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Climate and Ecological Emergency Bill

The Climate and Nature Bill, formerly promoted as the Climate and Ecology Bill, is a private member's bill before the Parliament of the United Kingdom aimed at tackling the climate crisis and environmental disaster.

Climate and Nature Bill
Parliament of the United Kingdom
  • A Bill to require the Secretary of State to achieve climate and nature targets for the United Kingdom; to give the Secretary of State a duty to implement a strategy to achieve those targets; to establish a Climate and Nature Assembly to advise the Secretary of State in creating that strategy; to give duties to the Committee on Climate Change and the Joint Nature Conservation Committee regarding the strategy and targets; and for connected purposes.
Territorial extentEngland and Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland
Legislative history
Bill titleClimate and Nature Bill
Introduced byAlex Sobel
Introduced21 March 2024
First reading21 March 2024
Second reading17 May 2024
Summary
A Bill to require the Secretary of State to achieve climate and nature targets for the United Kingdom; to give the Secretary of State a duty to implement a strategy to achieve those targets; to establish a Climate and Nature Assembly to advise the Secretary of State in creating that strategy; to give duties to the Committee on Climate Change and the Joint Nature Conservation Committee regarding the strategy and targets; and for connected purposes.
Status: Pending

The bill, which is currently before the House of Commons following its reintroduction on 21 March 2024, would ensure that the UK Government:

  • reduce its greenhouse gas emissions in line with the UK's proportionate share of the remaining global carbon budget for 1.5°C
  • reverses the damage to the natural world by 2030
  • establishes a temporary climate and nature (citizens') assembly to recommend measures for inclusion in an all-of-government strategy.

In the Commons, the bill has been presented twice by (the Green MP for Brighton Pavilion, and former Green Party leader) Caroline Lucas. In the 2019-21 session, the first reading of the CE Bill (Bill 172, 2019-20) took place on 2 September 2020.

In the 2021-22 session, the CE Bill (Bill 61, 2021-22) had its first reading on 21 June 2021. A second reading debate was scheduled for 6 May 2022—but the bill was not allocated time to proceed.

In the 2022-23 session, the CE Bill (HL Bill 13) was introduced in the House of Lords by (Liberal Democrat peer and former energy spokesperson) Lord Redesdale. Its first reading took place on 21 May 2022, second reading was 15 July 2022, committee stage was 18 November 2022, report stage was 25 January 2023, and third reading was 21 April.

In the same 2022-23 session, the CE Bill (No.2) (Bill 304, 2022-23) was reintroduced in the House of Commons by Olivia Blake (Labour, Sheffield Hallam) on 10 May 2023.

In the 2023-24 session, the CAN Bill was reintroduced in the House of Commons by Alex Sobel MP (Labour Co-op, Leeds North West) on 21 March 2024.

Details edit

The bill would "require the Secretary of State to achieve climate and nature targets for the UK; to give the Secretary of State a duty to implement a strategy to achieve those targets; to establish a climate and nature assembly to advise the Secretary of State in creating that strategy; [and] to give duties to the Committee on Climate Change and the Joint Nature Conservation Committee regarding the strategy and targets."[1][2][3][4]

It would establish a representative climate and nature assembly to propose recommendations in line with the proposed legislation's dual targets to tackle the climate and ecological emergency.[5][6]

John Harris wrote in The Guardian that:

The CE Bill is a neat means of doing two things. It highlights how much our politicians are defying the urgency of the moment and—by presenting clear and precise proposals to drastically reduce carbon emissions and restore biodiversity in the same typefaces and official vocabulary as the laws that define whole swathes of our lives—it makes the prospect of radical action eminently imaginable.[5]

History of the CAN Bill in the UK Parliament edit

2019-21 session

In the 2019-21 session, Caroline Lucas tabled the bill—and corresponding early day motion 832—on 2 September 2020. It received its first reading the same day[7] and its scheduled second reading date of 26 March 2021 was postponed. 11 MPs co-sponsored the billAlan Brown (SNP), Claire Hanna (Social Democratic and Labour Party), Wera Hobhouse (Liberal Democrat), Clive Lewis (Labour), Liz Saville Roberts (Plaid Cymru), Stephen Farry (Alliance), Ben Lake (Plaid Cymru), Tommy Sheppard (SNP), Alex Sobel (Labour/Co-op), Zarah Sultana (Labour) and Nadia Whittome (Labour).[8]

