A selection of images representing communities.
| Published | 26 November 2009 |
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Strong leadership, clear vision and ambition from councils could deliver reductions in carbon emissions of millions of tonnes annually and potentially unlock £1bn in income for councils, Communities Secretary John Denham said today.
Local authorities are already at the forefront in taking the decisions and actions that will help the nation meet our climate change targets - from waste plans through to transport policies.
In a speech at the Local Action on Climate Change Summit, Mr Denham outlined his vision for radically enhancing the role of councils with greater autonomy and powers to drive low carbon living - changing the expectations of what local government is and what it does for people.
John Denham said:
"The challenge of tackling climate change presents local authorities with an opportunity to take centre stage and lead the way in not only finding solutions for their own local area and delivering for their local residents but in helping the nation meet its commitments to driving down carbon emissions.
"Councils already play a crucial part in making the shift to a low carbon economy but there is capacity for them to go further than their current responsibilities. Getting this right will require local government to think differently, be ambitious and embrace innovation. In return central government will need to provide support, make sure unnecessary barriers to action are swept away, and be ready to give local authorities which are ready to go further and faster, and have a plan for doing so, the tools to do the job."
The Communities Secretary used today's summit, hosted by the Energy Efficiency Partnership for Homes, to set out how Government can support others to take the lead, challenge those authorities currently lagging behind and point to what the scale of green ambitions might achieve. This included:
Places like Manchester are already taking full advantage of the leadership role they have. Last year they conducted analysis of the costs of ignoring the threat of climate change and put this at £21bn over the next 12 years. The city has committed to reducing its CO2 emissions by 1m tonnes per annum by 2020 - that's a 41 per cent reduction from 2005 levels. City wide, residents and business and other organisations will need to adopt and implement the principles of a low carbon economy- making this happen will require the local authority to fulfil its proper role as community leader.
John Denham said:
"Real progress on tackling climate change in this country will only be made if we can harness the potential and vision that lies in local government. Whilst the possible outcomes could be revolutionary the steps to get there are not that radical - the model exists in the past and in some areas it is happening now.
"By combining the technology of today with the principles of the past councils are - like those before them- securing energy for local residents, generating income for the local area and driving down carbon emissions.
"Local Government is best placed to look right across all policies from housing to transport and waste and think strategically about how green, global agenda can be delivered locally. In doing so the very role of local government could be transformed."
Manchester is leading the way but there are several councils who are ahead of the game. Kirklees, in West Yorkshire, operates a waste to energy plant, Birmingham's Combined Heat and Power (CHP) plants supply council buildings and private businesses with a local energy supply not linked to the national grid, and Southampton has been operating a similar system for the last 20 years.
John Denham wants to work with those authorities already engaged in this agenda and encourage them to go further but also raise the bar for all authorities and help them recognise the potential and maximise the advantages that are available.
A commitment to driving down carbon emissions underpins work right across the Department for Communities and Local Government. Earlier this week Housing Minister John Healey announced the introduction of tough new green standards for all homes by 2016 and pledged an extra £3.2m to boost long-term research into how we design and build energy efficient homes.
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