We Need To Talk Beyond Kevin

Professor Kevin Anderson spoke to Full Council on Wednesday 30th January. He gave an account of the speed and scale of climate change that left many of the nearly one hundred councillors stunned. It left many of the 35 members of the public who came to hear him speechless. But it wasn’t enough, he didn’t finish the job.

His presentation was, of course, very up-to-date, very accurate, brilliantly presented and very very scary. You can read the extensive report that MCFly co-editor posted online almost before the councillors stopped quivering. But the problem is this; Kevin Anderson is a climate scientist. The climate change problem is not one of missing information. We know enough.

The climate change problem isn’t even a policy one. Here in Manchester at least we have policies that occasionally rise to the level of adequacy (well, for the sake of rhetoric, let’s assume this).

The climate change problem is political. Not Labour versus Lib Dem. Not Lib Dem versus Tory. Political in the sense of making sure our elected leaders – of whatever stripe – have no choice but to keep their promises, and then make bolder plans for making Manchester – its food systems, transport, democracy – ready for the challenges that lie ahead.

And the most of all, the problem is one of building resourcefulness among ourselves – building practical connections between individuals and communities, sharing skills and solutions and solidarity.

Kevin is a scientist. He provides information. He’s inordinately good at that. But it’s not enough. (And Kevin has never claimed it is.) Climate change is scary though, and there lurks a danger in ourselves. In our fear, we may become paralyzed, and expect some expert, some leader, to take responsibility, to be the shepherd to our sheep. That never ends well.

We cannot wait for the official “Steering Group” to get its act together. Despite repeated promises, it never has. It may never do so. We cannot rely solely on the Council – soon to be 100% Labour – which perpetrates such triumphs of democratic process and common sense as the razing of hundreds of trees in Alexandra Park. And we cannot assume that non-governmental organisations, charities and the like will magically start to do the job they haven’t done for 30 years. No-one will do this “for us”. We will have to do it ourselves. Not each on their own, but together.

We at Manchester Climate Monthly have plans and proposals for how we – citizens of Manchester – can create the changes we need. We are putting these out for comment and improvement in the coming days and weeks . They really don’t need (much) money. They certainly don’t need superhuman strength or intelligence, or every one of your waking hours. They need passion, but also passion’s estranged step-sister, commitment. They need regular, relentless commitment of, say, an hour a week. (More if you want!). In return, you will learn many new skills, make many new friends. And help make Manchester the resourceful (not resilient – resourceful) place it needs to be.

Professor Kevin Anderson spoke to Full Council on Wednesday 30th January. It wasn’t enough, he didn’t finish the job. You can. Your choice. Email us today – mcmonthly@gmail.com.

Posted in education, inspire | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Guardian: “Has the axe fallen on the Green Spaces of #Manchester?”

Arwa Aburawa, co-editor of Manchester Climate Monthly, has a new article looking at the Mersey Valley, Alexandra Park and the bigger picture. You can read it here.
I think it’s very good, but then I may not be completely impartial…

Marc Hudson
mcmonthly@gmail.com

Posted in Biodiversity, Green spaces, Manchester City Council | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

PMT #6: How to keep morale up among existing activists? #Manchester #climate #movement-building

webMCFlyWe want to hear from you!  We hope you will share your thoughts on the thorny question of “How do we maintain morale so that people who are already “in” the movement don’t drift away/leave in despair?”

What works for you?  What works for your friends? What doesn’t work?  Tell us all!

What are we doing with this information?  Well, every issue of Manchester Climate Monthly will have a page of people’s thoughts on issues around “movement-building”. Topics will include – well, if you’re interested, scroll down for some examples!

