Fiona Harvey Environment editor 

Starmer has a strong green record – but a rightwing backlash weakened his plans

Prime minister was forced to row back on some policies despite strong support among voters for climate action
  
  

Keir Starmer speaks at a podium with microphones against a green nature backdrop
Keir Starmer gives a speech at the Cop30 climate summit in Belem, Brazil, in November 2025. Photograph: Mauro Pimentel/PA

Keir Starmer has faced a problem no Labour government has needed to deal with before. His energy and climate policies – core to solving the cost of living crisis – have come under attack from opposition parties, which have made dismantling the agenda one of their top priorities, second only to immigration, in their pitch to voters.

This is new in British politics, where a cross-party consensus on the climate and environment has held at least since the days of Margaret Thatcher. She warned the UN of the climate crisis in 1988; David Cameron in 2006 urged voters to “vote blue, go green”; Theresa May enshrined in law the requirement to reach net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050; Boris Johnson championed the Cop26 UN climate summit in Glasgow in 2021; even Rishi Sunak only tried a partial rollback of green policies as a last desperate throw before calling an election.

But Kemi Badenoch has weaponised the climate and energy agenda, with Ed Miliband, the energy secretary, her most frequent named target in the cabinet. She has vowed to abandon the net zero target, boost drilling in the North Sea, scrap the windfall tax on oil and gas profits, and repeal the 2008 Climate Change Act.

Nigel Farage’s Reform party has gone even further, openly denying climate science and threatening to withdraw from the 2015 Paris agreement.

This tearing apart of the longstanding consensus threw Labour into disarray. Some within Starmer’s inner circle started to whisper that his eye-catching pledge – one of the five key “missions” he set for his government – to decarbonise the UK’s electricity by 2030 was a liability, and should be dropped. They briefed against Miliband to key sections of the media and forced a halving of the target of a pledged investment of £28bn in the green economy.

That advice was out of step with voters, and deeply flawed, experts have told the Guardian. Ed Matthew, UK director of the E3G thinktank, points out that polls continue to show that voters still support climate action. According to More in Common polling for the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit, on the eve of the local elections in May, two thirds of the public still want the country to meet the net zero target.

“Starmer made the bold move to set a whole of government mission to make the UK a clean energy superpower,” says Matthew. “This was visionary. But he was constrained by his former advisor Morgan McSweeney, who was concerned this mission would lead Labour voters to defect to Reform. That was a misreading of these voters, with polls showing the majority want to take back control of their energy and support more renewables.”

Rowing back on the climate helped the resurgence of the Green party. “By tempering his ambition on the clean energy front, [Starmer] left his left flank open, which the Green party is now pouring through, with their pledge to speed up the transition [to a low-carbon economy] and take on the fossil fuel industry profiting from the war,” says Matthew.

The irony, amid large voter losses from Labour to the Greens in the recent local elections, and to the Liberal Democrats who have also held firm on their climate and environmental policies under Ed Davey, is that Starmer has a good story to tell on the government’s green achievements.

“Starmer’s record of supporting Miliband’s climate action is strong,” says Mike Childs, head of science at Friends of the Earth. “He intervened in the spending review to ensure the warm homes plan [for insulating houses] was not cut further by the Treasury, insisted that the government’s revised climate plan must be legally compliant, and has voiced support for green energy and jobs.”

While the cost of living bites, investments in renewable energy reduced wholesale electricity prices by about a third last year, according to the ECIU thinktank. Households have seen little of the upside so far, because bills have been sent soaring again by two consecutive fossil fuel crises, one sparked by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the second by the Iran war, but Labour is hoping to change that by breaking the outdated mechanisms that shackle electricity prices to the cost of gas. Record numbers of people are opting for solar panels and heat pumps, made easier by Labour’s changes to regulations and more generous grants, and electric car sales leapt 60% in April, helped by investments in charging infrastructure.

The government’s stance on the North Sea, vociferously attacked by the Tories and Reform, has also been endorsed by the world’s leading energy economist. Fatih Birol, chief of the International Energy Agency, regarded as the global gold standard for energy research, told the Guardian the moratorium on new licensing made sense as it would not come onstream for years, and any green light for projects already in the licensing system – such as the controversial Rosebank and Jackdaw fields – would make little difference to the UK’s energy security, nor ease prices.

Pippa Heylings, vice-chair of parliament’s all-party climate group, says: “Birol is right that new exploration for oil and gas will not help lower people’s energy bills. We need to take back control of our energy security and strengthen clean energy cooperation with our European neighbours. To truly free ourselves from our dependence on fossil fuels and Trump’s America, our focus needs to be on a clean shift away from fossil fuels to homegrown renewable energy, with prices we can control.”

While some within Downing Street have sought to row back on green policy, Starmer in public has always shown clear support. Last year, he hosted 60 governments at an energy security conference in Westminster where he declared that the UK was “going all out” for renewables and would “accelerate” the transition to a low-carbon economy, because it was “in the DNA of my government”.

He has appeared less enthusiastic, however, over nature policy. Rachel Reeves, chancellor of the exchequer, dismayed conservationists when she opened up a war of words over planning regulations and development, lambasting rules that protect “bats and newts”, which she claimed were acting as a brake on growth.

Her target should instead have been the housebuilders, who have planning permission for more than 1m homes but fail to build them, argues Craig Bennett, chief executive of the Wildlife Trusts. He calls the attacks on nature protections “performative”, as “they decided to pick a fight with nature because they thought it would make them look big and strong”, rather than reflecting economic realities. “I don’t think they even really believed it.”

This fight “just demonstrates them to be unbelievably out of touch with where the British public is”, because polls show that roughly 80% of people want stronger nature protection, not less, according to Bennett.

Starmer leaves a legacy of strong action on net zero, undermined by anti-nature rhetoric and squabbling among his own advisers over how green to paint this government. Andy Burnham, his likely successor, is showing signs of the same struggle – despite previous strong support for renewable energy and net zero, now he is equivocating on North Sea drilling, perhaps to placate the unions.

The lesson of Starmer, however, is that voters are greener than the Tories and Reform would have the public believe, and Labour has much more to lose to the left than the right on these issues. Ami McCarthy, head of politics at Greenpeace UK, says the government cannot afford more mistakes. “Despite all the noise around Reform’s gains, Labour risks alienating even more voters by abandoning its policies on climate and nature,” they said.

 

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