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UK Government to reduce red tape for businesses that want to reduce emissions

In a speech to the financial sector this week, British Finance Minister Rachel Reeves is expected to ask regulators to lower barriers for businesses that want to reduce their emissions. A government source confirmed on Monday.

The Financial Conduct Authority of Britain, the Bank of England, and the Green Finance Institute (partly government-backed) will conduct a pilot to identify regulatory and other obstacles to projects that aim to enable businesses with high levels of carbon emissions to reduce them.

Reeves will make the announcement during her annual Mansion House address to London's Financial Sector on Tuesday. She will be speaking alongside BoE Governor Andrew Bailey.

Reeves stated in his speech last year that regulators placed too little focus on the support of economic growth, which was one of the main goals for newly elected Labour Government.

Since then, despite a good first quarter, the growth rate has been mediocre. Many economists believe that Reeves may have to increase taxes by tens or hundreds of millions of pounds to maintain public finances.

Green finance, according to the government, has the potential to generate revenue of up to 270 billion pounds (200 billion pounds) for the economy.

The Transition Finance Pilot is a small piece of this. According to a source in the finance ministry, it will focus on examining in depth how climate projects are funded and working with market participants to identify specific obstacles and how regulators and stakeholders can resolve them.

The pilot project is a follow-up to an external review of Transition Finance commissioned by the former Conservative government and published in October.

The barriers highlighted included the unproven nature of carbon-reduction technology, uncertainty over future government incentives, and concerns about reputational damage if projects are undertaken that aim to reduce rather than eliminate emissions.

(source: Reuters)