While the Obama administration is moving fast to break with eight years of "climate denial" under George Bush, the UK government seems to have lost its early focus on introducing climate change regulations. Jyoti Banerjee investigates.
For a time, a year or so ago, it looked as if UK companies would be required to meet mandatory regulations on carbon emissions. But the focus seems to have been lost, under pressure from business lobby groups that are concerned about the impact such regulations will have on British companies. Instead, UK companies are urged to report their carbon emissions following recommended guidelines, and the soonest we will have a carbon regulatory framework will now be 2010, when only Britain's largest companies will have to meet the forthcoming Carbon Reduction Commitment (CRC) mandatory framework.
The Americans are still debating the merits of carbon trading schemes versus carbon taxes, with carbon trading, based on existing EU schemes, gaining ground among policy-makers. Right now, no one really knows what the Obama administration will seek to put in place but it is quite certain that whatever happens in the US will be felt over here in the UK.

