TfGM admits will miss emissions target by 1.68 million tonnes. #Manchester

tfgm coverTransport for Greater Manchester has a public consultation going on.  Not about sardine-packing on Metrolink, but about its Low-Emission (sic) Strategy (sic) and Air Quality Action (sic) Plan (sic). There are of course no guarantees it will listen to anything anyone says, any more than Manchester City Council does (not).

Why is MCFly taking up your valuable mental bandwidth even telling you about it then? Because, as an eagle-eyed reader has spotted, there’s a startling admission buried deep inside.  This;

tfgm admission

Yep, even if all currently proposed measures are delivered (and that’s the biggest if since Lindsay Anderson), the 2020 target will be missed by a cool 1.68 million tonnes.  Sort of puts your recycling efforts in perspective, doesn’t it?

Perhaps it is time to retronym TfGM?

Traffic fog gobbles Manchester

Totally futile ginormous mess?

What are your suggestions, reader(s)?

Posted in Transport | 1 Comment

Upcoming Event: Carbon Coop AGM 7th April #Manchester

 Carbon Coop is having its AGM from  6pm-8.30pm on Thursday 7th April 2016 at Bridge 5 Mill in Ancoats.  Here Jonathan Atkinson explains a little more about what they’re up to…

Climate change is big. Really big.

To paraphrase the great Douglas Adams, author of Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy, Climate Change is big. Really big. You just won’t believe how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly big it is.

It’s so big that new evidence suggests many of us don’t even talk about it any more. Which may be something of a barrier if we are planning to avoid its worst excesses or even perhaps attempt to address or reverse its causes.

Over the years, we at Carbon Co-op have been talking about it and also contemplating how people working together, co-operating in small groups around Greater Manchester might be able to do something to address the causes of climate change in the very places we are most able to take action: our homes.

We’ve even gone a step further and done something. A whole house, energy efficient retrofit upgrade for 12 of our members’ homes. Providing finance and technical expertise to fund improvements reducing their energy usage by an average 60% per property.

Was it all worth it?

Now we are wondering whether the action we have taken is effective and proportionate in relation to the problem of climate change? Is it a drop in the ocean, a step in the right direction or actually a waste of time?

So we’ve invited some people who might actually know: a leading climate scientist and a leading retrofit expert, to give us their thoughts as part of our open annual general meeting, taking place from 6pm-8.30pm on Thursday 7th April 2016 at Bridge 5 Mill in Ancoats.

But we’re going one step further and asking those who attend. Our members, other co-operators, Councillors, policy wonks, do-ers, thinkers and the general public, to contribute their thoughts ideas for further action, barriers to that action and how they might be overcome.

What would you do with £50m?

The starting point for our discussion in April, was an interview Marc Hudson of Manchester Climate Monthly carried out with Professor Kevin Anderson, one of the UK’s leading climate scientists and co-director of Tyndall Centre in the aftermath of last year’s Paris climate talks.

The interview is long but well worth watching in full, pulling apart the guts of the international deal, what was said, what was not said and how we should feel and act as a consequence. Towards the end Marc asks Kevin what he would do with £50m. After observing that in the scale of climate change (it’s big, really big), £50m isn’t actually that much money, Kevin suggests that he would retrofit a red brick terrace in Levenshulme and then tell everyone about it.

This got us at Carbon Co-op thinking because though we haven’t retrofitted a single street we have retrofitted a dozen homes.

Community Green Deal was a project funded by central and local government to test elements of the now cancelled Green Deal. But we put a spin on our programme, it was more ambitious in scope and scale than Green Deal and at its heart it was led by a co-operative, community-based approach.

So, our technical partners URBED carried out in depth whole house assessments making a recommendation on measures and improvements that could be installed to bring the house up to ‘2050’ low carbon standards. We secured zero interest loans for our members and ECO funding. We commissioned URBED to carry our architectural designs. We tendered the construction work and procured it on behalf of our householders. And we ran the construction contract with more assistance from URBED.

