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Britain's Energy Secretary Ed Miliband addresses members of the Environment Agency at a conference centre in central London November 9, 2009.
View Photo »Britain's Energy Secretary Ed Miliband addresses members of the Environment Agency at a conference centre in central London November 9, 2009.
View Photo »Ed Miliband, Britain's Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, speaks during a press conference following the conclusion of the Major Economies Forum in London, Monday, Oct. 19, 2009.
View Photo »Ed Miliband, Britain's Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, speaks during a press conference following the conclusion of the Major Economies Forum in London, Monday, Oct. 19, 2009.
View Photo »Britain's Energy Secretary Ed Miliband chairs a Major Economies Forum (MEF) in London October 18, 2009.
View Photo »Britain's Energy Secretary Ed Miliband (L), Business Secretary Peter Mandelson (C) and former Leader of the Labour Party, Neil Kinnock, applaud at the close of the Labour Party Conference in Brighton, southern England October 1, 2009.
View Photo »BRIGHTON, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 28: Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change Ed Miliband addresses the Labour Party Conference on September 28, 2009 in Brighton, England.
View Photo »Britain's Energy and Climate Change Secretary Ed Miliband gestures on stage during the annual Labour Party Conference in Brighton, south England September 27, 2009.
View Photo »BRIGHTON, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 27: Prime Minister Gordon Brown (r) and Ed Miliband, the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, listen to speeches at the Labour Party Conference on September 27, 2009 in Brighton, England.
View Photo »Britain's Energy and Climate Change Secretary Ed Miliband appears on the BBC's "The Andrew Marr Show" in London September 13, 2009. Britain is not in danger of power cuts during the next decade as it switches to cleaner energy generation, Miliband said on Sunday.
View Photo »Britain's International Development Minister Douglas Alexander (R) and Energy and Climate Change Minister Ed Miliband (2nd L) travel with activists of the Indian Youth Climate Network (IYCN) inside a carriage of the Delhi Metro Rail Corporation (DMRC) in New Delhi September 2, 2009.
View Photo »A Delhi Metro Rail Corporation (DMRC) officer briefs Britain's International Development Minister Douglas Alexander (R) and Energy and Climate Change Minister Ed Miliband (2nd R) inside a carriage of DMRC in New Delhi September 2, 2009.
View Photo »Britain's International Development Minister Douglas Alexander (2nd L) and Energy and Climate Change Minister Ed Miliband (3rd L) walk inside the driver's cabin of the Delhi Metro Rail Corporation (DMRC) in New Delhi September 2, 2009.
View Photo »British Minister for International Development Douglas Alexander holds a Delhi Metro rail ticket as he enters the metro in New Delhi on September 2, 2009. Alexander and British Minister for Energy and Climate Change Ed Miliband have begun a two-day joint ministerial visit to India.
View Photo »British British Minister for Energy and Climate Change Ed Miliband and the Minister for International Development Douglas Alexander travel on the Metro in New Delhi on September 2, 2009. Alexander and Miliband have begun a two-day joint ministerial visit to India.
View Photo »Brazil's Environment Minister Carlos Minc (R) and British Climate Secretary Ed Miliband pose for photos before a meeting at the environment ministry in Brasilia August 4, 2009.
View Photo »Brazil's Environment Minister Carlos Minc (R) shakes hands with British Climate Secretary Ed Miliband during a meeting at the environment ministry in Brasilia August 4, 2009.
View Photo »United Kingdom's Secretary for Energy and Climate Change Ed Miliband, left, shakes hands with Brazil's Environment Minister Carlos Minc during a meeting in Brasilia, Tuesday, Aug. 4, 2009. Miliband is on a two-day official visit to Brazil.
View Photo »United Kingdom's Secretary for Energy and Climate Change Ed Miliband, left, and Brazil's Environment Minister Carlos Minc pose for pictures during a meeting in Brasilia, Tuesday, Aug. 4, 2009. Miliband is on a two-day official visit to Brazil.
View Photo »Brazil's Foreign Minister Celso Amorim (R) talks with British Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change Ed Miliband during a meeting at the Itamaraty Palace in Brasilia August 3, 2009.
View Photo »Brazil's Foreign Minister Celso Amorim (R) shake hands with British Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, Ed Miliband during a meeting at the Itamaraty Palace in Brasilia August 3, 2009.
View Photo »United Kingdom's Secretary for Energy and Climate Change Ed Miliband, left, speaks to Brazil's Foreign Minister Celso Amorim during a meeting at the Itamaraty Palace, in Brasilia, Monday, Aug. 3, 2009.
View Photo »United Kingdom's Secretary for Energy and Climate Change Ed Miliband speaks to Brazil's Foreign Minister Celso Amorim during a meeting at the Itamaraty Palace, in Brasilia, Monday, Aug. 3, 2009.
View Photo »Climate change campaigners pose with a symbolic letter of concern addressed to Ed Miliband, Britain's Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, outside the Department of Energy and Climate Change in central London, on July 15, 2009.