2021-22 session

In the 2021-22 session, Caroline Lucas tabled the bill on 21 June 2021 with the support of 11 co-sponsors—Alan Brown (SNP), Ed Davey (Liberal Democrat), Stephen Farry (Alliance), Barry Gardiner (Labour), Claire Hanna (Social Democratic and Labour Party), Ben Lake (Plaid Cymru), Clive Lewis (Labour), Brendan O'Hara (SNP), Sarah Olney (Liberal Democrat), Liz Saville Roberts (Plaid Cymru) and Alex Sobel (Labour/Co-op). During that session, the bill was scheduled for a second reading debate on four occasions—10 September 2021, 29 October 2021, 10 December 2021 and 6 May 2022.

2022-23 session: CE Bill (No. 1)

For the 2022-23 session, the CE Bill was entered in the House of Lords new session private members' bill ballot by (Liberal Democrat peer) Lord Redesdale. It was drawn 8 of 25 private member's bills. Its first reading took place on 21 May 2022 and its second reading on 15 July 2022. At its second reading, a cross-party group of peers spoke in favour, including Baroness Hooper (Conservative), Baroness Boycott (Crossbench), the Bishop of St Albans, (Liberal Democrat peers) Lord Teverson and Lord Oates, and (Green peer) Baroness Bennett. At committee stage, Lord Redesdale amended the bill to focus on its nature target in light of the agreement reached at COP15 for nations to halt and reverse nature loss by 2030. The amended bill—the Ecology Bill—passed through its House of Lords stages successfully, and was handed over to Wera Hobhouse (Liberal Democrat MP for Bath) on 25 April 2023.

2022-23 session: CE Bill (No. 2)

In the same session, the Labour MP for Sheffield Hallam—Olivia Blake MP—reintroduced the CE Bill in the House of Commons as a private member's bill on 10 May 2023. The bill's co-sponsors were Derek Thomas (Conservative), Peter Bottomley (Conservative), Geraint Davies (Labour/Co-op), Alan Brown (SNP), Brendan O’Hara (SNP), Ed Davey (Liberal Democrat), Wera Hobhouse (Liberal Democrat), Liz Saville-Roberts (Plaid Cymru), Colum Eastwood (Social Democratic and Labour Party), Caroline Lucas (Green), Stephen Farry (Alliance).

2023-24 session

In the 2023-24 session, Alex Sobel tabled an amendment to Charles III's first King's Speech, regretting the lack of a Climate and Ecology Bill in Speech. The amendment was supported by MPs from across the parties, including Caroline Lucas, Daisy Cooper, Liz Saville Roberts, Stephen Farry, Colum Eastwood and George Howarth.

2023-24 session: ‘CAN Bill’

In the same session, the Labour/Co-op MP for Leeds North West— Alex Sobel—introduced the bill under a new title, the Climate and Nature Bill, in the House of Commons as a private member's bill on 21 March 2024. The bill's co-sponsors were Caroline Lucas (Green), Ed Davey (Liberal Democrat), Colum Eastwood (Social Democrat and Labour Party) Brendan O'Hara (SNP), Olivia Blake (Labour), Sir Peter Bottomley (Conservative), Daisy Cooper (Liberal Democrat), Clive Lewis (Labour), Stephen Farry (Alliance) Alison Thewliss (SNP) and Derek Thomas (Conservative).

Zero Hour campaign edit

Zero Hour (formerly, the CEE Bill Alliance) is a 42,000 person-strong grassroots organisation working to build support for the bill by persuading MPs, peers, mayors, councillors, local authorities, electoral candidates and political parties—as well as businesses, unions, community groups, NGOs, charities, cooperatives, and media organisations—to endorse the proposed legislation.

Allies

Zero Hour's partners include The Climate Coalition, Patagonia, Natura &Co, SUEZ UK, UK Youth for Nature, The Wildlife Trusts, Women's Institutes of Northern Ireland, Surfers Against Sewage, UK Youth Climate Coalition, National Education Union, The Co-operative Bank, Oxfam, The Body Shop and Triodos Bank. The bill is also supported by a wide variety of environmental groups, including WWT, CPRE, Faith for the Climate, Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth and Extinction Rebellion.[9][10]

Political supporters

At the time of the CAN Bill's in the House of Commons on 10 May 2023, 132 MPs (from 11 political parties), 40 peers, 353 local authorities, and the London Assembly were backing the bill.

