it?”.

You can read the Telegraph’s write up of Barry’s comments here.

'Horrible and vicious' dog breeding clinics must face clampdown, ministers told

Published on the 12th of July 2023, Barry was interviewed by the Mirror on the horrible practice of dog breeding clinics.

Barry demanded tough new laws to clampdown on "horrible and vicious" backstreet clinics breeding designer dogs with an array of health problems because they look cute.

The rise of back street canine fertility clinics “appalled” Barry, where owners are charged thousands for procedures carried out by unqualified staff.

You can read this piece here.

The Government aren't stepping up to the plate on air quality

The Government have paid money to support scrappage schemes in Bristol, Bolton, Birmingham, Oxford etc., yet they refuse to spend any money in London.

On the 9th of July 2023 Barry Gardiner appeared on Oli Dugmore’s LBC show to discuss Sadiq Khan’s Ulez expansion.

Barry expressed his support for the scheme as it is a vital public health measure in the pursuit of better air quality.

Poverty in the UK is far too common for the 6th largest economy in the world

Lee Anderson is right when he says that global poverty is stark and beyond what we see in the U.K. “that’s why I was against your party cutting the foreign aid budget. But as the 6th largest economy in the world I think British people deserve more than mud shacks.” Argued Barry on GB News.

On the 29th of June 2023 Barry appeared on Lee Anderson’s GB News show to discuss poverty in the UK and abroad and Trans rights.

The Government dropping international climate aid commitment would be a disaster

The Government are reportedly considering dropping the £11.6bn commitment to climate aid, as reported in the Guardian. Barry appeared on LBC on the 5th of July 2023 to explain why this would be a travesty, not just for combatting climate change, but for the UK’s reputation internationally.

Barry welcomned the Government’s statement that this policy will not in fact be dropped.

On the 75th Anniversary of the NHS, 7.4 million people are on waiting lists

On the 5th of July 2023 Barry appeared on GB News to analyse PMQs. The panel discussed the 75th anniversary of the NHS, ULEZ expansion and the importance of keeping cash usable.

On the 75th Anniversary of the NHS 7.4 million people are still on waiting lists. Over 11 thousand people have been on waiting lists for 18 months. This is unaceptable and a clear indictment of how poorly the Conservatives have managed our NHS.

Barry argued that ULEZ is a vital public health measure, as he pointed out the extreme damage that air pollution can do to our lungs, particularly those of our young people.

Climate security is acheived by acting not as a fortress but as a village.

On the 28th of June 2023 Barry was interviewed by the India Global Forum (IGF) on Tech Solutions to Climate.

Barry explained how India and the UK are working together on international, cooperative climate solutions, in particular interconnected solar power.

There are several barriers to energy investment in the UK, argued Barry, for example the need for our energy grid to be changed to a “digitalized grid” is crucial in making our market more competitive.

However, Barry does point out that the UK is, in many ways, a very attractive country for climate investment, in particular the political consensus around Net Zero. This is because “both parties in the UK are committed to net zero. I don't think anybody would claim that that is true in the United States.”

Grant Shapps Needs To Justify the "Insane" Onshore Wind Ban

Barry was interviewed by Alain Tolhurst of PoliticsHome on the 25th of June 2023.

Barry Gardiner argued that the government's decision to keep the effective moratorium on building new onshore wind farms is “insane” and is keen for the chance to challenge the Energy Security and Net Zero secretary to justify the government's Net Zero plans to MPs

You can read the full interview on PoliticsHome here.

The UK is losing out by not investing in Net Zero

“We have to look at onshore wind as a huge win for our economy” - Barry Gardiner MP.

As a member of the newly-created Energy Security and Net Zero Committee, Barry appeared on The Rundown, a podcast by PoliticsHome, alongside Pete Chalkley, director of think tank the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit, and Luke Murphy, head of the Environmental Justice Commission at the Institute for Public Policy Research.

