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HomeClimate changeA green ‘people’s home’? Reflections on climate politics in Sweden

A green ‘people’s home’? Reflections on climate politics in Sweden

28937424213_1e0d89d2f8_zThis post is by Green Alliance associate Rebecca Willis. It was first posted on her blog.

When the going gets tough in UK politics, it’s tempting to look to Scandinavia for inspiration. Those ex-Vikings seem to have mellowed into a peaceful, consensual bunch, quietly doing the right thing on social policy and environmental protection. Or so we believe. But what’s the truth behind the stereotype? I recently spent a month in Sweden, and while I’m still no expert, I had a lot of interesting conversations about Swedish politics – so here are my reflections.

First, the famed Swedish social contract is still very much in evidence, though it’s under some strain. Sweden has managed to sustain consensus for quality public services funded through high taxes, and the results are tangible: good transport networks, functioning education and health systems and clean, calm streets. This all stems from the concept of the ‘Folkhemmet’, or ‘people’s home’, which guided Swedish political thinking through much of the 20th century. The foundation of the Folkhemmet is a sense of collective responsibility shared between citizens, the state, business and unions, cutting across class or other divides and striving for consensus. While this approach has arguably started to break down, it is still an important influence.

Environment is at the heart of Swedish politics
Where does the environment fit in? Many people I talked to saw the environment as an aspect of the Folkhemmet. A certain level of environmental protection is built into the model. In fact, Social Democrat prime minister Göran Persson made this explicit in 1996, launching the ‘Gröna Folkhemmet’ (you guessed it: ‘green people’s home’). As a result, Sweden has seen a consensual, gradualist and broadly progressive approach to environmental policy.

It shows in climate legislation. Much policy is managed at arm’s length from government by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), which was the first agency of its kind in the world, established in 1967. Sweden has a long standing carbon tax, together with relatively high levels of renewable energy, strong energy efficiency standards and low levels of fuel poverty. It has a new climate framework, is almost on track to meet its target of a 40 per cent greenhouse gas reduction by 2020, and aims to have no net greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, though this goal is not well defined.

Too consensual?
So far, so pragmatic. But therein lies the sting in the tail of the Swedish approach. It’s, well, maybe a bit too consensual. This first struck me when I talked to Kaj Török, head of Futerra Stockholm, who work with companies on sustainability strategies. He said that most Swedish companies tend to meet environmental standards without really thinking about it, just as part of their ‘license to operate’. This is great, but limiting. They don’t see it as a differentiator, don’t communicate what they’re doing, and don’t think of radical changes, tending to concentrate on meeting run-of-the-mill environmental management standards. Meanwhile, the green NGOs are more likely to be found inside the EPA providing technical support, than outside protesting with placards. In politics, too, pragmatic acceptance of climate measures seems to be the approach of the main parties to the left and right. Even the greens, according to some, have sacrificed radicalism since becoming part of the governing coalition since 2014.

So, the key question for me is what are the limits of consensus in climate policy? If Sweden is serious about achieving net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, will gradualism hit the buffers?

Could climate policy lead to greater inequality?
My own view (although maybe this is my Anglo-Saxon cynicism talking) is that a radical climate target entails significant social and economic change, which in turn requires robust debate. Though such changes can be positive, they may require upheaval, and fault lines may well emerge. One issue, flagged up by a few people I talked to, takes us straight back to the Folkhemmet. If Sweden continues its reliance on the price mechanism in climate policy, what will the distributional implications be? Could climate policy contribute to greater inequality and an unravelling of the social consensus? Is there an alternative path of a socially just, low carbon transition? This is an idea now being explored by some on the left.

Lessons for the UK
There are lessons here for the UK. The consensus on the 2008 Climate Change Act has endured and cross party support is still strong. The value of this consensus is evident, if you compare with the US and Australia, who are still arguing about the basics. But there is a yawning policy gap, if the UK is to meet these targets, as the Committee on Climate Change has made clear. And, as I argued earlier this year: there’s a danger that the targets themselves become a fig leaf hiding inadequate policy.

For all the differences between our two countries, I think a similar challenge for climate politics is emerging in both Sweden and the UK. How can we keep the much needed consensus, enshrined in long term carbon targets, whilst also encouraging proper political debate about how we meet those goals, and about the resulting social and economic change? As both countries navigate these uncharted waters, I’ll certainly be knocking on the door of the Folkhemmet, once again, to see how they’re getting on.

[Image: ‘Natur’, courtesy of Gunilla G from Flickr Creative Commons]

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Rebecca is a researcher at Lancaster University and an associate of Green Alliance. http://www.rebeccawillis.co.uk/biography/

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