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UK names Rachel Kyte as brand-new climate envoy

Britain on Thursday named Rachel Kyte, an environment policy teacher at Oxford University, as its new environment envoy the most recent action in the just recently elected Labour federal government's efforts to reinforce Britain's role in international climate politics.

Kyte's consultation as the UK's Unique Agent for Environment comes 6 weeks before COP 29, the current annual U.N. climate top. Nations from around the world will meet in Azerbaijan to try to surge out new deals to stop rising international temperatures, alleviate the damage they have triggered and raise moneying for those who have been worst affected.

In her profession Kyte has actually concentrated on methods to generate energy in reasonable and sustainable ways. She formerly worked for the World Bank in the run up to the landmark Paris 2015 Paris environment contract, and later as a special representative on sustainable energy for the United Nations Secretary-General.

Rachel's proficiency and experience in international and climate crisis roles will help drive UK global management on the agenda and across the world, British foreign minister David Lammy stated.

Earlier today energy security and net no minister Ed Miliband stated Britain was back in the business of environment management, criticising the previous Conservative-led federal government for rolling back some of its environment targets.

Last week Lammy said Britain would put climate change at the heart of choices about foreign policy, and designate two brand-new climate envoys: one for climate and one for nature. Kyte takes up the environment brief while the nature envoy has yet to be announced.

(source: Reuters)