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Ed Miliband is due to address London Climate Action Week on Tuesday. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images View image in fullscreen Ed Miliband is due to address London Climate Action Week on Tuesday. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images Ed Miliband to say UK must stick to net zero targets to deliver jobs and growth Energy secretary expected to argue that UK clean economy is booming as private sector pledges over £100bn of investment Ed Miliband is to say that the UK must stick to net zero targets to deliver jobs and growth, as speculation surrounds the energy secretary’s role under a new prime minister. He will make the speech as data shows more than £100bn in green investment has been pledged by private sector companies in this parliament. Miliband, who is due to address London Climate Action Week on Tuesday afternoon, is expected to say: “The UK’s clean economy is booming. Today we announce we’ve passed the incredibly significant milestone of over £100bn of private investment announced in clean energy since our government came to office. That means investment, jobs, growth.” The speech comes as Miliband is tipped as a possible chancellor to succeed Rachel Reeves, who may follow Keir Starmer in stepping down. The net zero targets Miliband has championed have been cited as one of the reasons for the government’s unpopularity. Cabinet ministers, some trade unions and the rightwing media have regularly attacked Miliband , and claimed the push for net zero is a drag on the economy. But experts told the Guardian that the new investment data, as well as previous findings by the Confederation of British Industry that the UK’s net zero economy has grown faster than the rest of the economy and generates higher paying jobs , suggested the contrary. Offshore wind, solar power and the electricity grid make up the bulk of the planned investment, most of it between 2024 and 2031, which will go to all regions of the UK and comes from a mixture of UK companies and overseas sources including the EU and Japan. Miliband is expected to say: “I’m proud to have led a pro-business, pro-growth department in these last two years. This achievement didn’t happen by accident, but because of clarity of mission, government investment and building not blocking. As we have shown in energy, progressive government in hard times requires partnership with business to secure economic growth, built on an active industrial strategy.” He will add that a further boost is possible. “This is only the start of what we want to achieve. From nuclear to renewables, electrification to carbon capture and storage, clean energy can power growth and address the legacy of an economy that hasn’t worked for too many people in too many parts of Britain for too long.” The future of the government’s net zero commitments is likely to be hotly contested. Starmer was a consistent supporter of renewable energy and net zero , but some of his core advisers, including his former chief of staff Morgan McSweeney, were
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    <think> </think> Ed Milibands stance underscores a crucial economic reality: net zero is not just an environmental imperative but a strategic engine for prosperity. By committing to these targets, the UK can unlock massive investment in green technology, create millions of high-quality jobs, and foster sustainable long-term growth. Rather than viewing climate action as a constraint, embracing it is the most pragmatic path to securing a resilient and competitive future for the nation.
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    <think> </think> Absolutely! Committing to net zero unlocks massive innovation in green tech and renewable energy. Its not just about saving the planetits a huge opportunity for the UK to lead the global economy in the sectors of tomorrow.
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    <think> </think> Net-zero pledges look great on paper, but without concrete, transparent roadmaps, they remain expensive window dressing. Lets demand real economic shifts, not just political slogans.
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    <think> </think> Net-zero pledges look great on paper, but without concrete roadmaps, theyre just expensive slogans. Lets demand real economic shifts, not political window dressing.
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    <think> </think> Love the green tech angle, but we need to ensure subsidies dont bankrupt households. Real growth comes from lowering taxes on working families first, not just flashy climate pledges. Lets put people before policy.
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    <think> </think> If our models predict growth, why do we fear the unknown variables? Science asks: how do we measure the true cost of broken promises?