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ウィスパリング同時通訳研究会コミュのBoris Johnson faces questions over government's pandemic exit strategy

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Speaker 1: (00:01)The government is introducing legislation to transform our environment through the Environment Bill, including measures to improve how we manage our resources and waste. And we continue to work with other countries to move towards resource-efficient and circular economy.
Speaker 2: (00:16)Thank you, Mr. Speaker and I’m grateful for the VP’s answer. I’ve had many conversations with schools around my patch of passionate young people from St. Margaret’s School, from St. Martin’s School, from South Charnwood School who are dedicated to recycling. And they wanted me to ask, will the government consider asking for international targets on recycling rates to drive up recycling across the globe?

Speaker 1: (00:43)Like my other friend, the school children in my own constituency are passionate and regularly communicating with me about reducing waste and reusing materials. The government’s view is that taking action is the best way to drive progress. And harnessing that consumer path drives changes for packaging use, I think, in the goods that we all buy and I think our children are the ones who are going to help all of us as parents across the country to help drive that. But domestically, we’re introducing the Extended Producer Responsibility Scheme, to ensure that producers cover the full net costs of recovery from packaging waste and a Deposit Returns Scheme to increase the recycling of drinks containers and that will help us to achieve a 65% recycling rate by 2035.

Chris: (01:24)12, Mr. Speaker.
Speaker 3: (01:27)Through the cooption six nature campaign, we are driving action to protect and restore forests and ecosystems as well as helping to catalyze a sustainable transition of the agricultural sector and food systems through our forest agriculture and commodity trade dialogues.

Mr. Speaker: (01:45)Chris Glenn.
Chris: (01:45)
I’m grateful to my [inaudible 00:01:48] friend for what he is doing. Can I ask him to step up the work he’s doing on ensuring that it’s protecting ecosystems is a part of the agreement we hope will be reached at coop. I know we have the summit in China, but for the protection of habitats and ecosystems around the world is so much an important part of dealing with climate change. But I hope it will be part of the deal in the autumn, but can I also ask him to put some pressure on the Brazilian government over the, the measures that appear to be happening there that could accelerate rather than reduce the loss of the Amazon rainforest?

Speaker 3: (02:19)Let me speak, my Roman friend raises a very important point. He will know that the UK co-lead the development of the leaders pledge for nature, which almost 90 leaders from around the world have endorsed committing to global action to protect nature. And of course we are campaigning for strong biodiversity targets to be set at the butter Vestey carbon coming this October. And as you would expect, I’m in contact with the Brazilian government as well. Right?

Mr. Speaker: (02:43)Substansive question to minister [inaudible 00:02:49]
Speaker 1: (02:49)
We’re exploring opportunities for strengthened international collaboration on innovation, focus on the bio economy through mission innovation, a global initiative to enable affordable, clean energy and achieve the goals of the past grievance. Leveraging growth of the bio economy will support clean growth across multiple sectors and contribute towards achieving net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.

Mr. Speaker: (03:08)let’s go to Rachel Mascel, (03:09)Rachel.
Rachel: (03:11)
Thank you, Mr. Speaker, the climate crisis is turbo charged as a trajectory of mitigation ever deviates from planet saving targets while the government’s moves at a glacial pace to establish a climate economy by Yorkshire will not only create 4,000 new jobs and up-skill 25,000 people. It will lay the foundations for world beating research in bio sciences, having York and Yorkshire of setting carbon and waste. All we ask is for government to bring forward the funding already committed ahead of co-op 26. Will she agree to do this and meet with me to discuss the project and the importance of by OSHA?

Speaker 1: (03:50)
I’m always happy to meet with all new and really interesting innovative products. I’m very happy to commit to do that. And I think we are absolutely leading the way in this and Mission Innovation is an extraordinary organization driving some of the most forward thinking protests and putting them shining a light on them because one of the key challenges to helping the developing countries to be able to move to King growth is that the technologies that UK businesses and our scientists invent and take to market can actually be used in those developing countries.

