Debates between Lord Sharma and Dan Carden during the 2019-2024 Parliament

Oral Answers to Questions

Debate between Lord Sharma and Dan Carden
Wednesday 29th January 2020

(4 years, 9 months ago)

Commons Chamber
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Lord Sharma Portrait Alok Sharma
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A successful delivery of COP26 in November is a key priority for the Government, and cross-departmental work is being co-ordinated through the Cabinet Office. It is vital for current and future generations that all of us around the world step up to the challenge.

Dan Carden Portrait Dan Carden (Liverpool, Walton) (Lab)
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Will the Secretary of State clarify what his Department’s policy is on spending UK aid money on expanding fossil fuels overseas?

Lord Sharma Portrait Alok Sharma
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I think the answer was given earlier by the Minister of State, Department for International Development, my hon. Friend the Member for Pendle (Andrew Stephenson) in respect of the statement the Prime Minister made at the Africa investment summit.

Dan Carden Portrait Dan Carden
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I am afraid that that is just not good enough. Last week’s UK-Africa investment summit cost the Department more than £15 million of aid money, on a one-day event. I wonder whether the Secretary of State can say now whether any of that money was spent on business-class flights or five-star hotels, because the Department will not disclose the figures until autumn 2021. At the summit, almost £2 billion-worth of new energy deals were struck for fossil fuels. How on earth can he justify using taxpayers’ funds to help fossil fuel companies when we are in the midst of a climate catastrophe?

Lord Sharma Portrait Alok Sharma
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If the hon. Gentleman had read the communiqué that came out of the summit, he would have seen not only the billions of pounds of investment, but the UK support going to developing countries. He always castigates private investment, but perhaps he ought to read what the UN Secretary-General wrote in November in the Financial Times, where he pointed out that the private sector is vital to advance development goals. Sometimes the hon. Gentleman needs to read and listen to the experts, rather than to people on his own Benches.