PS. PMT #3 – success! Thanks to all who have helped so far!

pmtlogo

Probable order of questions.
March – How do we get more people (especially ones who don’t look like us; white, middle-class, child-free) involved in the “climate movement”?
April – How do we attract back people who were involved but have become burnt out,/
disenchanted/engaged in other things.
May – What are the particular difficulties groups trying to tackle “climate change” face?
June – What do people need (skills, knowledge, other stuff) in order to stay involved in the “climate movement”?
July – What lessons can we learn from other movements (local or elsewhere, present or past)
August – How do we make sure we learn and share (the right lessons) from our successes and failures?

Posted in PMT | Tagged , | Leave a comment

#Manchester City Council’s latest de-pressing #climate blunder

We’d like to congratulate the Manchester City Council press office for providing such a good example.

[Wait for it, wait for it….]
  • For providing such a good example of the many things the Council will have to stop doing if it wants to be taken seriously.
  • For doing the opposite of what is needed if the Council wants to fulfil its role as a leader in preparing the individuals and communities of Manchester for the inevitable and unpleasant challenges that lie in wait.
  • And finally, for providing a clear and easy test of whether Manchester’s elected members are serious when they talk about the need for greater honesty and engagement with the electorate.

On Thursday 24th January both MCFly editors contacted the press office.  We were trying to publicise the January 30th presentation by Kevin Anderson to full Council. We asked

  • For what purpose has Richard Leese invited Kevin to speak?
  • What brief has Kevin been given?
  • What is the format – how long will Kevin speak for, how much time for question and answer.
  • Is there follow up work planned to inform the councillors further, or is this a “one-off”
  • Anything else you’d like to add.

We chased them and chased them, and they assured us they would give us the statement.  In the end, AFTER the talk, they finally released an asinine and anodyne blurb that answered NONE of the questions. (see footnote 1)

This “news management” is, we suspect, taught on day one of “being a press office meat puppet” training.  It works well if the journalists in question are desperate to be fed snippets of “information” to fill their paper, and are willing to reprint banalities in exchange for little “scoops.” (2)

That might be how a private company can act.  But Manchester City Council is supposed to be a democratic organisation.  It is supposed to be dealing with citizens, not “clients” and “customers.”

Anyone who has dealings with the Council, though, will recognise the above –

a) Straightforward questions that it could EASILY have answered are met with delay after delay
b) Contemptuous and contemptible disdain is shown for the principles of honesty, integrity and clarity.
c) Spin is used in a desperate, needy attempt to get “positive” responses.

The council is always banging on about how awful Central government is, and how Manchester is being treated unfairly. Fine, a lot of people (including the MCFly co-editors) agree with that. But maybe the Council could set a good example by treating people in Manchester with MORE respect than MCC is shown by Central Government? It would be a straightforward act of “behaviour change” (see various climate action plans) that wouldn’t cost a penny.

Are councillors, democratically elected and allegedly concerned with improving the health of democracy, happy that – on an issue as important as climate change – the paid officers of Manchester City Council are behaving like this?  And if they are not happy about it, will they DO anything about it?

Footnotes

(1) Councillor Nigel Murphy, Manchester City Council’s executive member for the environment, said: “It was inspiring and useful for all Manchester’s elected members to hear Kevin Anderson’s clear and at times challenging address. “He gave us information and encouragement for action both as individual councillors and, corporately, as a council. Commending the ambition of the city’s plans to address climate change, he made a case for them to be even more radical: we will respond to this. Firstly by working with partners across the city to make sure we deliver on the actions set out and agreed in Manchester – A Certain Future and secondly, by giving consideration to what more we might do to add to these plans in the future.”

(2) We like to believe that this isn’t how MCFly rolls.  After all this time, the City Council press office are still unable to get it.

Posted in Democratic deficit | 2 Comments

Upcoming Event: Workshop on Governance, Transport Policy and Carbon Reduction in #Manchester, Feb 28th

If you’re interested in going, please contact Dr Caroline Mullen – details at the foot of this post.

The workshop is hosted by the Multi-level Governance, Transport Policy and Carbon Emissions Management project, and aims to feedback findings from the project and to generate discussion and policy recommendations for governance of carbon emissions from transport.