The Alliance Party, Green Party, Liberal Democrats, Plaid Cymru, SDLP, Yorkshire Party and Welsh Greens officially support the proposed legislation—and MPs from Labour and the Co-operative Party, the SNP, and the DUP are also listed as bill supporters—alongside the Scottish Green MSPs and several Plaid Cymru MSs. The leader of the Welsh Liberal Democrats, Jane Dodds MS is also a supporter. The youth wings of several political parties are also behind the campaign, including Alliance Youth, Plaid Ifanc, Young Greens and Young Welsh Greens.

Conservative politicians

Alongside Conservative CE Bill supporters in the House of Commons—Peter Bottomley, Roger Gale and Derek Thomas—senior Conservative peers, Baroness Verma and Baroness Hooper support the bill, as does (Theresa May's former environment adviser) Lord Randall of Uxbridge. Conservative MP, Laurence Robertson, stated that he "supports the aims and principles of the bill" on 15 June 2022[11] and the Scottish Conservatives' leader, Douglas Ross MP, has said he will "consider signing the bill when it comes to the Commons for a vote". Mark Garnier, Conservative MP for Wyre Forest, has also met CE Bill supporters to discuss the bill; as have many other Conservative MPs, peers and councillors.

London Assembly

At a regional level, on 2 December 2021, the London Assembly passed a cross-party motion to back the CE Bill—proposed by Zack Polanski AM (Green) and Leonie Cooper AM (Labour/Co-op).[12] The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, subsequently confirmed his support on 15 July 2022 [13] and the chair of London Councils, Cllr Georgia Gould (Camden Council) confirmed her support on 18 April 2023.

Nature & Climate Declaration

Over 2022, Zero Hour organised a UK-wide, all-party initiative—a Nature & Climate Declaration—to attract the support of councillors, mayors, and devolved legislators to the key principles of the CE Bill. It was supported by 2,000 politicians[14] when the Declaration was launched and debated in the Commons in November 2022, including:

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Vogel, Jefim. "The new UK Climate and Ecological Emergency Bill is exactly what we need – here's why". The Conversation.
  2. ^ Ball, Tom. "Extinction Rebellion activists glue themselves to pavement outside parliament". The Times.
  3. ^ "Climate emergency bill offers real hope | Letter". The Guardian. 2 September 2020.
  4. ^ "We owe it to young people to take action on climate change - it's their future we're stealing". inews.co.uk. 19 August 2020.
  5. ^ a b Harris, John (30 August 2020). "If democracy looks doomed, Extinction Rebellion may have an answer". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  6. ^ Browne, Anthony (29 August 2020). "Extinction Rebellion's plan for eco-oligarchy". The Spectator.
  7. ^ Lock, Helen (4 September 2020). "The New UK Climate Bill: Everything You Need to Know". Global Citizen.
  8. ^ "Ministers 'out of sync' with public, say new climate bill campaigners". Evening Standard. 6 September 2020.
  9. ^ "Extinction Rebellion to block streets in London, Manchester and Cardiff". The Guardian. 28 August 2020. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  10. ^ "Extinction Rebellion activists glue themselves to ground outside parliament". The Independent. 3 September 2020. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  11. ^ "Tewkesbury MP Laurence Robertson supports climate bill". BBC News. 15 June 2022. Retrieved 18 July 2022.
  12. ^ Republic, Studio. "London Assembly gives support to proposed Climate and Ecological Emergency Bill". CIWEM. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
  13. ^ "Mayor Sadiq Khan is backing the CE Bill!". Zero Hour. Retrieved 18 July 2022.
  14. ^ H, Eskarina; ley (27 October 2022). "Nature and Climate declaration signed by 2,000 politicians across the UK". Open Access Government. Retrieved 16 May 2023.

