#Manchester #climate scientist Kevin Anderson on Tory politician: “his views… colonial, arrogant.”

It is very late in the day for this species.  If we are to pull through, it will be because people who know what is going on – and what is coming up –  decide to stand up and speak the truth.  Professor Kevin Anderson, long-time favourite of Manchester Climate Monthly, is one of those (sadly rare) people.

As reported by the Independent, Prof Anderson’s retort to the Conservative Environment Secretary (Owen Patterson’s) “views” on climate change and the IPCC 5th assessment report, is as follows-

“It’s a deliberately partial reading of the report. Either that or he has not read the report properly or does not understand the significance of the emissions scenarios. These tell us that business as usual will give us a 50:50 chance of a 4C temperature rise.

“His view that we can muddle through climate change is a colonial, arrogant, rich person’s view. Many people will die in the developing world where the changes will be felt the most and it is irresponsible and immoral to suggest that we as a species can adapt to climate change,” added Professor Anderson.

If you want more of Prof Kevin Anderson, see the two recent podcasts done by local impresario Phil Korbel.

UPDATE 2/10/2013:  IPK points us to this in today’s Independent where Prof Anderson, in a charm offensive the equal of any perpetrated by MCFly’s editor, slaps down the head of the IPCC on the subject of the efficacy of carbon markets to get us out of this grotesque mess.  In tomorrow’s Indie, Prof Anderson announces that only the tears and cerebro-spinal fluid of kittens and cute orphans can provide the energy we need to keep our iPhones and plasma-screens working…

Posted in academia | 5 Comments

#Manchester City Centre residents- “Green Spaces” meeting on Weds 9th October

Got this below from the city centre labour party site. The meeting it talks about is happening on the evening of the day that Manchester City Council meets and discusses, among other things, how to spend the £14.5m windfall from the airport. If you haven’t signed the petition calling for a full public consultation on how to spend that money, you can do so here.

Dear Residents,

A New Leaf residents group would like to invite you to a round table debate to discuss the current situation of under-used spaces in Manchester City Centre and how we as local residents, businesses and the Council can work together to improve the city for everyone.

A New Leaf is a resident-led group recently established, aiming to improve, promote and expand greenery and green space within the Manchester city centre area.  We aim to achieve this by working alongside Manchester City Council and other public, private and third sector organisations within the city centre area.

Increasingly it has come to our attention that there are a number of small, under-used spaces and plots of land across the City Centre that could be put to better use.  We are extremely lucky to have just experienced the wonderful “Dig the City”, Manchester’s Urban Gardening Festival, and we feel that this is an opportune time to discuss how we can create and take new ideas forward.

We will be holding a meeting on Wednesday 9th October, 6.30pm, at Reason Digital, Cheetwood House, 21 Newton Street, M1 1FZ and would really welcome your attendance and contributions.  As this will be the first meeting we will be looking to:

  • Gain a clearer picture of the extent of under-used spaces in the City Centre;
  • Discuss some of the ideas put forward through “Dig The City” and build on the momentum of the festival;
  • Discuss potential ideas for Manchester City Centre and how we can put these into practice.

I hope that all this information is clear but if you do have any questions please feel free to email us at anewleafmcr@gmail.com.  Also if you are interested in attending the discussion please can you RSVP at the same email address.

Thank you for your time and consideration and we look forward to meeting you in the near future!

Kind regards

A New Leaf

07730 659669

@NewLeafMCR

– See more at: http://citycentrelabour.org.uk/public-meeting-to-discuss-green-space-in-the-city-centre/#sthash.WElw9uii.dpuf

Posted in Democratic deficit, Green spaces, Manchester City Council | Leave a comment

Short Story Contest announcement – delayed, not deleted

Apologies to all people who submitted entries for the Short Story contest.

Winners *will* be announced shortly (by end of October).

The responsibility for the delay lies entirely with the competition organiser, NOT with the judges.

“Watch this space.”

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#Manchester #climate leadership from councillors? Let’s hope so!!

This Wednesday the Environmental Sustainability Subgroup of Manchester City Council meets  -in public – at MERCi, in Ancoats.  First item on the agenda is “leadership”  and a workbook for climate-concerned councillors  has been circulated.  MCFly takes a bash at answering the questions in the first exercise…

lgaclimatelocalworkbookcover a) What are the opportunities for showing leadership on climate action in your council area?