The project which is a collaboration between the Universities of Leeds, Sheffield, Glasgow and Lund, investigates the relationships between carbon reduction policies in transport and the governance structures and policy approaches at different levels. The research has been structured around case studies of city regions in England and Scotland, involving interviews with non-governmental actors and with government officers and advisors from local to European levels.
The purpose of this event is to contribute to the development of a series of policy briefings which the project team will use and make available to seek to influence the development of a more effective carbon management framework.
The event will draw on findings from the four case studies, highlighting issues of particular relevance to the Greater Manchester discussions. Issues will include:

* The relationship between national and local arrangements for carbon governance;
* Co-ordination amongst multiple actors (state and non-state);
* The role of incentives and sanctions in supporting delivery;
* Effective accountability for carbon management; and
* Uncertainty in decision-making

The workshop will be a participatory event. We think that the event will be relevant to those with interests in transport or carbon emission management, and that the project findings will benefit from insights provided in the discussion.

The day will start with lunch at 12 noon and the workshop beginning at 12.30. It will finish by 5pm. It will be held at Manchester Conference Centre, Sackville Street, Manchester, M13BB http://www.manchesterconferencecentre.co.uk/location/
If you are able to attend the workshop please reply to me at this email address, and please inform me of any dietary requirements.

The project is funded by the Economic and Social Research Council and the project team are:
Dr Greg Marsden (University of Leeds); Professor Ian Bache (University of Sheffield); Professor Matt Flinders (University of Sheffield); Professor Tom Rye (Lund University); Professor Iain Docherty (University of Glasgow); Dr Ian Bartle (University of Sheffield); Dr Caroline Mullen (University of Leeds); Dr Antonio Alves Pereira Da Cunha Ferreira (University of Leeds).

Kind regards

Caroline

Dr Caroline Mullen
Institute for Transport Studies
University of Leeds
Leeds
LS2 9JT
0113 343 5343
c.a.mullen@leeds.ac.uk

Posted in academia, Transport, Upcoming Events | Leave a comment

Upcoming Event: “GETTING TO ZERO: International Perspectives on Low Carbon Housing” Thurs 28 Feb, #Manchester #climate

Thursday, 28 February 2013, 10am to 5pm, University of Manchester

“Low and zero carbon housing has emerged as an icon of European policy ambition to reduce national carbon emissions. In response, policy-makers have devised regulations and incentive programmes while urban development actors have translated these measures into economic models, marketing strategies, and new housing typologies. The aim of this one-day workshop is to compare and contrast the formulation, interpretation, and translation of low carbon residential strategies in different national contexts. Using a socio-technical understanding of development and design, researchers will present their findings on low and zero carbon housing in Denmark, Norway, Austria, Germany, and the United Kingdom.

“The workshop will include presentations from Harald Rohracher (Linköping University), Eli Støa (Norwegian University of Science and Technology), Michael Ornetzeder (Austrian Academy of Sciences), Maj-Britt Quitzau and Jens Stissing Jensen (Aalborg University Copenhagen), Simon Guy and Andrew Karvonen (University of Manchester), and Heather Lovell (University of Edinburgh).

“This event is part of the Zero Carbon Habitation research project and the Sustainable Practices Research Group (www.sprg.ac.uk). It is funded by the Economic & Social Research Council, the Scottish Government, and the Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs.

“This event is free. Please RSVP with Susan Stubbs s.stubbs@manchester.ac.uk by 21 February.”

Posted in Upcoming Events | Tagged | Leave a comment

#Manchester #Climate Monthly #14, February 2013 out now! #mcc #acertainfuture #doomed

mcfly14coverWhat do we do now that Professor Kevin Anderson has explained the facts of life to Manchester City Council?  What is being done about the most helping vulnerable members of Manchester’s communities cope with climate change – read our interview with Aitha Chaudry of the Manchester Black and Minority Ethnic Network (MBEN). What advice does MCFly’s new agony aunt, Miss Movements have to offer?  All this and much more in the latest (and “new look”!) 8-page extravaganza that is Manchester Climate Monthly #14…

PLEASE retweet this/put it on facebook, tell your friends. And please tell us what you do and don’t like in this issue.

