The UK’s next parliament will be a pivotal one.
It will be the last full parliament before 2030. That date is a benchmark for many of the UK’s interim net zero goals and marks the end of the Decade of Action to deliver the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
The cost-of-living crisis is impacting on government spending and public priorities and behaviours. Balancing the needs of people with the needs of the planet will require clear, decisive leadership from the next government and significant investment in infrastructure.
This presidential roundtable discussed where the UK is today, and where it needs to get to in the next parliament to be on course to achieve net zero by 2050.
It explored the role of the government in unlocking the infrastructure sector’s true net zero potential, including the immediate actions the next government should take.
The discussion primarily covered:
- the need for bold leadership and clear, stable policymaking
- the case for public investment in infrastructure alongside the need to unlock more private investment and improve productivity
- the challenges holding back public behaviour change and need for a positive vision of net zero to help address them
- priorities for the next government in transport, energy and domestic heating
Presidential Roundtable summary: day one infrastructure priorities for the next UK Parliament – looking ahead to 2030
Content type: Policy
Last updated: 01 August 2023
You may also be interested in@headerSize>

- Type
- Awards and competitions
Vote to decide South West’s best as transport and flood schemes make shortlist
Twelve projects, totalling more than £230m of infrastructure investment, are in the running for the ICE South West People’s Choice Award 2026.

- Type
- Infrastructure blog
Another report? Does the civil engineering market study simply state what we already know?
ICE Policy Fellow Paul Mullett takes a critical look at the Competition and Markets Authority's findings and wonders, “are we brave enough?”

- Type
- Infrastructure blog
Mike Reader MP: the UK's Seventh Carbon Budget is an anti-poverty measure
The transition to net zero will lower costs, create jobs, and drive growth, writes the chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Infrastructure.