There are already “plans” in place in Manchester. The shortage is not of plans but of political will (attention, scrutiny, speaking out, credibility) to make those plans into reality.

Let’s remember; the goal was for 1,000 organisations to endorse the Manchester Climate Change Action Plan (2009). As of September 2013, about 220 have. Endorsing organisations were then supposed to create their own implementation plans – as of September 2013 two have – the City Council and Northwards Housing.

Let’s have a closer look at the City Council’s latest plan.

lgaworkbookpage5It claimed a 7% reduction in emissions, from a 2009/10 baseline (even though the Climate Change Action Plan gives 2005 as its baseline). But actually, as is admitted in the small print, this so-called reduction was due entirely to traffic lighting becoming TfGM’s responsibility. Actually, emissions were UP by 1.8%.

Has the Climate Change Action Plan been sent to Executive for approval yet? No. Every previous plan has, so why not this one?

Leadership you, as councillors, could show

  • Insist that the Annual Carbon Reduction Plan 2013-4 plan goes to Executive – finally– in October, and that both members of the Consultative Panel and members of the public can ask searching questions of it.
  • Make sure the process for the 2014-7 plan is open, iterative and honest
  • commit to challenging the Executive members thoroughly and regularly on the Council’s climate change plans. e.g. Getting quarterly progress reports on the 2013-14 plan wouldn’t hurt.
  • Make sure that all future City Council plans use the correct – 2005 – baseline
  • Renew efforts to get more organisations endorsing the plan, and writing their own implementation plans.
  • Climate change is going to affect ALL areas of life in Manchester City Council’s area, and therefore all scrutiny committees should be dealing with it as a regular item. This idea has been raised before, kicked into the long grass. It will not go away.
  • Establish, in addition to the above, a permanent Environment and Climate Change Scrutiny Committee,
  • Write about climate change and its local impacts on your local websites and blogs. If you do not have websites and blogs, start them.
  • Challenge the next Executive Member for the Environment to communicate regularly and widely on these successes and failures that Manchester is experiencing with its climate change work. They could even have a regular column in the Manchester Evening News on Saturdays, where the “digital economy” is currently being addressed.
  • Undertake an exercise in “backcasting” – imagining yourselves in October 2014, and how you want the Council and councillors to be operating. Then figure out what skills, knowledge and resources are needed to get there. Publish your results and make some firm commitments on which you can be judged.

These are just my ideas, and only some of them. (I circulated another list at the July Neighbourhoods Scrutiny Committee – most of these did not get properly discussed.)

But here’s the thing; I am only one person. There are thousands of people in Manchester who are passionate about this agenda, and thousands more who would be if they were properly involved.

Some guy recently said this in Brighton

only if you reach out and listen can you do the most important thing a leader can do, the most important qualification in my view for being Prime Minister. Only then will you have the ability to walk in the shoes of others and know who to fight for, whoever your opponent, however powerful they are, guided by the only thing that matters: your sense of what is right. This is what I believe, this is where I stand, this is the leadership Britain needs.

(b) What ward-level priorities could council action to create low-carbon, climate-resilient communities help address?

Why is there nothing in ward plans about climate change?
Why is there nothing in ward plans about extreme weather events? What ward-level plans are there for how to cope with a summer 2003 style heatwave, that killed so many in Paris and elsewhere?
What about flooding?
What about using meanwhile land for food growing, instead of flogging it off for take-aways?

(c) What local organisations can you work with to help realise opportunities within your ward?
That’s at the ward level, and so I could only really speak – and not from an expert position – about Moss Side.
On the wider issue though – from past and recent experience, I can say there is a fair (and growing) amount of distrust and cynicism about the Council’s ability and willingness to listen and engage in partnership-working outside the charmed circle of people who keep getting the grants and so censor themselves when talking to councillors and officers. And even they will roll their eyes in private.

d) What obstacles to action are there? How can they be overcome?
Inertia, apathy and, above all, unwillingness to rock the boat. If you want preferment and advancement in this city, it doesn’t pay to ask awkward questions more than once.

The Tory-Lib Dem cuts have, I agree with Richard Leese, fallen disproportionately on Manchester. But they are a fact of life. We cannot use them as an excuse to not crack on with local action
There is, in fact, £14.5million for a so-called “Clean and Green Spaces” Initiative.
There are good reasons the Council should welcome a full public consultation on this, by the way.

Maybe some councillors might like to support the Wythenshawe Constituency Party’s motion to City Party on the evening of Thursday 3rd October?

(e) What questions should I ask of my council decision-makers to help achieve change?
What hasn’t gone well over the last 4 years?
Besides blaming the Tories, what explanations do you have for this?
How will it be different in the future? What will the Council do differently to help get a different result?
How are we going to engage and re-engage people who have wandered- or walked – away from the “green” agenda in recent years.  How are we going to engage those who never did?
What kind of fiendishly difficult questions can we put to the new Steering Group chair when he appears in front of this sub-group? Do we have enough thumb-screws?

We are losing the game. We have to change the rules if we want to win.

Marc Hudson
mcmonthly@gmail.com
Sept 30th 2013

Posted in Climate Change Action Plan, Democratic deficit, Manchester City Council | Leave a comment

Youtube: #Fallowfield Secret Garden’s day of fun in south #Manchester

Fallowfield Secret Garden held an open day today. Here’s a wonkycam video with chief Gardener Mark Roberts…
If you want to get involved, email ’em at this address; thefallowfieldsecretgarden@gmail.com

Posted in Campaign Update, Fun, volunteer opportunity | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Investing in Nature? Or pretzelled people hearing pretzel logic in #Manchester… #climate #redemptionrituals

The format of a meeting always tells you a lot about the ideology of its organisers, and what they are looking to achieve (whether they can admit that – even to themselves – or not).  MCFly editor Marc Hudson gets all philosophical and “meta” about the recent “Investing in Nature” seminar. (see Richard Leese’s welcoming address here).

In the Bad Old Days of Industrial Capitalism, where nature was not respected, venerated and Valued, then we would have been sat in rows, listening to the various big cheeses at the front telling us that while there were some problems, everything would be alright as long as the current system was refined and tweaked.

badolddaysIn the New Collaborative Days of post-Industrial Capitalism, where nature is most definitely being Valued, we sit… at round tables, with some of us having therefore to twist around on our seats to listen to the various big cheeses at the front telling us that while there are some problems, everything will be alright as long as the current system is refined and tweaked.

We have swapped a system that was at least honest about who talked and who listened for one which is uncomfortable for some, who have to pretzel themselves in order to fit, but with the same underlying result. But it LOOKS better, and that, after all, is the important thing…  This is – like the meeting of the Airports Commission in the neighbouring room of the town hall a couple of months previously – nowt more than a redemption ritual.
I didn’t stick around for the “interaction” bit, but let’s just say this – the event ran for 2 and a half hours. There was a few minutes for questions. I asked “How is ‘biodiversity offsetting’ going to be different from carbon trading. I was told – in essence ‘that was intangible. This is local. Trust us.”

Hmm. Foundation, anyone?

The next question was even better – will we see a reversal of the trend of accelerating loss of biodiversity. The panelists waffled and said things like “hope to”.
Very very VERY unconvincing.

The medium is the message. There was only to be 25 minutes in the two and a half hours where we were supposed to ‘critically respond.’ After time for introductions on our tables, that presumably left closer to 15 minutes. And given that those in attendance are overwhelmingly in need of the good graces of our Lords and Masters, it seems vanishingly unlikely that anyone was going to say “this is nonsense.”

No – what will emerge, even if it’s not what the organisers tell themselves they want – is a timid rubber stamp. (See below for what happens if the rubber stamp bounces…)

The truth of the matter is this – the collapse of biodiversity is accelerating. Our “market mechanisms” will be every bit as successful at slowing the trend as they have been at slowing the increase in our carbon emissions.

employeesrevoltfinal Here’s a re-paste of a bit I wrote at the end of the Airports Commission blog post –

MCFly says:
These events are rituals. They are rituals of safety, rituals of redemption. People attend/participate/lend their good names to the process because, well, that’s just what people of their social class do. And they want to nudge the policies of the State in one direction or another. While, understandably, paying their mortgages.

All perfectly “reasonable,” and a theoretical improvement on the bad old days when policy discussions were held Behind Closed Doors.