External links edit

  • Campaign for the Climate and Nature Bill
  • Climate and Ecology Bill (2022-23) at the Parliament of the United Kingdom

climate, ecological, emergency, bill, climate, nature, bill, formerly, promoted, climate, ecology, bill, private, member, bill, before, parliament, united, kingdom, aimed, tackling, climate, crisis, environmental, disaster, climate, nature, billparliament, uni. The Climate and Nature Bill formerly promoted as the Climate and Ecology Bill is a private member s bill before the Parliament of the United Kingdom aimed at tackling the climate crisis and environmental disaster Climate and Nature BillParliament of the United KingdomLong title A Bill to require the Secretary of State to achieve climate and nature targets for the United Kingdom to give the Secretary of State a duty to implement a strategy to achieve those targets to establish a Climate and Nature Assembly to advise the Secretary of State in creating that strategy to give duties to the Committee on Climate Change and the Joint Nature Conservation Committee regarding the strategy and targets and for connected purposes Territorial extentEngland and Wales Scotland and Northern IrelandLegislative historyBill titleClimate and Nature BillIntroduced byAlex SobelIntroduced21 March 2024First reading21 March 2024Second reading17 May 2024SummaryA Bill to require the Secretary of State to achieve climate and nature targets for the United Kingdom to give the Secretary of State a duty to implement a strategy to achieve those targets to establish a Climate and Nature Assembly to advise the Secretary of State in creating that strategy to give duties to the Committee on Climate Change and the Joint Nature Conservation Committee regarding the strategy and targets and for connected purposes Status Pending The bill which is currently before the House of Commons following its reintroduction on 21 March 2024 would ensure that the UK Government reduce its greenhouse gas emissions in line with the UK s proportionate share of the remaining global carbon budget for 1 5 C reverses the damage to the natural world by 2030 establishes a temporary climate and nature citizens assembly to recommend measures for inclusion in an all of government strategy In the Commons the bill has been presented twice by the Green MP for Brighton Pavilion and former Green Party leader Caroline Lucas In the 2019 21 session the first reading of the CE Bill Bill 172 2019 20 took place on 2 September 2020 In the 2021 22 session the CE Bill Bill 61 2021 22 had its first reading on 21 June 2021 A second reading debate was scheduled for 6 May 2022 but the bill was not allocated time to proceed In the 2022 23 session the CE Bill HL Bill 13 was introduced in the House of Lords by Liberal Democrat peer and former energy spokesperson Lord Redesdale Its first reading took place on 21 May 2022 second reading was 15 July 2022 committee stage was 18 November 2022 report stage was 25 January 2023 and third reading was 21 April In the same 2022 23 session the CE Bill No 2 Bill 304 2022 23 was reintroduced in the House of Commons by Olivia Blake Labour Sheffield Hallam on 10 May 2023 In the 2023 24 session the CAN Bill was reintroduced in the House of Commons by Alex Sobel MP Labour Co op Leeds North West on 21 March 2024 Contents 1 Details 2 History of the CAN Bill in the UK Parliament 3 Zero Hour campaign 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksDetails editThe bill would require the Secretary of State to achieve climate and nature targets for the UK to give the Secretary of State a duty to implement a strategy to achieve those targets to establish a climate and nature assembly to advise the Secretary of State in creating that strategy and to give duties to the Committee on Climate Change and the Joint Nature Conservation Committee regarding the strategy and targets 1 2 3 4 It would establish a representative climate and nature assembly to propose recommendations in line with the proposed legislation s dual targets to tackle the climate and ecological emergency 5 6 John Harris wrote in The Guardian that The CE Bill is a neat means of doing two things It highlights how much our politicians are defying the urgency of the moment and by presenting clear and precise proposals to drastically reduce carbon emissions and restore biodiversity in the same typefaces and official vocabulary as the laws that define whole swathes of our lives it makes the prospect of radical action eminently imaginable 5 History of the CAN Bill in the UK Parliament edit2019 21 sessionIn the 2019 21 session Caroline Lucas tabled the bill and corresponding early day motion 832 on 2 September 2020 It received its first reading the same day 7 and its scheduled second reading