Eco-fanatic or true Scrutonian? (Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)

In 2019, the Conservative manifesto promised to ālead the global fight against climate change, by delivering on our world-leading target of Net Zeroā. In the wake of the Uxbridge by-election, that ambition looks much more precarious.Ā As the Prime Minister pledged to āmax outā the North Sea oil-fields, the Energy Secretary took aim at Labour, calling it the āpolitical wingā of Just Stop Oil, and blaming its ādangerous plansā on āeco-fanaticsā and āthe eco-mobā.
For a party that is trailing in the polls and uncertain of its direction, hostility to Net Zero has an obvious allure. As a rallying cry, it can speak both to the tax-cutting, libertarian wing of the party and to its culture warriors, eager to renew the fight against experts, elites and international organisations. It offers a bridge between the tech-bro-utopianism of the prime minister and the concerns of motorists and lower-earners, who are facing rising emissions-costs. For many Conservatives, Net Zero smacks of subsidies, price guarantees and market interventions: a centralised re-planning of the economy that owes more to socialism than to science. And while the Uxbridge by-election centred on air-quality, not Net Zero, it offered a glimmer of electoral light to a party raking through the ashes of its recent poll-ratings.
But climate scepticism does not (yet) have a monopoly on Conservative thought. The Conservative Environment Network lists more than 200 MPs and peers on its website, drawn from across the party spectrum. The conflict over Net Zero, then, is not a contest between the “woke” Left and the “radical” Right. It brings into collision different visions of Conservatism, in a struggle for ownership of the Conservative tradition.
Tory environmentalists can point to a strong record on the issue, stretching back to the Fifties. It was Conservative governments that created the Department of the Environment, the National Parks Authorities, the Environment Agency and the Hadley Centre for Climate Research. Tory administrations introduced the Clean Air Acts, the Wildlife and Countryside Act and the Environment Act, as well as the Landfill Tax, the Road-Fuel Escalator and, in England,Ā the Plastic Bag Charge. And it wasĀ a Conservative Prime Minister, Theresa May, who made Net Zero a legal obligation.
When global warming first entered public consciousness in the Eighties and Nineties, it was Margaret Thatcher who sounded the most trenchant warnings. Addressing the World Climate Conference in 1990, she accused the world of āplaying with the conditionsā of life. āWe have treated the air and the oceans like a dustbinā, endangering āthe biological balance ā¦ on which human life dependsā. This was a distinctly Conservative environmentalism ā even taking care to warn business that āthere will be no profitā¦ for anyone if pollution continues to destroy our planetā.
For Conservative environmentalists, this is not simply a record to defend. It is a reminder that there are powerful strands within Conservatism that can be mobilised against its climate sceptics. The first is the instinct to āconserveā: the idea on which both “conservatism” and “conservation” are founded.Ā For the Conservative intellectual Roger Scruton, global warming engaged āa fundamental moral idea to which conservatives attach great importance: the idea that those responsible for damage should also repair itā. He drew inspiration from the writings of Edmund Burke and his call to partnership ābetween those who are living, those who are dead, and those who are to be bornā. For Burke, the living were but the ātemporary possessors and life-rentersā of society. As such, they had a moral responsibility not to ācommit waste on their inheritance by destroying at their pleasureā, or āto leave to those who come after a ruin instead of a habitationā.
That belief intersected with an emphasis, drawn from Christian conservatism, on āstewardshipā: the belief, as Margaret Thatcher once put it, that humans were not the lords of creation but āthe Lordās creatures, the trustees of this planet, chargedā¦ with preserving life itselfā. As she told the Conservative party conference in 1988: “The core of Tory philosophy and the case for protecting the environment are the same. No generation has a freehold on this earth. All we have is a life tenancy ā with a full repairing lease.”
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