Short-term support for green innovations puts net zero target at risk

The government has been warned that its tendency to implement complex short-term support mechanisms for progressing green technologies is putting the country’s overarching net zero ambitions at risk.

In a damning 25-page report, the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) calls for the government to reform its funding mechanisms to provide certainty to businesses looking to invest.

The cross-bench group of MPs’ report also identifies a lack of clarity and support from government for both businesses and consumers, warning that government policy lacks oversight and transparency in supporting innovation to deliver net zero.

It adds that while the government has 115 net zero-related funding programs many of them pre-date policy decisions. It adds that because these funding streams are delivered through eight different government departments it is often difficult for businesses to know where to go for support.

The report adds that the uncertainty that is generated from short-term planning is of particular concern, in the context of the government’s announcement in September 2023 to delay the phasing out of new fossil fuel vehicles and heating systems.

Dame Meg Hillier, chair of the PAC, said: “Our Committee has warned time and again of the damage that can be done to delivering policy by the lack of long-term planning and funding from government.

“There is no more critical area where this is true than on net zero. If the government continues to leave businesses to peer through a haze of uncertainty, then that investment will not be forthcoming. Businesses and consumers need certainty.

“On supporting innovation for net zero, the government needs to agree with itself on what success looks like, what failure looks like, and report transparently on progress.

“Such basic building blocks being absent four years after a pledge critical to our very way of life was made is disappointing. The government must call an end to this faltering approach, or risk spelling out to industry, the public and the world that the UK is simply not serious about tackling climate change.”

The report makes seven recommendations. They are: