Coronavirus: Coastal areas demand £1bn 'kick-start'
- Published
- comments
More than 40 councils in coastal areas of the UK have demanded a £1bn "kick-start" from the government to help recover from the impact of coronavirus.
In a letter to the chancellor, they say the money could create almost 74,000 jobs by developing zero-emission ships and offshore wind farms.
This would help "economically at-risk" communities, they add.
The government said it was supporting "millions of firms" through the pandemic and "continuing to innovate".
In his speech to the virtual Conservative Party conference on Tuesday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson promised to make the UK a "world leader" in green energy.
He announced £160m of investment in ports and factories to increase electricity generation from offshore wind.
But the trade group Maritime UK, which coordinated the letter, is calling for a "more ambitious" approach when Chancellor Rishi Sunak unveils his Comprehensive Spending Review later this year.
Ships could be developed that are powered by hydrogen, ammonia or biofuels, it is argued.
The letter says a £1bn investment in decarbonising the UK's sea transport sector would directly create 15,200 jobs and add a further 58,400 in the supply chain.
It warns: "But without investment, this opportunity will be missed, and the UK will risk losing its position as a world leader in maritime.
"Many other countries around the world are already acting to support the decarbonisation of their maritime industries, and the UK government must do the same."
Forty-one leaders of - or senior members of - coastal councils have signed the letter, along with five mayors.
Maritime UK director Ben Murray told the BBC that, without the investment, the UK "cannot reach" its commitment to lower net greenhouse gas emissions to zero by 2050.
In its Clean Maritime Plan,, external published last year, the government said it wanted "zero-emission-capable" ships to operate in UK waters by 2025.
In July, the charity Social Investment Business said coastal communities, many of which depend on seasonal tourism, had taken "one of the biggest economic hits", external from the coronavirus crisis.
It added that they had a "large concentration of businesses and employees in sectors that were closed during the lockdown" and had "experienced some of the largest drops in local spending, as well as the highest rises in unemployment".
A Treasury spokesperson said: "Our support for business has reached, and continues to reach, millions of firms. The Job Support Scheme is designed to protect jobs in businesses facing lower demand over the winter due to Covid, and is just one form of support on offer to employers during this difficult period."
They added that businesses could "still access our loan schemes, now extended, defer VAT payments previously due in March, and benefit from business rates holidays, a moratorium of eviction for commercial tenants and the Statutory Sick Pay Rebate Scheme".
"We're also continuing to innovate in supporting incomes and employment through our Plan for Jobs announced in July, helping employees get back to work through a £1,000 retention bonus and creating new roles for young people with our Kickstart scheme," the spokesperson said.
The leaders who signed the letter are from:
Aberdeen City Council; Argyll and Bute Council; Arun District Council; Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council; Brighton and Hove City Council; Carmarthenshire County Council; City and County of Swansea Council; Conwy County Borough Council; Cornwall Council; Cumbria County Council; Devon County Council; Dundee City Council; Dumfries and Galloway Council; Durham County Council; East Renfrewshire Council; Fareham Borough Council; Hampshire County Council; Hull City Council; Inverclyde Council; Newcastle City Council; North Devon Council; North East Lincolnshire Council; North Norfolk District Council; Northumberland County Council; Orkney Islands Council; Perth and Kinross Council; Plymouth City Council; Portsmouth City Council; Shetland Islands Council; South Tyneside Council; Southampton City Council; Teignbridge District Council; Thanet District Council; The Highland Council; West Sussex County Council; Wirral Council; Ynys Môn Council
The mayors who signed the letter are from:
Belfast; North of Tyne Combined Authority; Liverpool City Region; Ards and North Down Borough Council; West of England Combined Authority
Other signatories are:
The convener of Fife Council's economy, tourism, strategic planning and transportation committee; the chairman of the Mersey Dee Alliance