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Electric cars, 'guilt-free planes' and tree planting feature in net zero strategy

The strategy details how the Government aims to meet its legal target to cut climate-warming emissions to net zero by 2050

Heavy industry decarbonisation is a crucial part of the Government’s strategy for tackling climate change and reaching Net Zero by 2050.(Image: BEIS)

New investment for electric car grants, on-street charging points and planting trees has been announced as the Government sets out its plans to reach net zero emissions by 2050.

The long-awaited has been unveiled ahead of crucial UN Cop26 climate talks which the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ is hosting in Glasgow, with ministers hoping to set an example to other countries on how to go green.

It details how the Government aims to meet its legal target to cut climate-warming emissions to net zero by 2050, cutting pollution as much as possible and using measures such as woodland creation to mop up what remains.

In his foreword to the strategy, Prime Minister Boris Johnson insisted it could be achieved without giving up flying abroad or driving cars.

He said: “For years, going green was inextricably bound up with a sense that we have to sacrifice the things we love.

“But this strategy shows how we can build back greener without so much as a hair shirt in sight.

“In 2050, we will still be driving cars, flying planes and heating our homes, but our cars will be electric gliding silently around our cities, our planes will be zero emission allowing us to fly guilt-free, and our homes will be heated by cheap reliable power drawn from the winds of the North Sea.”

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Setting out the plans, ministers said it would support 440,000 well paid jobs and unlock £90 billion in private investment in 2030 on the way to the mid-century goal, as well as reducing the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s reliance on imported fossil fuels and putting the country at risk of global price spikes.