#Chorlton Big Green Happening, South #Manchester Sat April 26th

small_logoChorlton Big Green Happening
Saturday April 26th, 2014
1-5pm
St Clement’s Church
Edge Lane
Chorlton

Chorlton Big Green Happening is going to be the biggest green festival in Manchester this year – we’re promoting a greener way of life and sharing ideas across our community on Saturday 26th

Whilst trying to tread a path that weaves around the main political parties, we are angry at the lack of opportunities available to us and for our future. This will be a warm, engaging and above all a community event, but with a fair slice of attitude added into the usual cocktail of campaigners, makers, doers, growers, educators and builders.

Prepare to be inspired by the activists, support local eco-businesses, moved by music, wowed by ethical fashion and up-cycling, but most of all, raise your awareness to make conscious decisions to create a sustainable, ethical lifestyle for our future.

PS MCFly editor Marc Hudson has been asked to give a short speech at this event, and over his own dead body, has agreed…

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#Salford Cabinet refuses to discuss #fracking despite 3,000-strong petition

Local residents opposed to drilling on Barton Moss gathered at Swinton Civic Centre as Salford Council cabinet members were presented with a 3000+ strong petition against the controversial practice of fracking. Ali Abbas, the originator of the petition presented a powerful 5 minute case against dirty unconventional fuels. [See text here]

Salford City Council gave planning permission for exploratory drilling at Barton Moss and the site’s seen constant protests since equipment began moving in. Many people have been disappointed at the level of consultation between the Council and local residents. Drilling company iGas needs further planning permission to carry out fracking, and it is expected they will apply to the council later this year.

Manchester Friends of the Earth’s Ali Abbas said:
“The petition was created to compel the Council to discuss the unacceptable risks that fracking and coal bed methane pose to neighbouring communities, the climate and the local environment. Extraction of these kinds of unconventional gas would conflict with Greater Manchester’s Climate Change Strategy and the target to cut emissions by 48% by 2020 – instead of risky fracking, Salford should back clean renewables and community energy instead.”

The anti-fracking campaigners received high profile local support with Actor and Salford resident Maxine Peake saying:

It is of utmost importance that we prevent fracking from becoming a reality in this country. We must stop the Goverment’s bribing of local authorities into participating in this disastrous exercise. No to Fracking! Stand up Salford before it’s too late.’

Sandra Dutson, from Frack Free Greater Manchester and an Eccles resident said,

“I’m very disappointed that the petition wasn’t debated. I’ve researched fracking and am totally against it on grounds of its impact on climate change and local risks to water, air and land use.

“I want to be assured that Salford council are properly informed about the impacts and that they too would want to protect communities in Salford by ruling out the possibility of fracking.”

Friends of the Earth’s press release continues “Fracking is a dirty word. The Government is threatening to puncture our green and pleasant land with countless fracking rigs in a headlong dash for gas, with little thought to local people. Shale gas is a dirty fossil fuel that contributes to climate change, and it poses serious local environmental risks such as water contamination and shortages. Meanwhile, there’s plenty of evidence to suggest it won’t lower fuel bills, and it risks taking much-needed investment away from renewables and energy saving. For more information, and to send a clear message to the Government that fracking is a dirty word, visit www.foe.co.uk/fracking.”

 

Footnotes
(1)Mayor Ian Stewart argued that Salford councillors could not comment on fracking issues due to concerns over ‘predetermination’ and any future planning applications. However, Manchester Friends of the Earth understand that the ‘predetermination’ rules have changed so that councillors aren’t excluded from voicing opinions. The clarified rules on predetermination still require a planning committee member to have an open mind when determining a planning application. However, proof of previous campaigning against a proposed planning application would not be proof that the member had a closed mind. For more details see:

http://www.out-law.com/en/articles/2012/january-/localism-act-clarifies-rules-on-predetermination/

http://www.planningresource.co.uk/article/1173984/two-thirds-councillors-unaware-predetermination-rule-change

NB The above has been lifted from the Friends of the Earth press release. MCFly has undertaken no independent research.

Posted in Democratic deficit, Energy, Fracking, press release journalism | 4 Comments

Philip Pullman on #climate futures, for #Manchester and everywhere. #nailedit

If you’re a decent author, you can say a LOT in 140 characters…

pullmantweet

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What IS a low carbon culture, #Manchester? Here’s the Bishop of Manchester’s answer… #climate #adaptation

twogoalsWhat is a “low carbon culture”?  Nobody seems to know for sure, four and a half years after it was listed as one of the two headline goals in the Manchester Climate Change Action Plan. Such is the efficiency and effectiveness of the people (some very well-paid) who have been in charge of the process, eh?