Mr. Speaker: (04:25)Substantial question to President Charlotte,
Speaker 3: (04:29)Mr. Speaker, the UK is committed to championing diversity and inclusion throughout our co-ptic presidency. More than 45% of the senior management team in the Cochran six unit are women, including our chief operating officer and communications director and around half of the cop 26 negotiating team are women.
Mr. Speaker: (04:46)Let’s go to Brenda [inaudible 00:04:50] .
Speaker 4: (04:49)Thank you, Mr. Speaker. (04:51)Later this year, I’m hosting the British South Asian Youth Summit focusing on co- op 26, will the minister meet with our youth champions to hear the perspective of young people living in some of the areas of the world, most vulnerable to climate change?

Speaker 3: (05:17)
[inaudible 00:05:17] speakers. I said in response to an earlier question, of course we have the suicide use advisory group. There are co-chairs chairs, young climate activist, one from the global South and one from the global North and on every visit that I do. I meet youth activists. Of course, I’m very happy to look at the event that he’s talking about in my diary, permits, I will certainly come to it.
Mr. Speaker: (05:35)Peter Buck, [crosstalk 00:05:38]
Speaker 3: (05:42)
Mr. Speaker, our overarching objective is to keep within reach the target of limiting global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees. To do this, we’re asking companies to set out ambitious emissions reduction commitments come forward with plans to protect communities and nature, mobilize and reach agreement on the outstanding elements of the past rubric.

Mr. Speaker: (06:01)[crosstalk 00:06:01] Peter Buck.
Peter Buck: (06:02)
Mr. Speaker, you will remember when David Cameron was hugging Huskies and I thought it was a great idea to try and do something to save the planet. So I got rid of my polluting petrol car, brought a biofuel car and then discovered I was destroying the rain forest. So I knew what to do next, get CO2 down, buy a diesel car. Now I know that when I drive along the street, I’m poisoning people. So could the president please give me some advice before buying an electric car? What do you assure me that the mining of cobalt and lithium isn’t killing people in the mind, or do you just be easier for me to buy a horse? [crosstalk 00:06:41]

Speaker 3: (06:40)Well, it will certainly be sustainable. Mr. Speaker. (06:43)
Mr. Speaker I’m really pleased to hear that my other friend is indeed a climate activist at heart it’s a revelation for all of us. It’s great that he’s made a decision to purchase an electric vehicle. I can tell him he won’t be disappointed. Plugin grants are available and he knows the government is also back in the sector with almost 3 billion pounds worth of support.

Mr. Speaker: (07:03)shutter Minister [inaudible 00:07:06]
Speaker 5: (07:06)
Thank you, Mr. Speaker, as the president knows the international energy associations, latest world energy outlook makes clear that a net zero pathway for global energy requires that there be no new fossil fuel supply beyond projects already committed as of this year. That means not just coal, but also oil and gas. The report reinforces Mr. Speaker, the obvious need to secure agreement on a global framework frame managed and fair phase out fossil fuels. Could the president tell the house therefore, whether he accepts the IEA’s conclusion and if so, where the ending all new fossil fuel supply from next year will be incorporated into the objectives of the UKs presidency of co-op 26.

Speaker 3: (07:45)Well Mr. Speaker, I actually commissioned that report and I’m very pleased that it is so substantive. Of course, he’s right. What we need to make sure is to help all countries with a clean energy transition. And that is what we are doing through the work of the co-op 26 eneergy transition council.
Speaker 5: (08:03)About how often
Mr. Speaker: (08:04)One, sir,
Speaker 3: (08:09)Mr. Speaker two weeks ago, I co-chaired the G seven climate and environment ministers track with my right honorable friend, the different sector stage at this meeting, the G seven nations agreed to overwhelmingly decarbonize our power systems in the 2030s, consistent with our 2030 NDCs and NetSuite commitments. And in addition, they committed take concrete steps to end support for international coal power generation. By the end of 2021, this is a critical step in consigning co-partner history and accelerating the international transition to clean energy robot health.

