SCOTLAND will have to push back its target to ban new petrol and diesel cars to 2035 after Prime Minister Rishi Sunak announced a delay without consulting any devolved governments, the SNP have said.
Dave Doogan, the party’s energy spokesperson at Westminster, said the Scottish Government will not be able to stick to its target of ending the sale of new petrol and diesel vehicles by 2030 because the country is “snared” into the UK Internal Market Act.
It comes after the Tory Prime Minister rolled back on a host of climate commitments, including pushing back the ban by five years to 2035.
In an interview on BBC Radio Scotland’s Good Morning Scotland programme, the SNP MP was asked how Sunak's announcement affects the Scottish Government target.
READ MORE: 'Mon the independence': Young Scots react to Rishi Sunak's net-zero betrayal
Doogan said: “We will have to move to 2035 because even if the Scottish Government did have the authority to intervene in that particular legislation, which is reserved to the Department for Transport and its agencies, principally the DVLA, we are snared in the United Kingdom into the Internal Market Act, which would see the UK Government intervene in any policy undoubtedly which created a difference between the market in Scotland and the market in the rest of the United Kingdom.
“What we’d have to be very careful if we decided to do that is that we didn’t put our motor manufacturing retail business at a strategic disadvantage by operating in a way that was completely different to that which was in England, resulting in cross-border trade to access vehicles that you couldn’t access in Scotland, so it’s a complex dynamic and of course at the base of all of this is the fact that the UK Government didn’t consult the Scottish Government on any of this.”
Doogan (below) described the UK Government decision to push the ban back to 2035 as an “unprecedented tragedy for the automotive industry in the United Kingdom”.
He said: “The market environment was set out by the Conservative Government in 2020 and industry has been gearing up and tooling up and investing in that market environment, only to find out as of yesterday from the Prime Minister that they’re actually now operating in a completely different environment.
“They’ve been establishing a market supply chain that will provide a greater proportion of electric vehicles by a time of around 2030, where now UK consumers will be in a position to continue to buy internal combustion engine cars, so they’ll have a mismatch between market demand and product availability that they’ve been tooling up for on the basis of Government market instruction.
READ MORE: 'Biggest impact since fall of Berlin Wall': Oxford expert hails key Scottish policy
“I don’t think it can be underestimated how foolish and irresponsible it is for the UK Government to create a market environment and then three years later create an entirely different market environment.”
Ruth Davidson, the former leader of the Scottish Tories, also criticed Sunak's move in similar terms, writing on Twitter/X: "Who knew the golden rule about business investment was that business hates uncertainty?
"Oh wait, that's right. We all do. [Jesus f******* Christ]."
Who knew the golden rule about business investment was that business hates uncertainty?
— Ruth Davidson (@RuthDavidsonPC) September 20, 2023
Oh wait, that's right. We all do. JFC. https://t.co/z4VQhKfKQl
Douglas Lumsden, net-zero spokesman for the Scottish Conservatives, said the Prime Minister is being “honest” with people, adding: “It’s about delivering net zero in a sensible way, pragmatic way that doesn’t place all of the cost and burdens on ordinary working people.”
He also told the programme: “We’re not falling asleep at the wheel. If you look at changes to the cars for example, that’s just bringing us in line with the rest of the EU.
“In the key area of us reducing our emissions, we are still leading the way.”
The UK Government has been asked for comment.
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