The average works cost was £40,500 per household and each received multiple improvements including external wall insulation, internal wall insulation, new boilers, ventilation systems, solar panels, triple glazed windows and more!

A waste of time?
It was a hard project and a long project. Work took place during 2014 and it was incredibly disruptive for each householder – having their homes ripped apart and put back together with a workforce not always sympathetic to their needs.

But after a clear 12 months since works were completed the results look very promising. Average carbon savings across the programme are 60% – as high as 92% in one case – the kind of targets we need to meet for 2050. Net bills (accounting for feed in tariff on the solar panels) have been reduced by an average £800 per year and average post-works net bills stand at just £325 per household, per year.

In the end we think it was worth it. And when we asked our householders they all said that though it had been hard they were glad they did it.

And, in the end we’ve outlived the government’s Green Deal programme.

What will happen on 7th April?
As a community benefit society we are accountable to our membership (100 householders aiming to make similar large scale savings) and to the wider community in Manchester and beyond. We think what we have done is worth sharing but that we all have much more to do.

On 7th April we will meet on the top floor of Bridge 5 Mill in Ancoats.
Firstly for some food and to get to know each other better.

Then we we will get Kevin Anderson’s view on the talks in Paris and to what extent a project like ours might have bearing on the work the UK needs to do to make its 2050 targets. We will reflect on the work we’ve carried out and Marianne Heaslip, a leading retrofit expert and architect from URBED, will talk about the nuts and bolts of the Community Green Deal project and some of the challenges that exist to repeating and scaling this approach.

Then we will ask your view. What do we need to do in Greater Manchester to make our homes warmer, healthier and more affordable to run. Who needs to be involved? What are the key barriers we face and how can we overcome them?

We will take note, write it all down and get on with the simply huge task of addressing climate change.

If you would like to join us you can book your space, free of charge here:
https://carbon-coop-agm-2016.eventbrite.co.uk

 

Posted in Campaign Update | 3 Comments

Upcoming Event: Non-Violent Direct Action Training in #Manchester, Sat 2nd April

Direct Action Training organised by ‘Groundswell’

For anyone interested in taking direct action. Join this training day to learn:

• Creative ways to take and hold a space

• Your rights when engaging with the police

• Ways of de-escalating tensions when standing your ground

This gentle introduction will help you take action safely and effectively. It’’s particularly good for those wanting to skill up before heading to the action camps against opencast coal in South Wales and Germany this May, as well as anyone interested in using direct action tactics for other social justice campaigns.

The session is free, and being run by trainers from Rising Tide and Green and Black Cross Legal. Please bring your own lunch and a donation towards room hire if you’re able to make one. Everyone is welcome, particularly those who have health concerns or personal responsibilities: we’ll be looking at some of the critical work you can still be involved.

No need to print tickets, no need to use your real name.

When
Saturday, April 2, 2016 from 10:30 AM to 5:00 PM (BST) Add to Calendar
Where
St margarets church – whalley range, Manchester m16 8ae, United Kingdom – View Map
Posted in Campaign Update, capacity building, Upcoming Events | Leave a comment

#Manchester City Council in ‘not listening’ shocker. For 100,000th time

Below is a repost of an article that has appeared on the Manchester Friends of the Earth website.  The tl;dr is this – the City Council has had multiple opportunities to listen to informed and committed citizens.  It has ignored these citizens and ploughed ahead with its own – dangerous – scheme.  This is completely normal for them.

“While the concerns raised by cycle groups are completely understood…”

The last few days have seen a spate of news articles and comments on social media regarding the new “cycling improvements” on Portland Street.  See for example, “New bike lanes on Portland Street have made roads ‘more dangerous as cyclists are sandwiched between buses” and “Bike lanes make roads “more dangerous” say campaigners.”

