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Where do the contenders for next UK prime minister stand on science?

The race to replace Boris Johnson as UK prime minister has begun, with Suella Braverman and Steve Baker announcing their intention to run. They may be joined by Liz Truss, Rishi Sunak and others, but where do the hopefuls stand on science?

By Adam Vaughan

7 July 2022 Last updated 8 July 2022

Boris Johnson

UK prime minister Boris Johnson announced his resignation outside 10 Downing Street on 7 July

James Veysey/Shutterstock

Following Boris Johnson’s resignation as leader of the Conservative party, attention is turning to who will replace him and become the UK’s next prime minister. Only two Tory MPs have signalled they will run for the leadership, and , but several others are expected to throw their hat in the ring in what could be a very widely contested race. So where do some of the prospective new leaders stand on climate change, nature and science?

Tom Tugendhat

“Climate change is one of the greatest challenges we face and I fully appreciate the urgency in our need to combat it,” the former journalist and British army officer in January 2020. He’s to former leader Margaret Thatcher’s comments on global warming as evidence that acting on climate change is a fundamentally Conservative principle, and has posted supportive comments on and . However, there is no mention of climate change, nor any environmental or scientific issue, in a setting out his leadership pitch. He does say “fuel tax must come down”.

Suella Braverman

The attorney general has that “climate change is one of the most serious threats that this country and the world faces”. She has also . However, she has never tweeted about climate change or nature, and only once about science during a visit to a school.

Steve Baker

The MP for Wycombe is the “anti-green” candidate. Baker he would end the push for wind and solar power and back shale gas extraction. He told The Guardian he would end a reform of farming subsidies that will reward farmers based on providing “public goods” such as improving biodiversity, and warned “we are at risk from extreme green policies”.

Rishi Sunak

Sunak resigned his position as chancellor on 5 July, starting a wave of resignations in protest against Johnson. As chancellor, he of research and innovation spending reaching 2.4 per cent of the UK’s GDP. He also committed ÂŁ800 million of funding for a new “high risk” research agency, ARIA. His budget speeches have given relatively little focus to climate change, though he gave and oversaw publication of the .

Liz Truss

As environment secretary from 2014 to 2016, Truss criticised solar power on agricultural land as harming food security, a . In her current role as foreign secretary, she was to have ordered foreign office officials to focus international aid on girls and women rather than climate change. She has been a prominent advocate for UK farming. Disagreement between Truss and the European Union over the status of Northern Ireland following Brexit has hampered the UK and EU’s ability to reach a deal on the Horizon science research programme, a major funding scheme that the UK had hoped to remain part of.

Jeremy Hunt

Hunt the government’s approval of an onshore oil and gas project in his Surrey constituency, describing it as creating “enormous disruption and environmental damage for little if any economic benefit”. He has also burnished his green credentials by called the Conservative Environment Network, and action on climate change as an economic as well as moral imperative. During his 2019 campaign for the Tory leadership, he would allow a free vote on lifting a ban on fox hunting. The former health secretary has also criticised the government’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic.

Penny Mordaunt

The trade minister and former defence minister to oppose an electricity link between the UK and France over energy security fears, despite such interconnectors usually being seen by analysts as improving energy security. She has also been .

Ben Wallace

The defence secretary that “climate change has far reaching consequences for global peace and security”. He voted in favour of the 2008 Climate Change Act, along with the overwhelming majority of MPs at the time, and has  about local impacts from the exploration of shale gas. Generally, however, he has said very little publicly about his stance on climate change, nature and science.

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