Archive for October 2007

Watch the launch video

By Sarah Beeny on 29 October 2007 | 1 Comment

As part of the launch of the Big Green Challenge, I was interviewed at BedZed by GreenTV for a short film outlining the aims of the prize.

News: Join us at a Big Green Challenge event

By Vicki Costello on 24 October 2007 | 4 Comments

We are holding 10 events across the UK throughout November and December 2007. These events will be a great chance to hear more about how you can compete for a share of the £1m prize fund. The events will also give you a chance to network with other groups and organisations in your area who are interested in working together to find new ways of reducing C02 emissions. Register for an event near you:

Birmingham - Friday 2 November

Bristol - Friday 9 November

Manchester - Thursday 15 November

Belfast - Thursday 22 November

Newcastle - Friday 23 November

Cardiff - Thursday 29 November

Norwich - Friday 30 November

Dates for London, Edinburgh and Sheffield will be added soon.

Spaces at each event are limited so make sure you register.

Top tips and plastic bags

By Alan Morton on 24 October 2007 | 2 Comments

George Marshall of COIN wrote a provocative piece about whether re-using plastic bags and other small actions are helpful when it comes to doing something meaningful about climate change.

See Guardian and his blog.

Now he is right to point out that re-using bags has a very small effect on overall carbon use. He acknowledges that there may be other benefits – a few turtles won’t die as a result of confusing plastic bags in the sea for jellyfish.

So can we consign the idea of re-using bags and similar “simple tips” to the recycling bin? And chastise the Government and anyone else who promote them for diverting us from the serious business of responding effectively to climate change.

Or is there more to it? Several bloggers have pointed out that by encouraging people to start with simple actions you may them to move on to more demanding ones once they’ve realised what’s at stake and have a better understanding of what’s actually required.

What strikes me about plastic bags is that when we re-use bags today, it’s the big supermarket chains that make most the savings. We do the work, and the supermarkets reap the benefit. So there’s an imbalance there. Especially if you know that £100m or so is spent each year on these bags.

So my version of re-using bags is to have local communities strike a bargain with supermarkets. If the community re-uses bags, then the community gets some of the money that’s saved. For example, if students in a school pester their parents to re-use bags and the school gets funding for energy efficiency measures or renewable energy technologies etc. If you can save 20% of bag use, then this could be £20m a year!

But there’s more. One great advantage is that people immediately see the point; you take resources – the bags - that would literally go in a hole in the ground and turn them in to something useful – renewable energy installations or whatever. This is a very powerful message about how we confront climate change – we have to use resources much more efficiently. Only that way we have a high standard of living but with lower carbon use.

And more …. If we had a branded “Green Bag” then this would be advertising for the campaign on every high street in the country. The campaign snowballs.

Climate Change: the citizen’s agenda - report

By Alan Morton on 24 October 2007 | 2 Comments

We went to a meeting organised by PRASEG (the Parliamentary Renewable and Sustainable Energy Group) on the recent report by the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee of the House of Commons Climate Change: the “citizen’s agenda”. Michael Jack, Chair of the Committee, outlined the report and its conclusions.

It’s a great report. It summarises a lot of useful information – such as the breakdown of emissions by UK household. On average each household emitted 20.7 tonnes of CO2 in 2001. Over half of this comes from private cars, direct fuel and electricity use in the home, and aviation and public transport.

It also sets out what more the Government – and Citizens could be doing - from home energy efficiency, (smart metering, low energy lightbulbs, and insulation) to microgeneration and personal carbon allowances.

Do have a look at the report and see what could be done (and what is being done in countries like Germany). Plenty of food for thought for people interested in the Big Green Challenge.

More than the sum of the sparks

By Vicki Costello on 19 October 2007 | No Comments

Over the past three days we’ve already had a brilliant response and loads of interest in the Big Green Challenge. David and Anne highlight just some of the ethusiasm in the UK for trying to tackle climate change. I agree with David’s suggestion that there are many sparks of exciting activity taking place across the UK at the moment. The Big Green Challenge hopes to give some of these sparks an opportunity to really take off by proving the impact they can have. It’s also not just about the groups and approaches that go on to win - the Big Green Challenge is as much about bringing the sparks together to showcase what is possible and to generate a feeling, across the whole of the UK, that people can and do have the ingenuity to work together to come up with solutions to tackle the major issues that affect us all.

As well as being a chance to find out more about the Big Green Challenge, the regional events we’re running over the next couple of months will be a good chance to meet other people working on related projects in your region - so make sure you’re signed up to find out about the event nearest to you.

Launching the Challenge!

By Sarah Beeny on 16 October 2007 | 2 Comments

Welcome! The Big Green Challenge is a really worthwhile reason to get together with your neighbours, a local club or find like-minded people to join with.

Climate change affects everybody, so having a prize that rewards communities and groups for working together to tackle it makes perfect sense.

Find out more by exploring the site, and don’t forget to Sign UP!

Sarah Beeny

Sarah’s Big Green Challenge top tips

1. Think creatively! I always try and come up with new ways of dealing with problems in my work. The best ideas are those which are innovative

2. Do you belong to any kind of group, club, society or association? Speak to the people you see regularly and encourage them to get involved

3. Take a look at what’s around you. Have you seen a good ‘green’ idea and thought you could make it better?

4.Think about the barriers to ‘going green’ - what is it that stops you from taking up existing ideas?

5. Even if you don’t already take part community activities, pester your friends, family and colleagues to join forces with you to come up with ideas

6. Have you got a friend or colleague who’s always dreaming up good ideas? Well join them to think about climate change and make an idea happen!

7. Remember the winning ideas, that groups can prove work, will be rewarded with cash

8. Visit the website of NESTA’s Big Green Challenge to register, find out more and get some inspiration: www.biggreenchallenge.org.uk

9. Try and think beyond the obvious - turning off lights and walking rather than driving are good ideas for saving energy, but something more is needed to achieve a 60% reduction in carbon emissions within your community.

10. Try and get other groups in your community to take part, and turn it into a local competition.

Looking for new ideas

By Vicki Costello on 15 October 2007 | 3 Comments

Around a third of those polled by NESTA thought time to find a solution to the problem of climate change is running out, with almost half claiming individual action is not enough and that fresh thinking on the issue is required.

The research further suggests as many as 17 million people in Britain would be willing to work with others to combat global warming, with two-thirds believing it is everybody’s responsibility to take action. Charities (42%) and scientists (28%) were the groups rated most highly for their current efforts to tackle climate change.

* A representative sample of 1,972 GB adults (aged 18+) was surveyed online by YouGov between 5th and 8th October 2007.

**Population calculation based on 36% of 47,255,880 GB adults (Source: ONS ‘Population Trends, Autumn 2007’).

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