Speaker 6: (08:40)Thank you, Mr. Speaker, of course we welcome plans for a cleaner greener Britain, but can my right honorable friend give reassurance says to my hardworking Harlow residents that the government’s environmental measures will not mean a more expensive hitting the low-paid with extra costs and increasing the cost of living for ordinary folk.
Speaker 3: (09:02)Mr. Speaker, the government is indeed committed to getting the transition to net zero right for all consumers, we’re committed to driving savings and making our homes better insulated with more energy efficient measures. And indeed he will know that through the energy company obligation and the expanded warm homes discount, we will provide at least 4.7 billion pounds of extra support to low-income and vulnerable households between 2022 and 2026.

Mr. Speaker: (09:28)[inaudible 00:09:28]
Speaker 7: (09:28)Thank you very much, Mr. Speaker, the speaker first successful co-op 26, we have a particular responsibility as hosts to build trust with developing countries, the government’s decision to cut aid spending the only G seven country to do so is therefore an appalling one, not just because it’s wrong in principle, but because it’s staggeringly self-defeating now he knows the decision makes a successful outcome at the cop harder, not easier. So can I invite him to add his voice to the powerful calls we heard yesterday, including from the former prime minister, the right former member for Maidenhead to immediately restore government aid spending to nought 0.7% of GDP.
Speaker 3: (10:06)Mr. Speaker, as the round-table gentleman knows the UK is doubling its international climate finance commitments to support developing countries. And I can tell him this has been very much welcomed around the world with regards to the overall OODA spenders. He knows as they temporary measure and as the economic situation improves, I hope that be possible restore the nought 0.7 target at the earliest opportunity
Speaker 7: (10:27)Mr. Speaker, the problem is that cutting aid spending severely undermines the ability of developing countries to tackle the challenges of climate poverty and public health. And he knows that, and that’s what developing countries are telling him in the negotiations. We need vulnerable countries to be calling for more ambition from big emitters like China, but there can be much more reticent to do so when they don’t feel we can be trusted. Now, totemic on the issue of trust is the promise made at Copenhagen for a hundred billion dollars of public and private finance for developing countries within a decade on it still hasn’t been delivered. It’s our job as hosts to deliver on this promise. So can he therefore tell us will the hundred billion finally be delivered this weekend at the G seven meeting?

Speaker 3: (11:08)Mr. Speaker? He’s absolutely right. The a hundred billion easy totemic figure. And we are doing everything we can to ensure that we are able to deliver that by co-op 26. And I can assure him that I am having very frank discussions with donor countries with developed countries to ensure that they deliver on this commitment that was made in 2009,
Speaker 8: (11:27)Does the co-op presidency share my concern at the reputational hit that the UK will take in the event that it continues to approve old-style carbon belching waste incinerators, like the one proposed at Westbury? In my constituency.
Speaker 1: (11:47)Thank you, Mr. Speaker, all energy from waste plants named under regulated by the environment agency and must comply with strict emissions limits set down in legislation. I’m aware that North Acre renewable energy limited has applied for an environmental permit from the evaluators to operate an incinerator in WestBridge Wilkshire. And the advantage is considering responses to the public consultation.
Mr. Speaker: (12:07)Let’s go to Joanna Chair, Joanna,
Joanna: (12:11)Mr. Speaker, 11% of Scottish renewable generation comes from small projects like Harlow Hydro in my constituency. So ahead of co-op 26, well, the government introduced a replacement for the feed-in tariff, which is better place to encourage similar new projects than the smart export down in ti scheme?

Speaker 1: (12:33)Thank you, Mr. Speaker, we will be launching a new contract for difference auction in the, at the end of this year and the opportunity for a number of smaller sources of energy storage will be available.
Speaker 9: (12:49)Thank you, Mr. Speaker, wieldy minister detail. What steps has taken to engage with the G seven ahead of cop 26
Speaker 3: (12:57)Mr. Speaker can I commend my honorable friend for all the work he’s doing in Dudley in turn supporting the local economy and green jobs. And as I said earlier, I co-chair, the climate environment minister’s meeting, which came forward with some ambitious commitments.

