John Barrett
jrbarrett.bsky.social
John Barrett
@jrbarrett.bsky.social

Professor in Energy and Climate Policy, University of Leeds

Home page: https://environment.leeds.ac.uk/see/staff/1146/professor-john-barrett-obe

John Richard Barrett is a British academic who is chair in Energy and Climate Policy at the University of Leeds. He is the Director of the Centre for Industrial Energy, Materials and Products (CIE-MAP) and co-director of the UK Energy Research Centre. .. more

Environmental science 31%
Energy 23%

Reposted by John Barrett

⚠️ With much of the UK experiencing near-record June temperatures how prepared are we to deal with the heat? ☀️

🎧 Listen to our latest episode which explores this issue with @jrbarrett.bsky.social, @kathryn-brown.bsky.social and Suraje Dessai

www.podbean.com/eas/pb-uemfz...

Reposted by John Barrett

🎧 Have you listened to our podcast yet?

In this episode, Dr Sean McDaniel and @hollybt.bsky.social join @jrbarrett.bsky.social to discuss how the Labour government is performing on climate action.

👂 Listen now: climateevidenceunit.podbean.com/e/how-is-the...

Watch our latest podcast! This episode explores what needs to happen to adapt to our changing climate.
⚠️ With much of the UK experiencing near-record June temperatures how prepared are we to deal with the heat? ☀️

🎧 Listen to our latest episode which explores this issue with @jrbarrett.bsky.social, @kathryn-brown.bsky.social and Suraje Dessai

www.podbean.com/eas/pb-uemfz...

Reposted by John Barrett

🏛️ Are the climate promises of the Labour government coming to fruition?

🎙️ In this episode, Professor @jrbarrett.bsky.social is joined by @hollybt.bsky.social from @green-alliance.org.uk and Dr Sean McDaniel from @universityofleeds.bsky.social

climateevidenceunit.podbean.com/e/how-is-the...

Reposted by John Barrett

🎧 New on the Climate Evidence to Action podcast:
Are emissions targets still effective? Do we need more of them?

Professor @jrbarrett.bsky.social, Sam Betts-Davies & Professor @bankfieldbecky.bsky.social unpack the evidence.

Listen now → climateevidenceunit.podbean.com/e/could-more...

My new article with @piersforster.bsky.social on the CCC's @thecccuk.bsky.social latest progress report - How’s the UK attempt to reach net zero going? There’s good news and bad news theconversation.com/hows-the-uk-...
How’s the UK attempt to reach net zero going? There’s good news and bad news
The UK’s latest climate change progress report highlights serious gaps.
theconversation.com
📢 The UK must act on the Climate Change Committee’s advice. Christian Calvillo, @jrbarrett.bsky.social, @martiskainen.bsky.social and Hannah Corbett highlight 3 priorities:

✅ Clear leadership & public engagement
✅ Stronger energy demand monitoring
✅ A fair transition for all

tinyurl.com/daushfdb
Three priorities for Government in acting on the Climate Change Committee’s advice on the Seventh Carbon Budget - Energy Demand Research Centre
tinyurl.com
Good illustration of the alternative options available to the government when considering how to approach decarbonisation of surface transport.

Shows car-kms travelled per capita in latest CCC advice against ‘positive low energy futures’ (ie scenarios that are demand-led)

Reposted by John Barrett

The Climate Change Committee published its recommendations for the UK’s “seventh carbon budget”, covering 2038 to 2042.

Professor John Barrett reviews the budget and finds that not only is net zero possible, but also that it has a wide range of benefits.

theconversation.com/will-the-uks...
Will the UK’s proposed long-term emissions strategy get us to net zero? An expert review
The UK’s official climate adviser has published its seventh climate budget, with a plan to reduce emissions up to 2042.
theconversation.com

As the UK government digests the findings, we suggest greater consideration of the “social” transformation that examines how we travel and what we buy, to fully unlock the benefits of net zero.

The report gives less consideration to demand making the technological transition harder and more expensive than necessary, and increases the risk of failure. More energy must be generated, more car miles need to be driven, and more materials and products must be supplied.

It relies heavily on electrification implementing known and established technologies at speed. These include heat pumps for homes and industry, electric vehicles and renewables. It reduces reliance on currently expensive and emerging technologies. A positive move.

Key findings - the transition to net zero is not only possible but highly beneficial. It will strengthen the economy, deliver warmer homes, cheaper household bills, reduced air pollution, greater energy security with less reliance on imported gas, and many other benefits.

Reposted by Christian Brand

We have also written a piece in @theconversation.com summarising the key findings, that is available from here: theconversation.com/will-the-uks...
Will the UK’s proposed long-term emissions strategy get us to net zero? An expert review
The UK’s official climate adviser has published its seventh climate budget, with a plan to reduce emissions up to 2042.
theconversation.com

Reposted by Christian Brand

Reposted by John Barrett

6.3m properties now at risk from flooding in England.

43% higher than the Environment Agency's last report in just 2018.

Climate change is hitting harder than expected.
UK emissions reduction targets—set up to 14 years ago—aren't fit for purpose.

We need to pass the Climate & Nature Bill #CANBill

Maybe to early to say, but is there a sense of the possible leakage rate of the CO2? In other words, what percentage of CO2 is likely to be "mitigated"?

Reposted by John Barrett

New evidence from the Priestley Centre's Climate Evidence Unit highlights a strong public mandate for climate change adaptation in the UK. Looking for strong leadership from the Government.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=7G6_..., @priestleycentre.bsky.social
Climate Evidence Unit: A public mandate for climate change adaptation
YouTube video by Priestley Centre for Climate Futures
www.youtube.com

Our insights on the targets the UK Government needs to set to deliver their 2030 target and beyond. We need separate targets for GHG emissions and carbon removal, fossil fuel use and energy demand climate.leeds.ac.uk/our-work/cli...
Targets for effective climate mitigation governance in the UK - Priestley Centre for Climate Futures
Authored by Sam Betts-Davies, John Barrett, Chris Smith, Steve Pye, Elliott Johnson, and James Price in July 2024. Download or view the full report: Targets for effective climate mitigation governance...
climate.leeds.ac.uk

It is definitely less than what is needed for a per capita equitable distribution of the remaining carbon budget. As a starting point, I would like the UK Government to provide the details for how the 2030 and 2035 NDC will be delivered. At the moment, no credible pathway has been provided.

The research continues @edrc-uk.bsky.social with a citizen's panel now constructing their "Citizen led Positive Low Energy Future". Watch this space!

Along side rapid decarbonisation, energy demand falls by 38% from today. It's not possible to reach the target without transforming how we use energy. It has to combine both efficiency and sufficiency measures.

What does the UK's new 81% reduction in GHG emissions target look like? Our Positive Low Energy Future Scenarios describes a pathway with numerous co-benefits while delivering the target. More information from low-energy.creds.ac.uk