date of 26 March 2021 was postponed 11 MPs co sponsored the bill Alan Brown SNP Claire Hanna Social Democratic and Labour Party Wera Hobhouse Liberal Democrat Clive Lewis Labour Liz Saville Roberts Plaid Cymru Stephen Farry Alliance Ben Lake Plaid Cymru Tommy Sheppard SNP Alex Sobel Labour Co op Zarah Sultana Labour and Nadia Whittome Labour 8 2021 22 sessionIn the 2021 22 session Caroline Lucas tabled the bill on 21 June 2021 with the support of 11 co sponsors Alan Brown SNP Ed Davey Liberal Democrat Stephen Farry Alliance Barry Gardiner Labour Claire Hanna Social Democratic and Labour Party Ben Lake Plaid Cymru Clive Lewis Labour Brendan O Hara SNP Sarah Olney Liberal Democrat Liz Saville Roberts Plaid Cymru and Alex Sobel Labour Co op During that session the bill was scheduled for a second reading debate on four occasions 10 September 2021 29 October 2021 10 December 2021 and 6 May 2022 2022 23 session CE Bill No 1 For the 2022 23 session the CE Bill was entered in the House of Lords new session private members bill ballot by Liberal Democrat peer Lord Redesdale It was drawn 8 of 25 private member s bills Its first reading took place on 21 May 2022 and its second reading on 15 July 2022 At its second reading a cross party group of peers spoke in favour including Baroness Hooper Conservative Baroness Boycott Crossbench the Bishop of St Albans Liberal Democrat peers Lord Teverson and Lord Oates and Green peer Baroness Bennett At committee stage Lord Redesdale amended the bill to focus on its nature target in light of the agreement reached at COP15 for nations to halt and reverse nature loss by 2030 The amended bill the Ecology Bill passed through its House of Lords stages successfully and was handed over to Wera Hobhouse Liberal Democrat MP for Bath on 25 April 2023 2022 23 session CE Bill No 2 In the same session the Labour MP for Sheffield Hallam Olivia Blake MP reintroduced the CE Bill in the House of Commons as a private member s bill on 10 May 2023 The bill s co sponsors were Derek Thomas Conservative Peter Bottomley Conservative Geraint Davies Labour Co op Alan Brown SNP Brendan O Hara SNP Ed Davey Liberal Democrat Wera Hobhouse Liberal Democrat Liz Saville Roberts Plaid Cymru Colum Eastwood Social Democratic and Labour Party Caroline Lucas Green Stephen Farry Alliance 2023 24 sessionIn the 2023 24 session Alex Sobel tabled an amendment to Charles III s first King s Speech regretting the lack of a Climate and Ecology Bill in Speech The amendment was supported by MPs from across the parties including Caroline Lucas Daisy Cooper Liz Saville Roberts Stephen Farry Colum Eastwood and George Howarth 2023 24 session CAN Bill In the same session the Labour Co op MP for Leeds North West Alex Sobel introduced the bill under a new title the Climate and Nature Bill in the House of Commons as a private member s bill on 21 March 2024 The bill s co sponsors were Caroline Lucas Green Ed Davey Liberal Democrat Colum Eastwood Social Democrat and Labour Party Brendan O Hara SNP Olivia Blake Labour Sir Peter Bottomley Conservative Daisy Cooper Liberal Democrat Clive Lewis Labour Stephen Farry Alliance Alison Thewliss SNP and Derek Thomas Conservative Zero Hour campaign editZero Hour formerly the CEE Bill Alliance is a 42 000 person strong grassroots organisation working to build support for the bill by persuading MPs peers mayors councillors local authorities electoral candidates and political parties as well as businesses unions community groups NGOs charities cooperatives and media organisations to endorse the proposed legislation AlliesZero Hour s partners include The Climate Coalition Patagonia Natura amp Co SUEZ UK UK Youth for Nature The Wildlife Trusts Women s Institutes of Northern Ireland Surfers Against Sewage UK Youth Climate Coalition National Education Union The Co operative Bank Oxfam The Body Shop and Triodos Bank The bill is also supported by a wide variety of environmental groups including WWT CPRE Faith for the Climate Greenpeace Friends of the Earth and Extinction Rebellion 9 10 Political supportersAt the time of the CAN Bill s in the House of Commons on 10 May 2023 132 MPs from 11 political parties 40 peers 353 local authorities and the London Assembly were backing the bill The Alliance Party Green Party Liberal Democrats Plaid Cymru SDLP Yorkshire Party and Welsh Greens officially support the proposed legislation and MPs from Labour and the Co operative Party the SNP and the DUP are also listed as bill supporters alongside the Scottish Green MSPs and several Plaid Cymru MSs The leader of the Welsh Liberal Democrats Jane Dodds MS is also a supporter The youth wings of several political parties are also behind the campaign including Alliance Youth Plaid Ifanc Young Greens and Young Welsh