But you can have a Reasonable Ritual that is totally inadequate to the scale of the problem.

Posted in Adaptation, Biodiversity, Climate Change Action Plan, GM Climate Strategy, Low Carbon Hub, Manchester City Council | 2 Comments

Video- “The Sustainability Fix” in 90 seconds or so #Manchester #sustainability

Last November a bunch of young sweet innocent Sciences Po students made a mistake. They allowed me to come and rant at them, and run a workshop on their skills and knowledge.

Here’s me trying to explain to them my view on why there is so much rhetoric about “green” in (Greater) Manchester, stealing the ideas of Aidan While et al.
(The Environment and the Entrepreneurial City: Searching for the Urban ‘Sustainability Fix’ in Manchester and Leeds* AIDAN WHILE, ANDREW E.G. JONAS and DAVID GIBBS)

Posted in academia, Adaptation | Tagged , | Leave a comment

“Free carbon literacy workshops” in #Manchester

This from the people at Dwelle

We have some places available THIS Monday morning (9am) and some in the afternoon (2pm).

In total we have 16 half-day workshops (on MONDAYS and TUESDAYS in SEPTEMBER & OCTOBER only) that are being funded by “Greater Manchester Energy Smart Homes” (GMESH) in association with Eastlands Homes. GMESH is part funded by the European Regional Development Fund.

These workshops are normally priced at £40 including certification.

For availability and to make a booking:

1. go to: http://dwelle.eventbrite.co.uk
2. please select your preferred workshop date (Mondays & Tuesdays only, in September & October)
(it may say that there are no tickets available until you enter the Promotional Code)
3. enter “gmeshfunded” as the Promotional Code
4. a ticket will appear called “GMESH funded place” – please use this to reserve your free place on the workshop
5. once you’ve completed the registration, you will receive an email confirmation

More details about our workshops can be found here: www.dwelle.co.uk/dwelle_carbon_literacy.pdf

More information on the Carbon Literacy project can be found here: www.carbonliteracy.com

Any queries, please don’t hesitate to give Ric Frankland a call on; 07976 704 532.

dwelle carbon literacy image

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Something for the Weekend 13 July 2012 #Manchester #Climate

Went to a cannibal’s dinner party the other night, but was quite late (thanks TfGM!!). When I got there the host was really embarrassed. He said “I’m sorry, everybody’s eaten.”

 

And this weekend, there are events at Hulme Community Garden Centre as part of their “Little Green Weekend”

On Sat 28th The “Equality not Poverty ” conference

On Sunday 29th The March against Austerity (city centre – follow the police helicopter)

On Sunday 29th  Incredible Edible Levenshulme-

incredibleediblelevenshulme

 

Posted in Something for the Weekend | Leave a comment

The #IPCC report, #Chomsky and the future of the species beyond #Manchester

Today there will be an entirely predictable and pointless media circus.  Well, there will be several – every day brings new clowns, jugglers and high-wire acts.

Today though, the fifth assessment report of the United Nations’ “IPCC” climate body will be promoted, attacked, defended, re-attacked blah de blah de blah.

“Glaciers” this, “sea level rise” that.  “Droughts” here, “not happening” there.  Natural cycles, paused, El-Nino. Yawn.

Six years ago I was at the Royal Society event in London where over two days the authors of the last report (AR4) laid out their work.  Two things I remember very clearly – they massively underestimated the speed and scale of change in the Arctic.  And a very prominent scientist (Susan Solomon) kept replying to the question “how long have we got?” with the very cryptic and terrifying phrase “It’s later than you think.”

Amid all the media scrum, remember this – as Noam Chomsky points out, there are actually three positions on climate.  There’s a few very loud and well-funded denialists “it’s not happening”.  There’s the formal process (IPCC) and then there is a significant body of scientists who think that things are WORSE than the IPCC paints.

Finally – change doesn’t come from documents. If it did, Manchester’s future would be far more certain, given the local climateriat’s love of refreshes and reboots, half-arsed implementation plans that never get, um, implemented.

Change comes from people getting together and creating sustained pressure that keeps building, organisations that keep doing things, people that keep learning lessons from the last time and doing it better the next time.

For more on Chomsky, see this video

http://whatonline.org/en/s/what-about-the-future-noam-chomsky/

Posted in academia, Arctic | 5 Comments