Anyway, here at MCFly we’d like to know what YOU think a low carbon culture is.  (If you need something to chew on, see this interview with an anthropologist).

Use the comments box below…

Meanwhile, here’s a clip from the interview with the Bishop of Manchester, David Walker, that we put up last week.

Posted in Climate Change Action Plan, Low Carbon Culture | 3 Comments

Competition, co-operation and what we do after the apocalypse, in #Manchester and beyond

anthropologistPerson A “Whether the story is true (I am inherently suspicious), the underlying point is well made. Marketeers, economists etc have to work very VERY hard to suppress our co-operative instincts and only valorise our competitive ones. It enrages them that we “naturally” care about each other, since it makes their pretty fables useless (John Nash, one of the proponents of game theory, could never understand how/why the secretaries in the office where he worked didn’t behave ‘as they should’).

Divide and conquer is one of the oldest tools of a dominating minority. Sowing seeds of distrust and discord, fostering paranoia and praising asocial behaviour. From the first tinpot leader to David Cameron, it has been thus. It probably will be, on a smaller scale, as the global webs that bind us presently fray and break. Then what?”

Person B “Going to share with you a little of my experience in ‘drug addiction recovery’ as I feel it relates a lot. I, as do many other people, arrived at a self help group when I was 27 completely beaten. I was going to be imprisoned, my 8 year old daughter taken away permanently (she’d been in care twice) and I was putting drugs and alcohol into every orifice, and ones I created myself, round the clock. In the drug recovery group I found the best co-operation I’d ever found. Whatever the cause of our addiction (in mine it was having zero self-esteem and masses of self-hate that was fostered by a dysfunctional home situation and reinforced by an unhelpful wider social set up e.g. competitive school), in the group, we gave up all prejudices, judgements, fears… became like empty willing vessels… because it was sink or swim. There is amazing camaraderie in Narcotics Anonymous and other such groups that springs from that point of complete surrender. There’s a slogan ‘I can’t, we can’. I would be dead if I hadn’t found that group. There’s no outside funding for it, no professional ‘do-gooders’… just completely desperate people throwing in the towel and finding that loving and caring for each other gets us well. It’s like all the attempts to ‘divide and rule’ get blown away. It’s not a paradise though.. old conditioning does re-surface, but people own it and consciously attempt to let go of it. I don’t go to the meetings as much now.. but it moves me and gives me tremendous hope when I see people who were so completely done in blossom and flower and hug and love others where they had been brutally self-seeking. Gives me hope that our collective ecological rock bottom might result in a similar mass scale re-discovery and re-emerging of our co-operative instincts – that natural caring for each other that also makes our lives truly rich and meaningful, and as they should be, rather than full of empty plastic consumeristic promises.”

Posted in Campaign Update, education, Guest post, inspire | Leave a comment

Upcoming event: #fracking skills building weekend in #Manchester April 12/13th

A5_NGG_Organising_Together

 

PS  When I post information on MCFly, it is always for informational purposes. It is not necessarily an endorsement of an event.  You attend at your own risk.

Posted in Upcoming Events | 1 Comment

IPCC scientist: “Is this microphone on” (Cartoon) #gallowshumour

ipccisthisthingon

Posted in humour | 5 Comments

“Inspired to Grow” in #Levenshulme, #Manchester – starts Mon April 14th

inspired to grow

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#Shale Gas lecture in #Manchester – #fracking consequences etc. Prof Susan Christopherson

Lecture by US academic Professor Susan Christopherson, at the University of Manchester on Weds 19th March, hosted by the Centre for Urban Resilience and Energy (CURE) in collaboration with Manchester Energy and Geography at SEED Seminar series

Posted in academia, Energy, Fracking, University of Manchester | Leave a comment

#Manchester citizens answer 3 questions – 013 Tom Skinner #3qthurs

This week, Tom Skinner

1. “Who are you?”  (Name, where you live, and – if you want to say – what you “do”)
2. “What does Manchester need to become more sustainable?”
3. “What knowledge and skills do you want to acquire in 2014?”

Why this? Because we need to celebrate what is happening, imagine what could happen and also connect people who have skills with people who want them.  #movementbuilding.

So, watch out. If I see you before you see me, and I’ve got my video camera handy (I will), you might be in the frame…

* And an optional 4. –  “Anything else you’d like to say?”

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