In one of its first moves after taking power Tuesday, Sweden’s newly elected right-wing government scrapped the country’s environment ministry, drawing outrage from opposition lawmakers who say the step threatens to undermine the nation’s chances of meeting its climate targets.
Per Bolund is the leader of The Swedish Greens. wrote on social media that the axing of the environment ministry shows “how little this government values the environment and the climate.”
“This is a historic decision with devastating consequences for environmental issues,” Bolund added, noting that Sweden will now be without a separate environment ministry for the first time in five decades.
Pär Holmgren, a Swedish meteorologist and member of the European Parliament, also expressed outrage on Twitter.
The first move of the new rightwing government in Sweden was to dismantle the Ministry for Environment! 🤔The Ministry for Environment was dismantled! 🤕
They don’t care about our common future.
Expect huge cuts in green funding 👉 a devastating impact on climate policies that we, the Greens, worked so hard to put in place.
— Pär Holmgren (@ParHolmgren) October 18, 2022
Romina Pourmokhtari, the new environment minister, will be working under Ebba Busch, the minister for energy and business.
Busch is the leader of Sweden’s Christian Democrats, part of the right-wing coalition now governing the country after winning a slim majority in September’s elections. The Sweden Democrats, a far-right party that is xenophobic, are part of the bloc.
Bloomberg reported Tuesday that “Kristersson’s government is heavily dependent on the nationalist Sweden Democrats, the only party in parliament that doesn’t back the country’s target of having net zero emissions by 2045.”
“The four-party alliance that agreed on forming the new government last week said they would seek to lower fuel prices, partly by reducing the percentage of biofuels that has to be mixed into gas and diesel to the minimum level required by the European Union,” Bloomberg noted. “That would make it more difficult to reach a target of reducing transport emissions by 70% by 2030.”
Kristersson also advocates for the expansion of nuclear power. This is a move that Kristersson hopes to reverse earlier efforts to dismantle the country’s reactors.
The Associated Press reported Tuesday that Kristersson said “Sweden’s goal on electricity production would change from ‘100% renewable’ to ‘100 percent fossil-free,’ which leaves room for nuclear energy.”