Hosted by Alain Tolhurst, the panel discuss how well the government is getting on with its target of hitting net zero by 2050, as well as Labour’s updated energy plans.

The Home Office has demonstrated a simple failure of governance

On the 20th of June 2023 Barry appeared on BBC Politics Live alongside Conservative MP Danny Kruger; Labour MP Barry Gardiner; Liberal Democrats MP Layla Moran and global pollster and communication analyst, Frank Luntz. 

Hosted by Jo Coburn the group discussed the Boris Johnson Privileges Committee which was backed by MPs 354 MPs, with only 7 opposing.

After this they discuss Council Housing, where Barry made clear that the Government simply havn’t built enough houses. 1.2 million households are on the waiting list for social housing, but last year less than 8000 new social homes were built.

Home Office has made a U-turn on drug testing at UK festivals. From now on, drug-checking facilities must apply for a special licence, which could take three months to be approved, this therefore means that festivals this year, such as Parklife and Glastonbury won’t be able to have drug-checking facilities. Barry argued that this is “simply a failure of governance”.

We must establish safe and legal routes to the UK to stop small boat crossings

On the 14th of June 2023 Barry appeared on GB News to discuss and analyse PMQs.

Barry praised Keir Starmer’s attacks on Rishi Sunak, arguing that the PM was “too weak” to stand up to Boris Johnson over his honours list, to solve the mortgage crisis or to challenge former PM Liz Truss’ honours list that we can expect in the future.

As people who have crossed the channel on small boats reached over 9,000, Barry stressed that the only way to stop small boat crossings is to establish safe and legal routes to the UK from countries such as Afghanistan.

As the ice melts, a perilous Russian threat is emerging in the Arctic

Ask Britain’s foreign secretary which part of the world poses his biggest foreign policy challenge, and the chances are he will say either Russia or China. He probably will not say the Arctic. Yet the implications of what is happening in the Arctic will change patterns of international trade, drive food insecurity, deepen global poverty, increase refugee crises, reorient military alliances, and turbocharge military expenditures and the risk of war.

The eight Arctic states – Canada, Finland, Denmark, Iceland, Norway, Sweden, the US and Russia – have long collaborated on scientific research through the Arctic Council, a non-military body. Until now. After Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Arctic Council meetings ceased. So did cooperation with Russia. This has hampered progress on climate and environmental research and turbocharged the militarisation of the Arctic.

The success of the Arctic Council depended on its geopolitical balance. It is not a security alliance and has always tried to remain independent from politics. Five of the eight countries were part of Nato; the other three were not. That has now changed. Finland joined Nato in April. Sweden is in the process of joining. Soon, Nato will literally be surrounding Russia in the Arctic.

To understand why this matters, we must first understand the climate emergency taking place in the region. Summer sea ice has declined by 30% in the past 30 years; 90% of old ice, which is classified as five years old or more, has gone. That ice used to act as the great heat shield for the planet, reflecting back the sun’s rays. But the loss of ice is producing a vicious spiral of heating. The Arctic is now warming three times faster than the global average. This process is called Arctic amplification. It means that scientists now project an Arctic free from summer ice by 2040–45.

As the ice cover is lost, a trans-polar route is opening to connect east Asia to Europe and the eastern coast of North America. And the ice barrier that once protected Russia’s northern shore will be exposed as never before. Russia represents 53% of the Arctic coastline and the need to protect its northern border as the ice barrier melts is a key national security concern.

Vladimir Putin already had ambitious plans for the northern sea route, seeking to more than double the cargo traffic. But over the past six years, Russia has also built 475 military sites along its northern border. The port of Severomorsk, on the Kola peninsula, is the base of the country’s northern fleet. In recent years, the Russians have reactivated 50 Soviet outposts in the Arctic and equipped its northern fleet with nuclear and conventional missiles.

