Writing in the Financial Times, Johnson said that he would "establish Task Force Net Zero committed to reaching net zero by 2050", although no details have been announced of this task force's membership and duties. Robbie Owen of Pinsent Masons suggested that this could be done by formalising the role of the Committee on Climate Change (CCC), which reports annually to the government with its views on the UK's progress towards meeting its carbon targets.
"The creation of a single purpose Net Zero Commission backed by government would provide the required resources, expertise, focus and statutory powers to make the enormous and challenging progress required across all sectors over the next 10-15 years if we are to have a realistic hope of and plan for reaching net zero by 2050," he said.
The prime minister announced ambitious offshore wind power generation plans last month, at the Conservative Party's virtual party conference. The latest announcement confirms an increased 40GW target by 2030, although planning expert Gareth Phillips of Pinsent Masons said that reaching these targets would require grid updates, an expedited consent process and a "strategic approach" to habitat compensation measures, as well as targeted subsidies through the Contracts for Difference (CfD) mechanism.
The additional funding for CCS would be used to create two carbon capture 'clusters' by the mid-2020s, with another two to follow by the end of the decade. CCS will play an essential role in the transition to net zero, as it will allow for unavoidable emissions to be removed from the atmosphere. The government also intends to increase rewilding and tree-planting efforts to remove carbon from the atmosphere, planting 30,000 hectares of trees every year by 2025.
Green finance, cleaner public transport, more cycle lanes, 'zero emission' air and shipping and investment in energy efficiency measures for schools and hospitals also form part of the announcement. The government is also targeting domestic energy efficiency improvements, extending the Green Homes Grant voucher scheme by a year and funding trials of the use of hydrogen for heating and cooking. A 'hydrogen neighbourhood' will be established in 2023, followed by a 'hydrogen village' by 2025 and an aim for a 'hydrogen town' before the end of the decade.
Stacey Collins of Pinsent Masons said: "The high-level financial commitments on CCS and hydrogen are important, but they need to be swiftly followed by the detail of exactly how they will be realised. Only then can business and industry start to fully embrace the net zero pathways that the government is laying out".
"Hopefully, that detail will be available before the end of this year, along with the long-awaited energy white paper, so that those early developers/adopters of CCS/hydrogen technologies have enough information to make the required investment decisions to accelerate those low-carbon options," he said.
On the announced investment in hydrogen, Collins added: "It’s great to see that the government is aiming to support the potential deployment of low-carbon hydrogen in industry, transport, power and homes. However, there is still a lack of detail on how that deployment might be realised, which means the pathways to embracing low-carbon hydrogen remain fairly unclear. To achieve the Government’s 2030 objective we need to get into the details/practicalities swiftly".
"The commitments to a hydrogen neighbourhood, village and - ultimately - town are really ambitious, as there are considerable technological, and practical, challenges to overcome. There are already a few pilot and developing schemes that are well advanced in terms of seeking to create a hydrogen grid, in place of a gas grid, to service domestic properties. If the government's targets are realised then this would represent a huge step forward toward the sizeable challenge of decarbonising domestic heating," he said.