Greens Conservative politiciansAlongside Conservative CE Bill supporters in the House of Commons Peter Bottomley Roger Gale and Derek Thomas senior Conservative peers Baroness Verma and Baroness Hooper support the bill as does Theresa May s former environment adviser Lord Randall of Uxbridge Conservative MP Laurence Robertson stated that he supports the aims and principles of the bill on 15 June 2022 11 and the Scottish Conservatives leader Douglas Ross MP has said he will consider signing the bill when it comes to the Commons for a vote Mark Garnier Conservative MP for Wyre Forest has also met CE Bill supporters to discuss the bill as have many other Conservative MPs peers and councillors London AssemblyAt a regional level on 2 December 2021 the London Assembly passed a cross party motion to back the CE Bill proposed by Zack Polanski AM Green and Leonie Cooper AM Labour Co op 12 The Mayor of London Sadiq Khan subsequently confirmed his support on 15 July 2022 13 and the chair of London Councils Cllr Georgia Gould Camden Council confirmed her support on 18 April 2023 Nature amp Climate DeclarationOver 2022 Zero Hour organised a UK wide all party initiative a Nature amp Climate Declaration to attract the support of councillors mayors and devolved legislators to the key principles of the CE Bill It was supported by 2 000 politicians 14 when the Declaration was launched and debated in the Commons in November 2022 including Daisy Cooper MP Deputy Leader Liberal Democrats Lord Knight of Weymouth Lab Co op Minister for Biodiversity 2005 06 Andrew Boff AM Conservative Deputy Chair London Assembly Cllr Carla Denyer Co Leader Green Party and Cllr Andrea Davis Conservative Cabinet Member for Climate Change Devon County Council Angus Robertson MSP SNP Cabinet Secretary for External Affairs Scottish Government Lorna Slater MSP Scottish Green Minister for Biodiversity Scottish Government Sandesh Gulhane MSP Scottish Conservative Shadow Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Care Cllr Norman Hampshire Scottish Labour Leader East Lothian Council and Cllr Steve Delaney Scottish Liberal Democrat Depute Provost Aberdeen City Council Sian Gwenllian MS Deputy Leader Plaid Cymru Jenny Rathbone MS Welsh Labour Climate Change amp Environment Committee Senedd Cymru Cllr Terry Mendies Welsh Conservative Denbighshire County Council Cllr Gareth Morgan Welsh Liberal Democrat Powys County Council and Cllr Ros Griffiths Williams Welsh Green Conwy County Borough Council Naomi Long MLA Leader Alliance Party Colum Eastwood MP Leader Social Democratic and Labour Party Mayor Stephen Ross DUP Antrim and Newtonabbey Borough Council and Gerry Carroll MLA People Before Profit See also editClimate change in the United Kingdom Private Members Bills in the Parliament of the United Kingdom UK Climate Assembly Climate Change Act 2008 Environment Act 2021References edit Vogel Jefim The new UK Climate and Ecological Emergency Bill is exactly what we need here s why The Conversation Ball Tom Extinction Rebellion activists glue themselves to pavement outside parliament The Times Climate emergency bill offers real hope Letter The Guardian 2 September 2020 We owe it to young people to take action on climate change it s their future we re stealing inews co uk 19 August 2020 a b Harris John 30 August 2020 If democracy looks doomed Extinction Rebellion may have an answer The Guardian Retrieved 21 January 2021 Browne Anthony 29 August 2020 Extinction Rebellion s plan for eco oligarchy The Spectator Lock Helen 4 September 2020 The New UK Climate Bill Everything You Need to Know Global Citizen Ministers out of sync with public say new climate bill campaigners Evening Standard 6 September 2020 Extinction Rebellion to block streets in London Manchester and Cardiff The Guardian 28 August 2020 Retrieved 21 January 2021 Extinction Rebellion activists glue themselves to ground outside parliament The Independent 3 September 2020 Retrieved 21 January 2021 Tewkesbury MP Laurence Robertson supports climate bill BBC News 15 June 2022 Retrieved 18 July 2022 Republic Studio London Assembly gives support to proposed Climate and Ecological Emergency Bill CIWEM Retrieved 8 December 2021 Mayor Sadiq Khan is backing the CE Bill Zero Hour Retrieved 18 July 2022 H Eskarina ley 27 October 2022 Nature and Climate declaration signed by 2 000 politicians across the UK Open Access Government Retrieved 16 May 2023 External links editCampaign for the Climate and Nature Bill Climate and Ecology Bill 2022 23 at the Parliament of the United Kingdom Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Climate and Ecological Emergency Bill amp oldid 1214971378, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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