Helen Pidd - nearly met my makerLove Your Bike, GMCC and others first raised concerns with the cycle designs on Portland Street back in 2013 during the Cross City Bus consultation. Unfortunately, our comments and concerns were not taken on board at that time.

There was another opportunity for Transport for Greater Manchester and Manchester City Council to reconsider the designs when a short ‘moratorium’ on City Centre road works was announced in the run up to the 2015 Xmas festive period. Concerns with the partially completed ‘in bound’ route (towards Piccadilly gardens) had been highlighted in November on the Mad Cycle Lanes of Manchester blog “Portland Street – is this Manchester’s most dangerous cycle lane?

The advice from the campaign groups was basically ‘please don’t do this…. doing nothing would be the better option!”.   But once again, our concerns were not taken on board.

Where do I go now?

In response to a request for an update on Portland Street at the Manchester Cycle Forum (8th March), Manchester City Council replied thus:

The Portland Street scheme was completed and became operational on March 7th.  Whilst the concerns raised by cycle groups are fully understood , MCC Highways are satisfied the requisite design processes have been followed to achieve a design that is suitable for implementation and therefore no changes will be made at this stage.

Well, the ‘requisite design processes’ may well have been followed – but as the multitude of comments from people who have actually tried to cycle along this route testify, Love Your Bike believes that this is a long way from being a ‘design suitable for implemention‘.

The photograph (above) highlights a section of the new “cycle route” where people are expected to cross the bus lane (when there is a gap in the wall of buses) and merge with other motorized traffic coming from behind and turning right…. oh , and you may have a taxi trying to filter in from your left (see photo below). The video accompanying the Manchester Evening News article doesn’t really capture this section but does give a flavour  ….you have to cycle it to get the full experience!

Portland Street - cycle lane - cross bus lane and with added taxisThe reply from Manchester City Council continues:

We are however, agreed a review process should commence following completion of construction that will include an analysis of the surveys borne out of the review and by the views expressed by all road user groups.  The outcome will determine whether changes are necessary, and are satisfactory for all road users.

So…. here we go (again).

Please send us details of your experiences of cycling this delightful route.  Did you feel safe, would you use this route again…..

Please send (printable) comments, photographs etc via:

Email : gmloveyourbike@gmail.com

Twitter @gmloveyourbike 

Please indicate whether you want your comments to be anonymised.

We will compile the results and submit to the Manchester City Council ‘review’ process.

 

LYB 10 logo 120Love Your Bike is 10 in 2016.  We don’t want to have to wait another 10 years for Manchester to be a cycling city!

Posted in Democratic deficit, Manchester City Council | 3 Comments

Are your councillors carbon literate? Probably not #Manchester #climate #disgrace #debacle

Two years ago, under pressure from activists, the Executive Member for the Environment set a target that by the end of 2014, 60 of the 96 councillors of Manchester City Council (all Labour party, btw) would have completed their ‘carbon literacy’ training.  That involves half a day of face-to-face about the causes of climate change and what can be done locally, and also an on-line component.

That was a fairly unambitious goal, since Manchester City Council is supposed to be leading the way on climate change.   Still, 60 out of 96 would have been a good start, and the other 36 – or near enough – would have been done in 2015….

[Ironic laughter.]

The number is 25, and hasn’t really budged in the last 15 months.  And that number will go DOWN, as several councillors who had the intelligence and integrity to do the training step down at the May 2016 elections.

This is Manchester. We do things very very badly here.

literacy01literacy02

 

Posted in Manchester City Council | Leave a comment

Exclusive: #Manchester City Council renames Neighbourhoods Scrutiny Committee

There’s a headline to lead the 6pm news, eh?

Manchester City Council has decided to change the name of its “Neighbourhoods Scrutiny Committee” to “Neighbourhoods and Environment,” with the change taking effect in May.

