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The Chancellor George Osborne Prepares To Give His Budget To Parliament
Budget 2012 - George Osborne: 'environmentally sustainable must always be fiscally sustainable.' Photograph: Oli Scarff/Getty Images
Budget 2012 - George Osborne: 'environmentally sustainable must always be fiscally sustainable.' Photograph: Oli Scarff/Getty Images

Budget 2012: green measures at a glance

This article is more than 12 years old
George Osborne's budget was more positive on pro-environmental rhetoric, but critics call it a polluters' charter

Soundbite of the speech

"Environmentally sustainable must always be fiscally sustainable."

Renewable energy

Clean energy would be an infrastructure priority on a par with roads and broadband, he said today. "I also want to see investment in our world-leading energy sector including renewables," he said, adding that "renewable energy will play a crucial part in Britain's energy mix but I will always be alert to the costs we're asking families, business to bear." He recapped the establishment of the green investment bank and plans to introduce a carbon floor price from April 2013. No new funds were offered for green energy, however.

Dash for gas

The chancellor signalled the government would be backing new gas power, saying "gas is cheap" and that it would be the UK's biggest source of electricity generation in coming years. The climate and energy secretary, Ed Davey, would lay out plans to encourage gas investment in the autumn, he said. The Department of Energy and Climate Change (Decc) announced rules last Saturday that would encourage new gas power.

Carbon reduction commitment (CRC) changes

The chancellor strongly criticised this £1bn tax on businesses' energy use, which he previously changed from a scheme to reward companies' cutting energy demand to a tax in the 2010 comprehensive spending review. "It is cumbersome, bureaucratic and imposes unnecessary costs on business," he said today. He said he would seeking savings for businesses through administrative costs, and if they could not be found, would look in the autumn at replacing the CRC with a new environmental tax.

Air passenger duty (APD) rise

A rise in the environmental tax on flights, APD, went ahead as planned, despite a last-minute lobbying push by airlines. Duty will rise 8% this year, eventually rising 50% by 2016.

Planning reforms

Britain will earn its way in the world through "new growth-friendly planning laws," the chancellor said. Next Tuesday the government will publish the results of its controversial planning reforms, the national planning policy framework, he said. It would feature a "presumption in favour of sustainable development while protecting our most precious environments," a statement that will infuriate green groups who say such sustainable development is poorly defined and biased towards economic development. He called it the biggest reduction of business red tape ever undertaken.

Airport expansion

The budget statement seemed to suggest a U-turn on the government's stance on airport expansion. "We must confront the lack of airport capacity in south-east England – the transport secretary will set out government thinking later this summer," the chancellor said. However, the 2010 coalition agreement pledged to cancel the third runway at Heathrow and refuse permission for additional strips at Gatwick and Stansted.

Reaction

John Sauven, executive director of Greenpeace: "This was a bad day for the environment. Support for British manufacturing, green jobs and greening the economy should have been the cornerstone of Osborne's budget. Instead we got a polluters' charter. The chancellor performed a carbon-belching U-turn by supporting airport expansion in the south-east, before handing tax breaks to an oil industry that's already making billions in profits and a cash bung to the very same oil industry to drill in our fragile seas."

Friends of the Earth's executive director, Andy Atkins: "This budget sticks two fingers up at David Cameron's promise to build a clean future – and gives a massive thumbs down to new jobs and cutting our reliance on expensive gas and oil. Safeguarding our environment and growing a strong economy go hand-in-hand – but the chancellor has fired the starting pistol for more roads, airports and gas power that will keep the UK hooked on costly fossil fuels for decades to come."

More on this story

More on this story

  • Budget 2012: chancellor fires starting gun on dash for gas

  • Budget 2012: oil and gas industry gets £3bn tax break to encourage drilling

  • Ed Davey's dash for gas will not help UK meet carbon targets

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