With special thanks to our new graphic designer, Bridget Hines, for her excellent logo!
And also with special thanks to Marc Roberts, our enslaved cartoonist.

Manchester Climate Monthly Feb 2013 by

Click here to read MCFly without downloading!

UPDATE: Sigh. Once again scribd is letting us down.  (You get what you pay for, eh?)  So, in future we will be posting MCFly using issuu.com.

Posted in print editions | Tagged | 3 Comments

Sending all the wrong signals on #climate action in #Manchester #acertainfuture

conferencerosterImagine you are trying to galvanise people to take action on climate change and that part of this is to organise a big annual conference for “stakeholders.”

Would you delay the details of time, venue and how to sign up to a mere six weeks in advance?
What signal would that send? That the issue didn’t really matter?

Would you keep your publicity simply to an email – and one bit of text on a website? (No letters to the paper, no request that groups publicise the conference far and wide?)
What signal would that send? That only those “in-the-know” matter?

Would you have the “conference” be a mere three and a half hours long?
What signal would that send? That the issue didn’t really matter?

Would you have a sign-up process that tells people they will be selected on “merit” (but not enable them to say why they deserve to be part of the conference
What signal would that send? That there are cool kids and lamoids, sheep and goats?

Would you fill the already short agenda with speeches that have been heard and presentations about what is happening elsewhere?
What signal would that send? That people’s time is not precious and that there is nothing inspiring in Manchester to talk of?

Imagine no more, friends. This is happening, here and now, here in Manchester.

conferenceroster

 “… and a late update to the event roster is that we’ll be including presentations from our neighbouring cities of Liverpool and Leeds on the progress they’re making on climate change.”

Great. A three and a half hour “conference” (cough cough) that they have had all year to prepare. Apparently no elections, though these were promised.

And it’s now going to have a speech from Sir Richard Leese (1) but presentations about what OTHER cities are doing. What about what we are doing? Or are we doing so little that is interesting, so little that is inspiring that we have to look east and west?

I am not saying Leeds and Liverpool aren’t to be learnt from, but if the Steering Group was so keen for us to learn, maybe they could have, you know, put these events on at another time, instead of “talking out the clock” – crowding out much-needed time for real discussion of the barriers, obstacles and inadequacies of Manchester’s current (in)action on climate change. This simply isn’t fit for purpose.

What is to be done

1) Drastically lower your personal expectations of the 2013 conference, if you even get to go along. Just for the record, the screengrab of my “confirmation” (aka, application) is ordernotconfirmedhere.

2) Ensure the 2014 conference is not as shambolic and elusive as this.

Lobby the Neighbourhoods Scrutiny Committee (it has plenty of members. Some of them are probably your councillors. Find out here) to call in a report on the Steering Group, and especially on the “planning” (har har) for the 2013 “conference”.

Constant pressure and oversight to make sure the 2014 conference is at least a full day, with the date announced by October 2013.
Make sure the format and content is democratically constructed (not necessarily “unconference”, but consultative in its agenda setting).

And if it looks like the same old nonsense is being repeated, then groups and individuals in Manchester are just going to have to get together and put on a Real Stakeholders’ Conference. We couldn’t do worse than what we have now.

This three year farce must stop of cancelled, truncated and frankly embarrassing inaction and ineptitude must stop. IMHO, the only people who can stop it are the “outsiders.” The current Steering Group (and there are individuals within that who are very hard-working and effective in their other work)  is hopelessly compromised by their silence (collusion) with the omnishambles that is currently unfolding.

Footnotes
1) To be fair, no-one ever gets to hear what the man thinks, since he virtually never gets invited to be on panels, is never quoted in any newspapers, followed on twitter etc. Virtually invisible.