Neighbourhoods is one of six scrutiny committees that the council has.  These are supposed to hold the 9 member executive and the senior officers to account.  That’s a bit tricky given that there all 96 of the Council’s members are Labour. It’s especially tricky on climate change since so few of the councillors have even bothered to undertake the ‘Carbon Literacy’ training that everyone who lives, studies or works in Manchester was supposed to have had by 2013.  The man who launched that program, aka the Leader of the Council, has not done the training himself and recently refused to commit to doing so anytime soon.

There was a proposal to actually have a seventh scrutiny committee, dedicated to our (growing) environmental problems.  That proposal suffered three fatal flaws

  • it didn’t come from inside the Town Hall
  • it was entirely sensible
  • it could end up resulting in genuine scrutiny of the Council’s appalling record and staggering incompetence and incapacity on environmental matters.

It sank without trace.

Instead, we have a re-badging of an existing unwieldy and consistently under-performing behemoth.   The good news is it may force the next chair of the committee to pay more than zero attention (there are councillors who think Neighbourhoods should be about dogshit and street-lighting).

BUT, in the real world, this renaming means nothing without a sea-change in attitudes and knowledge by councillors, and a similar sea-change in behaviour of officers and Executive.

And those will not happen spontaneously.  What would be needed is for ‘civil society’ to get its gameface on.

It won’t.  We’re toast.

 

Posted in Democratic deficit, Manchester City Council | 2 Comments

Another petition about northern renewables, ahead of March Budget.

If you’re of an organsiation that might sign a letter to George Osborne about renewables funding, then read on. If you’re not, move along, nothing to see here…

 

Dear fellow Northern colleagues

Green Alliance is convening a declaration from groups across the north of England, calling for clean energy to power the region. It would be great to get as many organisations from across the north to get behind and sign the declaration.

As you know, this is a challenging time for low carbon energy. Subsidies have been cut and there’s a great deal of uncertainty about the future of the industry. At the same time, the North has been a focus of the Chancellor’s attention, with the much talked about ‘Northern Powerhouse’ idea. But it’s unclear so far what this term really stands for, and there’s been barely any mention of clean energy or the environment.

Community Energy England wants to support Green Alliance to connect these two circumstances together to create a political moment before the March Budget. There’s a window of opportunity this year to shape the meaning of the Northern Powerhouse in a positive way, with clean energy and the wishes of northern people at its core.

The declaration will bring together a mix of groups from across northern England, to ask the Chancellor to respond to our call for clean energy to power the north. See text attached. We plan to launch it publicly on 12th/13th March, the weekend before the Budget.

Anyone who want to be a signatory just needs to send their organisation name and logo to Amy Mount,AMount@green-alliance.org.uk by 9th March. You can also contact her with any questions. Apologies for any cross-posting.

And here is what you’d be signing up to.

 

We want clean energy to power the North

The North of England was the cradle of the Industrial Revolution of the nineteenth century, and the heart of British industry in the twentieth. Today, we want the northern economy to play a leading role in the biggest transformation of the world’s infrastructure since the switch from wood to coal power.

The world is rising to the challenge of climate change, which means using new ways to meet our travel, energy, and communication needs. Now, after a winter of floods, we know this change can’t be delayed, and that new infrastructure has to be futureproof. Representing diverse organisations from across the north, we want clean energy to power our future.

The North is already designing, building and exporting the new low carbon products and services that the whole world wants and has committed to buy, from wind turbines to electric vehicles. Renewable energy, efficient homes and workplaces, and smart technologies will all support local jobs and businesses. And they enable communities to shape their own energy futures, as towns and villages across the North have done since Baywind in Cumbria, which was the UK’s first ever renewable energy co-operative.

The future we want is one with clean air, healthy people and resilient communities. We want to protect our astonishing landscapes, like Lindisfarne in the east and the Ainsdale Dunes in the west, from the devastating impacts of climate change.