View Photo »Britain's Business Secretary Peter Mandelson (L) accompanies Labour MP Sadiq Khan, (2nd L) Chief Executive Officer of ADL, Colin Robertson, (3rd L) and Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change Ed Miliband (R) during a visit to the Alexander Dennis Ltd factory in Guildford, Surre...
View Photo »Britain's Energy Secretary Ed Miliband addresses members of the Environment Agency at a conference centre in central London November 9, 2009.
View Photo »The truth is that the Tories have opposed Labour's extra public investment, including the 400 million pounds allocated at the time of the budget for new green industries
I know how strongly people in my constituency feel about the need for agreement. Gordon Brown and the Secretary of State, Ed Miliband, are taking the international lead in the discussions leading up to Copenhagen, just as the then recently elected Labour government took a lead at Kyoto in 1997 in develo...
Change is also needed for energy security ... In a world where our North Sea reserves are declining, a more diverse, low-carbon energy mix is a more secure energy mix, less vulnerable to fluctuations in the availability of any one fuel.
Britain are not the bad guys here. I would say the current British government just lacks the resolve. The challenge now starts with Ed Miliband. Either you are the one to direct here, or you are a general whose troops do not address your will.
New nuclear is right for energy security and climate change and will be good for jobs too, creating up to 9,000 jobs to build and operate power stations at each site and helping leading companies access the international market
Ed Miliband [the Environment Secretary] now has a golden opportunity to rule out all emissions from new coal as a sign of Britain's leadership before the key Copenhagen climate meeting. With E.ON's announcement he's got an open goal.
New nuclear is right for energy security and climate change and will be good for jobs too
The UK Government is entirely aware that we must work together, both domestically and globally, to combat climate change so the idea anyone has been relegated to the fringes of these talks is simply wrong. This is an international treaty and Scotland will be represented at Copenhagen by the Prime Minist...
The current planning system is a barrier to this shift. It serves neither the interests of energy security, the interests of the low-carbon transition, nor the interests of people living in areas where infrastructure may be built.
The threat of climate change means we need to make a transition from a system that relies heavily on high-carbon fossil fuels to a radically different system that includes nuclear, renewable and clean-coal power
Europe has put its cards on the table ... Now we want others to do the same. That is China, Russia, India and the US. Everyone needs to come forward with specific proposals. They need to come with ambitious reductions. An agreement without numbers would not be a satisfactory agreement.
Europe has put its cards on the table ... Now we want others to do the same. That is China, Russia, India and the US. Everyone needs to come forward with specific proposals. They need to come with ambitious reductions. An agreement without numbers would not be a satisfactory agreement.
Each generation holds the planet in trust for the next and to fulfil our obligations to these future generations, we must succeed in getting a fair and ambitious agreement. We need the voice of all the world's religions in the coming weeks as we approach the Copenhagen summit.
If Copenhagen is not going to achieve what we need, we should not sign a deal there
Britain's scientists have helped to illustrate the catastrophic effects that will result if the world fails to limit the global temperature rise to 2C. With less than 50 days left before agreement must be reached, the UK is going all out the persuade the world of its need to raise its ambitions so we ge...
Environment ministers are determined that the EU maintains its leadership position on climate change in order to promote an ambitious deal at Copenhagen
I think what we see from India is a clear sense that a deal and an agreement on the right terms is in India's interests and that India needs to engage in what Jairam Ramesh calls Per Capita Plus - so it has a per capita approach, but also needs to take domestic action
It's important that we strain every sinew to get a deal in Copenhagen
When you think about the Copenhagen deadline, it has focused people's minds ... So China has moved its position, India has moved it's position, Japan has recently moved it's position. There is a lot further to go, and there is a danger that we won't get a deal, but it's right that government from around...
When you think about the Copenhagen deadline, it has focused people's minds ... So China has moved its position, India has moved it's position, Japan has recently moved it's position. There is a lot further to go, and there is a danger that we won't get a deal, but it's right that government from around...
When you think about the Copenhagen deadline, it has focused people's minds ... So China has moved its position, India has moved it's position, Japan has recently moved it's position. There is a lot further to go, and there is a danger that we won't get a deal, but it's right that government from around...
We have seen countries moving toward each other: India, Japan, China and Indonesia have all made significant shifts in the past few weeks
We have the lowest median price for gas in Europe and we have below average prices for electricity ... Now that doesn't make me complacent, but my view is that there's essentially two markets. There are the people who switch in a keen way and get better deals. And then there are the people who don't swi...
We do need significant cuts in emissions from the US. We want as much action from America as we can get ... America and China are the two biggest emitters. They are very key to this. I think a deal without America would be a very bad deal.
Yes. This only works if leaders engage. It’s a very interesting lesson that in July the leaders met in L’Aquila in Italy and agreed that they should commit to avoiding dangerous climate change above two degrees [centigrade]. If they had left it to negotiators it wouldn’t have happened. And Obama was the...
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