Ian Blackford: (13:15)Well, the world’s not currently on track to meet our Paris targets, are we? The common pledges only add up to less than 10% emissions and we need 45% to meet the target in the last parliamentary session, 109 MPS signed the climate in ecological emergency bill. When it is reintroduced, will the government give time to debate this bill? Just so as we did with the climate change act, 2008, we can lead the world on legislation, not just follow.

Mr. Speaker: (13:45)brother, Sean.
Speaker 3: (13:46)What was bigger? I would recommend that he talks and lead with the house and the matters of the timetabling for, for debates and other events in this house. What I would say to him is that we are working very hard and pressing all the big emitters to ensure they come forward with the ambition that is required to be able to have emissions by the, by 2030
Speaker 10: (14:07)Mr. Speaker. I’m kind of going through a lot of work in my constituency with people on the climate agenda preparation for the co-op summit and law for school children, young people are particularly interesting have asked me, one child in particular has asked me to raise this question with the president to beat climate change. We’ve got to look at his hoard con world. Surely this means given more, not less help to poor countries to help them make the changes needed to see if I would plan it.

Speaker 3: (14:34)Well, Mr. Speaker the honorable gentleman raised the issue with me. I’ve set out that the position when it comes to overseas aid, in terms of schools, we are engaging. And I hope I will shortly be able to send out a pack, which will encourage young people around our schools to get even more involved in co-op six.

Mr. Speaker: (14:53)Right? Should we now go to questions for the prime minister. [crosstalk 00:14:58] I start with governor,
Mr. Speaker: (15:02)I start with [Gavin Newlands 00:15:03]. Gavin.
Gavin Newlands: (15:04)Number one, Mr. Speaker.
Mr. Speaker: (15:06)Prime Minister.
Boris Johnson: (15:08)Mr. Speaker, I’m delighted that the UK is hosting the leaders of the world’s greatest democracies at the G7 summit in Cornwall this week. This is the first meeting between G7 leaders since the start of the pandemic.
(15:22)
Mr. Speaker, this week is Carers Week and I’m sure the whole house will wish to join me in thanking care workers and everyone caring for family, friends, and loved ones. Their selflessness and devotion to helping others is an inspiration to us all. (15:42)
Mr. Speaker, this morning, I had meetings with ministerial colleagues and others, in addition to my duties in this house. I shall have further such meetings later today.

Mr. Speaker: (15:49)Gavin Newlands.
Gavin Newlands: (15:50)Thank you very much, Mr. Speaker. And I very much echo the comments of Prime Minister on the work of unpaid carers.(15:55)
But after plenty of warm thanks for the victims of fire and rehire, including from the Prime Minister himself, the government yesterday announced its legislative response to the [A-CAS 00:16:05] report of doing absolutely nothing, nothing for the hundreds of thousands already threatened or, as the A-CAS report itself says, the many, many more that are anticipated to face fire and rehire when the fall does commence.(16:16)
He should be thorough ashamed of himself, Mr. Speaker. It’s increasingly clear this government won’t protect workers, so while they evolve an employment law to hold it to, the Scottish government can.

Boris Johnson: (16:27)Actually Mr. Speaker, this government has been absolutely clear that it’s unacceptable to use threats of firing and rehiring as a negotiating tactic. We welcomed the A-CAS report, which actually finds that hire and fire should only be used in limited circumstances, such as to prevent job losses, Mr. Speaker, when other options have been exhausted. (16:49)
We therefore asked A-CAS to produce clearer guidance to help employers with other options.
Speaker 11: (16:56)[inaudible 00:16:56] to create 84,000 jobs for local people? We’re legislating for planning powers for our development corporation, which will work in tandem with our unique inland Freeport. But Mr. Speaker, decisions about HS-2 and specifically the Toten Hub, will have a huge impact on whether we can deliver on our vision for the East Midlands. Will the Prime Minister meet with me urgently so we can make sure we can deliver on that commitment to local people?
Boris Johnson: (17:18)Mr. Speaker, the East Midlands could have no more fervent or effective champion. And I congratulate my honorable friend on his vision for the East Midlands, Freeport, and all the benefits that rail integration will bring in. And I know that he’s about to have a meeting with ministerial colleagues to determine how the integrated rail plan can work with HS-2 best to achieve his objectives.

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