LIVERPOOL, England — Prime Minister Keir Starmer must go to the COP climate
summit to show “there is still climate leadership,” despite Donald Trump’s
attacks on the science of global warming, the U.K.’s former climate minister
said.
While Starmer’s travel plans have not yet been confirmed, he is reportedly not
planning to attend COP30’s leaders’ summit, due to be held in Brazil in
November. It would be the first time a British prime minister has skipped the
event since 2019.
But Kerry McCarthy, who served as climate minister from July 2024 until a
government reshuffle earlier in September, told POLITICO at Labour’s party
conference in Liverpool that Starmer should attend, to demonstrate the continued
“imperative” of international collaboration on climate.
“It was a really important moment when Keir went to COP last year,” McCarthy
said. “Particularly because Trump had just won the election, that left a vacuum
in terms of international leadership and it was very much seen that the U.K.
[stepped in].”
Now, with Trump stepping up his attacks on the climate agenda in last week’s
United Nations speech, McCarthy said Starmer should go to this year’s COP “to
signal that there is still that intent to show leadership.”
“There are so many Americans I have met since the Trump win who want to say ‘he
doesn’t speak for us,’” McCarthy added.
Starmer attended the COP29 conference in Azerbaijan in 2024 and announced an
ambitious new U.K. greenhouse gas emissions target for 2035.
McCarthy, however, conceded that it was probably fruitless to try to lobby Trump
directly on climate change. “I’m not sure how useful it would be to have a
conversation, given the extent to which he has disengaged,” she said.
No. 10 Downing Street was approached for comment.