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Welcome Findings from the Regional Growth into the Low Carbon Study
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Agenda Context - the Regional Sustainability Challenges What would a local low carbon strategy look like? Discussion & Break Research Findings Discussion Lunch
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Context – what are the regional sustainability challenges? Dr Simon Slater Executive Director simon.slater@swm.org.uk sustainabilitywestmidlands.org.uk
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The West Midlands at a glance 5.3 Million people – 9% of UK total Birmingham is 2 nd largest city in UK – population of more than 1 million. 75% of the UK ’s population is within 5 hours drive. Most ethnically diverse region in the UK outside of London. Highest concentration of manufacturers in the UK 80% of the region is rural
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The Regional Sustainability Challenge –The Productivity Gap - £10 billion plus – productivity & worklessness –The Carbon Gap – need to focus on transport, waste, decentralised energy, energy efficiency –Quality of Life Gap – health inequalities, basket of indicators such Index Sustainable Economic Welfare – vary across region, externalities –Confidence Gap – poor promotion within and outside region of good practice –Leadership Gap – varied understanding on sustainability as overall framework for action, business often ahead of public sector, regional governance ‘unfinished & uncertain’
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Our Vision By 2020 businesses and communities are thriving in a West Midlands that is environmentally sustainable and socially just. By 2012 our leaders are clear on what this looks like, have set milestones and their organisations are making strong progress. ‘Low carbon vision’ begins to set out what is possible now in terms of energy, transport, construction, demographic change to reach 2020…just add leadership and next steps
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The Regional Low Carbon Building Blocks The National Low Carbon Transition Plan & Others The West Midlands Economic Strategy, Regional Spatial Strategy, Climate Change Plan The emerging Single Integrated Regional Strategy and Joint Strategy and Investment Board and 20 impact areas Regional Ministers Low Carbon Task Force City Region Low Carbon Economy Programme SWM review to identify key priorities
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What would a local low carbon economic strategy look like? Dr Simon Slater Executive Director simon.slater@swm.org.uk sustainabilitywestmidlands.org.uk
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Lessons from UK first low-carbon regional economic strategy? Opportunity to address both the regional productivity challenge and carbon challenge. ‘Connecting to Success’ published in January 2008 and Delivery Framework in May 2008. Full story covered in ‘Evidence of success ‘– Dec 2008 Lessons and approach are applicable to local level
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Defining Low Carbon Economy There is no official government definition of a low-carbon economy so the region produced its own, definition : “An economy that produces goods and services of increasing value while reducing the associated greenhouse gases in their production, use and disposal…” - Connecting to Success, page 89 Embraces the region’s strengths in engineering, science and technology to deliver low-carbon solutions to national and international markets.
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The scale of the output challenge Gross Value Added – a measure of the net total output or income generated by an economy. Essentially it is the difference between the value of the goods and services produced in an economy and the cost of raw materials and other inputs which were used in their production.
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The scale of the carbon challenge CO 2 (e) is an abbreviation of 'carbon dioxide equivalent' and is the internationally recognised measure of greenhouse gas emissions. The sources of greenhouse gas emissions include carbon dioxide (CO 2 ), methane (CH 4 ), nitrous oxide (N 2 O), hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), perfluorocarbons (PFCs) and sulphur hexafluoride (SF 6 ).
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Developing new policies Developed policy areas that could be influenced by the new economic strategy and that would address the productivity and carbon challenges at the same time. Developed a benchmark of what an ‘ideal’ low-carbon economic strategy could look like. Assess the extent which ‘Connecting to Success’ supported these key policy areas during several stages of development as a parallel process to the wider sustainability appraisal.
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Improving the Strategy
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Benchmarking against other regions
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Prioritising actions and programmes The actions against the policy areas were prioritised in terms of: Economic benefit Potential to reduce carbon Ease of implementation Alignment with other regional social and environmental policy Main programmes were around: Smarter Working / ICT Decentralised energy & waste infrastructure Resource Efficiency Support for Business (energy & waste) Stimulation and support for diversification into Green Markets e.g. Procurement & R&D Our commitment to deliver our role within the delivery framework is outlined in our Corporate Plan 2008 -11 which was published in June 2008.
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Delivery - Monitoring Progress Delivery of the Strategy is monitored using the following indicators: –Tonnes of CO 2 e per £10,000 GVA – Headline Indicator –Regional Indicator of Sustainable Economic Wellbeing - Headline Indicator –Total Industry and commercial energy consumption (GWh) per £billion GVA –Percentage of people usually working from home or travelling to work using sustainable means of transport –Growth of companies in the region providing low-carbon products and services (to be developed) –Industrial and commercial waste indicator (to be developed) –Natural environment indicator (under development)
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Delivery – progress to date
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Delivery – progress to date (cont) Monitoring of Strategy Actions - Overall good progress AWM carbon reduction from investments on target of 150,000 tonnes in 2008/9 Smarter Working launched to help flexible working / use of ICT National Centre for Low Carbon Vehicles, Science City, Power Academy Waste infrastructure programme Renewable Energy and Supply Chain and deployment programmes – but more coordination required Business support via good practice networks e.g. Business Futures or Business link BUT – more sub-regional targeting at risks and opportunities required
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Emerging sub-regional actions Improved business support and good practice in improving efficiency of existing business, supported by waste and energy infrastructure, smarter working/travel Link green space maintenance to future jobs fund to create immediate supported employment, and longer term natural assets Mass scale housing retrofit programme – stimulate new products and employment Public Procurement to create new low carbon markets, drive innovation, and efficiency that existing business base well placed to exploit Pooling of resources – joint agency to improve coordination, attraction of investment
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2. Key Lessons in producing your local low carbon strategy Definition is important – productivity & carbon of overall economy Low Carbon does not guarantee environmental or social progress – need SD review, including longer term issues. Identifying the scale of the challenge & within target of 2020 Focus on what can be influenced
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Key Lessons (cont) Prioritise actions on a range of investment / benefit criteria Balance of productivity verses jobs safeguarding / creating, tackling worklessness Create new markets in areas local economy has strengths to exploit Skills and investment follow longer-term demand and certainty created by leadership
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Local Low Carbon Economic Strategy Benchmark? 1.Your Local Economic Strategy is your low carbon strategy 2.Clear definition – around increased productivity and reducing carbon 3.Evidence base to support your strategy should cover: 1.Sectors at risk from carbon / environmental legislation 2.Opportunities for sectors from decarbonisation and diversification 3.Understanding of impact on productivity & jobs 4.Actions prioritised based on addressing ‘market failure’ and costs, benefits. 5.Monitoring – productivity, jobs, efficiency, diversification
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What do you think a local low carbon economic strategy would look like? Dr Simon Slater Executive Director simon.slater@swm.org.uk sustainabilitywestmidlands.org.uk
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