The challenge of all this has not been purely logistical. As the permafrost thaws, the structural base for roads, buildings and other key infrastructure has collapsed. Russia is trying to deploy huge amounts of infrastructure and military capacity to build structures on land that is disintegrating, across roads that are disappearing. In December 2022, it passed a new law requiring 90-day notification for any warship transiting the northern sea route. It has also legislated that there be no more than one warship allowed in these waters at any one time and that any submarine be required to surface and show its flag along the internal waters of the route.

Recent experience in the Pacific suggests that the US or Nato will seek to assert rights of navigation under the UN convention on the law of the sea. This is inherently risky. Russia could see such attempts to declare freedom of navigation as a provocation. But failure to enforce these freedoms carries an opposite risk: without maintaining a presence in the region, Nato members would be allowing Russia’s new law to become normalised. A careful balancing act is essential to maintain presence and not allow Russia to close off this region of the Arctic as its private domain.

Moscow sees Nato borders expanding. It fears encirclement. Its experience of humiliation in Ukraine has increased this tension. Two Arctic brigades have been deployed to Ukraine with disastrous consequences; the Norwegian Institute for Defence Studies estimates that more than 1,000 personnel have been lost. As Russia’s conventional land forces have been depleted in the Arctic, the Kremlin will turn to its naval and submarine capacity. The potential to inflict damage to undersea cables and pipelines is a lever that Putin could use against his opponents.

At the moment, it seems our politicians are not looking beyond the Ukraine war. They need to. A weakened and resentful Russia does not make for a stable global order. We have already seen Putin pivot to China and use the Arctic as a bargaining chip to strengthen that relationship. It is scarcely a month since the two countries’ coastguards signed a memorandum in Murmansk about cooperation in the Arctic. China’s price for providing Russia with support over Ukraine could be requesting naval access to Russian bases in the Arctic.

On a recent visit to the Ny-Ålesund international research station on Svalbard, it was depressing to hear that scientific cooperation with Russia on climate matters has effectively ceased. The Arctic is an environment where cooperation is essential. Arctic science must be done over the long term, and the relationships and trust built up between partners offer predictability and greater stability. In a region that is becoming over-securitised, every opportunity to minimise accidental misunderstandings and avoid a military response should be seized.

A militarised Arctic would undermine scientific cooperation and pose an existential threat. Somehow, we need a diplomatic effort to separate the politics of war from the imperatives of climate research. During the cold war, the USSR and the west had cultural and scientific exchanges that kept back-channels of communication open when political temperatures were running high. Now, more than ever, we need similar initiatives to thaw the permafrost between Russian and western research efforts.

This article was published in the Guardian on the 13th of May 2023

We must stop investing in our own demise

The financial sector is fuelling climate change. If the investments made by the banks, venture capitalists and asset managers of the City of London were their own country, it would sit above Canada and Germany as the world’s ninth-largest polluter. The financial markets continue to pour trillions of dollars into fossil fuel industries, new oil and gas projects, and carbon-intensive activities. In doing so they are driving themselves, and the planet, towards a cliff edge. The task of redirecting these investments towards the goal of achieving net zero carbon emissions by 2050 is as mammoth as it is crucial if the goal of limiting warming to 1.5°C above pre-industrial global temperatures is to be achieved.

Failing to achieve net zero by 2050 would not just be a human and environmental catastrophe. It would be an economic one. Business as usual, leading to warming of 2°C or 3°C, would break the foundation of the financial system and risk major economic collapse. The adverse impacts of extreme weather events will undermine the ability of insurance companies to evaluate risk, with hurricanes, bush fires and droughts causing entire business models to fail. The consequence is that insurers would set the price for cover at increasingly unaffordable rates. With assets uninsurable, banks will be unable to offer security for loans such as mortgages, and without insurance or banking functioning as before, the entire financial system that today generates so much capital could fail.

Yet the risk to the sector presented by climate breakdown currently plays a minor role in investment decisions. Fossil fuel investments remain high-reward, and very few financial institutions are committed to ending investment in oil and gas: private banks invested $742bn in the fossil fuel industry in 2021 alone, and the UK bank Barclays is the seventh-largest investor in the world. Reversing this trajectory requires global action.

