Event: “The ardous transition to low-carbon energy” #Manchester Tues 29th Oct. #solookingforward

geelsseminarOkay, this is exciting.  On Tuesday 29th October (note the date change!) Professor Frank Geels will be doing a seminar on the multi-level perspective, renewable electricity niches and resilient regimes.

I know that sounds like a mouthful, and I hope to make a short video about what multi-level perspectives are and why they matter before Tuesday.  But even if I don’t, and you are worried that you’ll be bewildered, you should so come.  There’ll be drinking afterwards…

It’s free, from 4pm in the Arthur Lewis Building…

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“Ways of seeing #climate change” event in#Manchester Weds 30th October

invisibledustA range of new collaborative works between artists and scientists will be showcased at “Ways of Seeing: Climate Change.”  Spaces are limited for next Wednesday’s daytime series of talks, discussions and performances held in St. James’ Building.

On of those talks is by MCFly stalwart Professor Kevin Anderson. We asked him why the event mattered. Here’s what he told us –
To be blunt, scientists have failed to communicate the severity of the climate change future we face so it is important we try other avenues to translate the science into a language the public and wider civil society can understand.  Artists are professional communicators and so it is natural to bring them together with scientists to develop new ways of communicating the severity and urgency of the climate change challenge.”

“To be blunt”?. We’ve never known the good prof to be anything else, bless him!!

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Interview with Professor Adisa Azapagic of University of #Manchester on engineering, research, food waste and #climate

PROF ADISA AZAPAGICHow will becoming elected to the Royal Academy of Engineering change what you do, or the impact of what you do?
The Royal Academy of Engineering is the UK’s national academy of engineering with the main aim of advancing and promoting excellence in engineering. By becoming a Fellow, I will have greater opportunities to contribute to this goal, and in particular to promoting sustainability in engineering, which is my area of research but also my passion. I also hope to have closer interactions with policy makers and help shape national policy related to the environment and sustainability. Above all, I hope to be able to inspire young people and particularly women to become engineers.

Re: the Sustainable Industrial Systems group – what recent successes has it had? What projects are “in the pipeline”?
Sustainable Industrial Systems is my research group at the University of Manchester. The main aim of our research is to help identify sustainable solutions for industry taking into account economic, environmental and social aspects. We work closely with companies in different sectors including chemicals, construction, energy, food & drink and water.
We have recently been successful in attracting £7m from Research Councils UK to set up a Centre in Sustainable Energy Use in Food Chains. The Centre, a collaborative venture with universities of Brunel (lead), Manchester and Birmingham, will work on developing innovative and sustainable solutions for reducing use of energy and resources in food production and consumption. This will contribute towards reducing greenhouse gas emissions and meeting UK climate change targets.
For more detail on our research visit www.sustainble-systems.org.uk.

If you could “wave a magic wand” what would you change in the way that consumers behave?
If I had a “magic wand”, one thing that I would change regarding consumer behaviour is how we shop for food as that could reduce food waste significantly.
How come and why is food waste important?
Because most people go shopping every two weeks or even once a month, we buy much more food than we can eat before it goes off, then we throw it away and buy more food, and on it goes. In the UK, we throw away 30% of perfectly good food which is responsible for high greenhouse gas emissions and environmental pollution. At the same time, in other parts of the world, people are starving. Surely this is unsustainable. So, if we were to buy food more frequently and just enough for what we can actually eat, then we would minimise food waste which in turn would reduce significantly the environmental impacts from food.

If you could “wave a magic wand” what would you change in the way that research like yours is conducted and feeds through into the world of industry?
I would first want the Government to recognise the importance of research for the national economy and future development and growth – currently, this is not the case and lag in research investment behind many European countries and the US. I would also like to see industry fund research at a greater level rather than expecting Government to provide most of the funding. Finally, I would like to see a greater uptake by industry of sustainable solutions identified and developed through research. So, it would have it be a really big “magic wand”!

This interview appeared in the October 2013 issue of Manchester Climate Monthly, in which we managed to demote the Professor to Doctor, and spelt her first name wrong. These have been corrected for the web version. (You can’t get the staff, you really can’t…)

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University of #Manchester “makes a difference” #climate #sustainability

This. MCFly will tumble for ya.

manchester make a difference

Four things
a) good news on Manchester Climate Monthly??  Shurely shome mishtake
b) Don’t mention the People and Planet league table in which U of M plummeted .[ See here for their same-day response to our request for a statement.]
c) Or the Scope Three emissions.
d) Now this is otterly the Best. Tumblr. Ever.

UPDATE: I probably need to get my reading gear around this recent report about the links between the fossil fuel industry and UK universities.

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Save the Veggie Cafe at University of #Manchester

After you’ve signed this petition about getting a full public consultation on how the Council should spend the £14.5m windfall it just got, there’s a second petition to sign.

It’s to save the wonderful “Herbivore’s” vegetarian cafe on the University of Manchester Campus, at which the Manchester Climate Monthly editors have met, held volunteer inductions and dodged scurvy for two years.