Posted in Climate Change Action Plan, Democratic deficit | Tagged | Leave a comment

“Apocalypse Now” says @SirRichardLeese, about Kevin Anderson’s #climate talk to #Manchester City Council #acertainfuture

We don’t make a habit of being a mouthpiece for Labour councillors. Sometimes the blighters won’t even talk to us so we have to suggest a range of answers. However, on Wednesday 30th January Professor Kevin Anderson gave a presentation to them (and the Lib Dems) about just how much trouble the species is in (hint: more than you’d think. Or want to think.) Councillor Suzanne Richards has already written an account. And here below we reprint the words of Richard Leese. If you’ve something to add, you can either add it below on our site, or – more sensibly? – add it on his.

Apocalypse Now

Full Council yesterday. This municipal year every full Council meeting has started with an external speaker on a subject of topical interest. Yesterday Council members were blitzed with a truly shocking and apocalyptic address from Professor Kevin Anderson, Director of the Tyndall Energy Programme at the University of Manchester. Professor Anderson is a scientist working in the field of climate change, and what he told us is that a world that is still talking about containing average temperature increases to 2degreesC, is sleep-walking towards 4degreesC and possibly even higher with disastrous consequences for the planet as we know it. It’s not just Kevin that think that as he cited sources, rather sober and conservative sources, like the President of the World Bank, who think similarly.

One of the devices that governments use to put off decision making is the use of 2050 targets for reducing carbon emissions, and Professor Anderson made the point that carbon emitted now will still be in the atmosphere by 2050, and if we want to have any chance of keeping the rise between 2 and 4degrees we have to act now.

We can’t do that by simply bringing in alternative low/no carbon energy supplies. We have to do that but the scale of investment required and the length of time to deliver that would mean that only tackling the supply side would be too late. We need to tackle demand and we can do things about that immediately and that probably means everybody reading this blog. It doesn’t mean everybody. I might not get the figures quite right but around 50% of the emissions in this country are caused by less than 5% of the population and it’s not the poorest in our society. As the recent Great Manchester Poverty Commission Report made clear, a report Professor Anderson described as a report about low carbon people written by high carbon people, there is a fundamental issue of equity here. It is rich people, rich countries that have to turn down the lights.

I’m sure there are other climate change scientists who would take issue with some even much of what Kevin said, but how much of a gamble do we want to take with our future and our childrens future?

This entry was posted by leadersblog@manchester.gov.uk, on 31/01/2013. You can leave your response.

MCFly says – I wonder if Sir Richard is happy with the performance of the Steering* Group – 13 blog posts in 2 years, promised elections then being cancelled, a resolute failure to appoint sub-group headsa 3.5 hour “conference” announced with six week’s notice.   Maybe people would like to ask him if he considers the Group fit for purpose?  And if he thinks it isn’t, what does he think should be done about that, and by whom?

You could ask some of these questions directly, if you liked.

* Clue? Name? Clueless?

Posted in Manchester City Council | Tagged , | 4 Comments

Repost: “Protesters camp in Alexandra Park to stop further tree felling” #Manchester #democracy #bioshamversity

This is a repost from here.

Protesters camp in Alexandra park to stop further tree felling

With a film crew from BBC Northwest Tonight, around 80 local people of all ages and backgrounds who had gathered to protest against the tree felling, peacefully entered the felling site and succeeded in bringing tree felling works to a halt.IMG_1345Sadly, all 50 of the healthy Sycamore trees that made up the avenue along Claremont Road have now been cut down. But hundreds more trees are under threat.

IMG_1348The picture below shows how this avenue looked just a few days ago. Many of those present were very upset about the devastation.

other end of terrace before cutting2

BBC Northwest Tonight are featuring the story this evening on BBC 1 at 6.30pm.

Some of those present have this evening set up camp to continue their protest. We wish them the best of luck.

alex park camp4alex park camp2

 

 

Posted in Biodiversity, Democratic deficit, Manchester City Council | 1 Comment