Some moves are already under way, with parts of the financial system indicating their willingness to transition to net zero by joining alliances such as the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero (Gfanz). Gfanz is a collective of more than 500 firms across the financial sector, such as banking, asset management and insurance, which has publicly committed to net zero by 2050, dedicating $130trn to weaning the economy off fossil fuel investments.

Bridging the gap between words and action, however, requires standardised and uniform goals. Without these, companies will be accused of elevating their own particular climate credentials publicly in an attempt to be seen to be green, while doing little to implement measurable and accountable change. Financial industries can claim to be making environmentally informed decisions, while failing to make public the exact indices and standards to which they measure success. Sadly, the varying standards against which different investments are bench-marked – whether environmental, social and governance (ESG) policies, carbon emissions, carbon productivity or other climate-focused metrics – are extremely inconsistent. Inevitably companies tend to pick and choose the ones that show them in the most favourable light. To address this, consistent metrics are needed for investors to determine the environmental performance of their investments – a “green taxonomy” that is globally aligned and can be an informed resource to rank green investments.

Restructuring requires a robust regulatory framework. Gfanz members are clear: “We are policy-takers, not policymakers.” They will run their businesses in accordance with the rules, but the rules must be the same for everyone. Until they are they will continue to justify carbon-intensive investments. Policy that engages the financial sector towards climate action must recognise that voluntary schemes are unlikely to deliver the change required. As things stand, Gfanz operates through voluntary initiatives, but only 60 of the 240 largest members have policies against coal investments, and only 11 robustly oppose offering financial services to new coal mines or related infrastructure.

To remain members of the United Nations’ net zero initiatives, investors have been told they must phase out unabated fossil fuel assets to support a just transition that does not leave communities to suffer. But the commitment to this phased approach must involve action and not be a “smokescreen” to disguise the financial sector’s foot-dragging. Regulation must create accountability. This could involve mandating diverse investments to ensure a move away from fossil fuel reliance with minimum economic pain, or oil and gas companies paying a bond for expected decommissioning costs, effectively ensuring that any new projects have their end firmly in sight.

By far the most direct way to factor environmental degradation into investment decisions is to put a price on CO2 emissions. This is supported by the majority of Gfanz members because it internalises the price of carbon and ensures the most polluting sectors pay their fair share. Put simply: the polluter pays.

But to align investment decisions with net zero requires a global focus that brings the entire financial sector under the same rules so as to avoid carbon leakage, which will be inevitable if industries in countries with high carbon prices can be undercut by those that have low ones. A unitary metric is required and competitive undercutting must be prevented. The International Monetary Fund estimates that the global price of carbon must increase from the current average of $6 per tonne to $75 by 2030, or the positive impact of carbon pricing risks being undone by leakage.

The global financial sector needs systemic change if it is to survive and mitigate the impacts of climate change. Faced with tackling the ravages of the Second World War, 44 nations gathered for the Bretton Woods conference in America to set up a system of rules, institutions and procedures to regulate the international monetary system after the war. It set unitary metrics for currencies – convertibility against the dollar – and demanded cooperation to prevent competitive devaluations. Next year, on the 80th anniversary of the original conference in New Hampshire, the world has a perfect opportunity to reconfigure our global financial institutions once again. We must do so to meet a climate change challenge that is both economic and existential.

This article was published in the New Statesman on the 23rd of May 2023.

The best way to grow the economy is to invest in a green future

On Sunday the 12th of June Barry appeared on Camilla Tominey’s GB News show to discuss Boris Johnson’s resignation, the Green Prosperity Plan and Just Stop Oil.

“If you are transitioning your economy to a greener future… you need to create the jobs of the future before you lose the jobs of the past”, argued Barry as he expressed support for a ban on new north sea oil and gas.

We are not going fast enough in investing for a green future.