To make this vision real, the 2016 Budget must enable us to develop and grow renewables for our region into the 2020s. The UK government should be celebrating clean energy as core to its economic plan. To cherish what we love about our region and reassert our place in the forefront of the world’s economy, we ask the Chancellor to back clean energy for the North.

Posted in Campaign Update, Energy | 1 Comment

Only 2 of 6 “Scrutiny” chairs of #Manchester Council are carbon literate

Three of the six councillors who chair important* committees that are supposed to keep tabs on Manchester City Council have not completed either part of the  “Carbon Literacy” training that has been on offer since 2013.  One other has only completed the face-to-face component.

At the moment five of the six committees basically shun all matters environmental, including climate change (This is of course the type of short-sighted siloed thinking that got the species in this mess, but never mind).  One committee- Neighbourhoods – is supposed to deal with climate, but has signally failed to do so properly for many years.   Meanwhile, important issues are ignored or swept under the carpet, and the implications of climate change for health, for young people and community cohesion (for example) are ignored.

carbon literacy scrutiny chairs

Given the total lack of any opposition party councillors, there was a supposed to be an effort for the councillors to – in the words of Richard Leese [who also hasn’t done his carbon literacy training) –

“We have to ensure we hold ourselves to account within this chamber and we also need to ensure that citizens – and people that have voted for us – are able to hold us to account on an ongoing basis, not just once every 12 months. So it is a challenge. I think it is a challenge for every member of this council but I believe we will demonstrate that as a Labour administration, the people of Manchester were right to put their trust in us.”

 

And on climate change?  Accountability? Trust?  Why would we do that?  Anyone?

 

 

  • theoretically.  Mostly they function as self-love arenas where hopes and dreams go to die.
Posted in Democratic deficit, Manchester City Council, Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Funded place on “Zero Carbon Britain” course up for grabs

From Centre for Alternative Technology (CAT) email.

We’re again offering a funded place for grass roots campaigners to join us on our next Zero Carbon Britain (ZCB) course.

Do you know anyone who might love a free place to attend this empowering and inspiring course looking at this ground-breaking research?

We’ll be running the next ZCB course on 28-29th April which is the Thursday and Friday before Mach Comedy Festival.

ZCB offers a robust, evidence-based scenario that explores ways we can deliver a climate positive future, whilst also maintaining a modern lifestyle. The course also covers how ZCB can be successfully used as a powerful tool to inspire positive action, stimulate debate and build consensus in our communities and places of work.

The course is ideal for Change Makers working in Local Green Groups, Transition Towns, FOE groups, CAT members, students and activists etc.  To apply for the free place all your friend needs to do is send us no more than 300 words (posted to the CAT Facebook or emailcourses@cat.org.uk) about why they should get a funded place and what they will do with the knowledge they get from the course.

Deadline is 5pm GMT 4th April.
The winner will be judged by a panel of CAT staff and announced on 8th April on our Facebook page.
By entering they accept that CAT will post their first name and surname initial to the CAT Facebook page should they win.
Travel to CAT is not included but vegetarian wholefood full board and onsite accommodation at CAT is included.

Posted in education, Energy, Upcoming Events | Leave a comment

International Women’s Day – Berta Caceres, Judi Bari, etc.

Happy International Women’s Day.  Normal service will resume tomorrow of course.

Berta Caceres was murdered last week.  The Honduran indigenous leader got between rich people andtheir money-making opportunities and paid the price, like at least 116 environmentalists in 2014.

Friends of the Earth has a good piece about “Amazing Women Who Defended the Environment.”

Me, I’d have added Judi Bari, the radical American working-class activist and environmentalist who was dangerous enough to be blown up.  (Shades of Fred Hampton – it’s the activists who might get the competing groups of poor seeing beyond their short-term interests to their longer-term interest (in, say, a habitable planet)  who are the biggest threat to our lords and masters.)

 

Posted in Article alert, Campaign Update, Uncategorized | 2 Comments