Sign the change.org petition!!; “University of Manchester’s beloved Herbivores Vegetarian Cafe, right next to the main library, has just been told by the Student Union to vacate the premises by January! If this goes ahead, where will we go for healthy food and 60p tea in between lectures, and in revision breaks? Where else can we get competitively-priced vegetarian, halal or kosher food on campus? And is it fair to take away the jobs of its staff? If you agree, please sign this petition and share it with your friends, and let’s show our university that we NEED our Veggie Café to stay exactly where it is!”

See the film here –

Here’s the facebook page

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Plant garlic and harvest squash!! #Manchester #LandArmy Thurs 24th & 31st Oct

Wanna get some soil under your fingernails, do some good, have some fun?

landarmyThursday 24th and Thurs 31st October – The Land Army will be heading out to Moss Brook Growers to help with planting garlic, weeding and harvesting squash. Lunch, hot drinks, gloves and tools provided. Transport from Hulme will also be provided, meeting at the Kindling Trust office (Unit 19, 41 Old Birley Street, Hulme) at 9.00am and arriving back for 5.00pm. Please email corrina@kindling.org.uk to book your place”

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#Manchester Science Festival #climate events!!

Manchester Science Festival kicks off this Thursday!!

There are 3 climate-specific events that MCFly readers will be interested in (and heaps more good stuff too).

Two are next Wednesday, 31st 30th October;
Ways of Seeing Climate Change from 10am to 5.30pm
What Art Can Bring to Our Understanding of Climate Change from 6.30pm to 8.30pm

The third is this Saturday, Sunday, the 27th. It’s a showing of the documentary “Chasing Ice”

MCFly editor Marc Hudson is doing a brief intro on the night.  If thatdoesn’t put you off, I don’t know what will!

chasingice

“This event is part of Manchester Science Festival; Come out and play, create and experiment at this eleven day Festival www.manchestersciencefestival.com”

And this logo;MSF_SIEMENS_LOGO_colour

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“Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation” seminar in #Manchester on Weds 23rd

So there is this idea that the rich could pay poor/”developing” countries not to chop down their forests. That would be good, insofar as we might not pave and then cook the planet.
Sadly, there are devils in the detail. Like the fact that the rich have deep pockets and short arms.

So anyway, this Wednesday, from 4.30 to 6pm there’s a public event as part of the development@manchester seminar series

Topic: “Will REDD work for people? Learning from the distributional implications of Payments for Ecosystem Services”
Speaker: Dr Esteve Corbera Universitat Autónoma de Barcelona
Chair: Dan Brockington

Lecture Theatre G6
Humanities Bridgeford Street
Manchester

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#Manchester to host Global Forum… sorry “Ecological Congress” in 2015

In 1994, y’see, Manchester hosted the two year “follow-up” to the Rio Earth Summit. It was called the “Global Forum” and it was not, so the story goes, a success. Hopefully this “Congress on Ecological Restoration” will have better outcomes.

Not quite sure the world needs another jamboree with experts flying in from everywhere to talk about sustainability (Isn’t that what skype is for?)  Still, it will raise £3.9 million for the ravenous beast known as the Local Economy… And it will keep some climatocrats happy and CV-pointed, so what’s not to love, eh?

confnewsSee this

Manchester has won its bid to host the 6th World Congress on Ecological Restoration, after ’team Manchester’ impressed decision-makers with the city’s sustainable credentials.

The five-day meeting, which takes place 23-27 August 2015, will bring 1,500 delegates to the city in a deal estimated to be worth £3.9m for the local economy.

The congress was secured through a partnership approach between Visit Manchester, Manchester Central, Manchester Metropolitan University’s (MMU) conference office, Meeting Makers, and was led by MMU’s Dr David Haley, as well as supporters including The Biospheric Project at the Manchester International Festival, Positive Impact and Creative Concern.

The Society of Ecological Restoration (SER) plans to use Manchester Central for the main assembly and MMU for pre-conference meetings. The SER praised both venues for their sustainability initiatives, which include Manchester Central being one of the first UK venues to achieve ISO20121 international accreditation, while MMU was recently ranked as the UK’s greenest university….

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Survey/competition: £100 for your cycling opinions #Manchester #cycling

Contribute to cycling research for a chance to win £100!

We would like to invite you to take part in a survey on cycling in Greater Manchester. We are interested in hearing your views if you cycle, whether occasionally or every day, and whether for work, fun or sport.

By taking part, you have the opportunity to win a £100 shopping voucher, and of course to help contribute to efforts to get more people cycling confidently in Greater Manchester.

The survey is part of a study that is being conducted by Graeme Sherriff at the Salford Housing and Urban Studies Unit in association with BikeRight!. The study aims to improve understanding of the barriers to utility cycling and to find ways to improve the uptake of cycle training by adults.

The questionnaire should take you between 10 and 15 minutes to complete. At the end of the questionnaire, you are given the opportunity to volunteer to take part in a focus group to discuss adult cycle training further, but this is entirely optional.

To complete it, simply go to this website: https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/cyclesurvey2013

The deadline for responses is 27th October 2013.

Thank you for your time.

Best wishes

Liz Clarke, Managing Director, BikeRight!
Graeme Sherriff, Research Fellow, SHUSU

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