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West of England Opportunities for Green Infrastructure Joint Scrutiny Committee, Item 9, 22 January 2010 Gerry Hamersley

West of England Opportunities for Green Infrastructure Joint Scrutiny Committee, Item 9, 22 January 2010 Gerry Hamersley, Area Manager, Natural England Steve Grainger, Chief Executive, Avon Wildlife Trust. Green Infrastructure?.

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West of England Opportunities for Green Infrastructure Joint Scrutiny Committee, Item 9, 22 January 2010 Gerry Hamersley

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  1. West of EnglandOpportunities for Green Infrastructure Joint Scrutiny Committee, Item 9, 22 January 2010 Gerry Hamersley, Area Manager, Natural England Steve Grainger, Chief Executive, Avon Wildlife Trust

  2. Green Infrastructure? • Strategic network of green space and environmental features with multiple functions • Established and new in urban areas and rural hinterland • Operates at all spatial scales – local to wider countryside • Parks and Gardens, amenity and semi-natural green space, allotments, churchyards, river and canal side corridors, functional space (SUDS and flood storage)

  3. The Benefits • Health and wellbeing in the Community • Food production and productive landscapes • Climate change mitigation and adaptation • + • Promoting sustainable transport and reducing the need to use cars • Community cohesion and life long learning; volunteering • Habitat provision and access to nature • Landscape setting and context for development • Flood attenuation and water resource management • Energy production and conservation

  4. Health and Wellbeing

  5. How Stress can be seen as a major public Health Problem Social Isolation Reduced access to Greenspace Social Inequalities leading to environmental injustice Physical inactivity and Obesity Chronic Stress Raised Inflammatory Markers Anxiety and Depression Cardiovascular Disease Lung Disease Diabetes Cancer

  6. How surrounding vegetation help children cope with stress

  7. Physical Activity & Obesity • Only 40% of men and 28% of women reach 30 X 5 target of Physical Activity. • Physical Inactivity Costs the NHS £1.8 Billion • In the UK rates of obesity have tripled in the past 20 years. • By 2050 60% of population and 1 in 4 under 16 year olds will be obese. • Total cost of obesity to society will be £45 billion by 2020.

  8. Physical activity and land use Generalised Land Use Database – classifies features in OS Mastermap Topography

  9. Association of greenery with obesity? N = 6919 Odds Ratio A Ellaway S Macintyre BMJ 2005;331;611-2 Greenery

  10. Green Infrastructure and local food production • Opportunity to showcase ‘relocalisation’ of sustainable food production and consumption • Can forge food supply chain links between residents, local food producers, processors and distributors • Ensure greater access to garden allotments, city or school farms • Can encourage local farmers markets, community garden centres • Promote the local economy, community interest and cohesion

  11. STOKE PARK – the Natural Environment, Access and Local Food

  12. Climate Change - Manchester Heat Map

  13. Green Infrastructure and Climate Change • Providing a natural cooling effect to mitigate the urban ‘heat island’. • Sustainable urban drainage to absorb excess rainfall. • Providing space for renewable energy resources, such as ground source heat pump installations and biofuel production. • Allowing species to migrate and adapt to the effects of climate change. • Reducing the effects of air pollution by providing vegetation to store carbon. • Encouraging alternative modes of transport such as walking and cycling, thus helping to reduce carbon emissions. • Providing attractive, cooler and shaded outdoor areas in hotter summers.

  14. Planning Policy Statement 12: Creating strong safe and prosperous communities through Local Spatial Planning (June 2008) defines green infrastructure and makes clear that it is necessary to ensure that sustainable communities are delivered. Draft Regional Spatial Strategy for South West (April 2006)contains Policy GI1 making clear that the development of networks of green infrastructure is a requirement and that provision for them should be incorporated in spatial planning documents. Planning policy context for green infrastructure in the West of England Bristol Development Framework Core Strategy Publication Version (November 2009) Green infrastructure features in the vision and overarching objectives which are translated into a specific Policy BCS9. There is also a section on green infrastructure policy delivery. Bath and North East Somerset Spatial options consultation (October 2009) includes green infrastructure as a Key Infrastructure and Delivery Requirement. It sets out the main elements of a proposed policy framework for Green Infrastructure. South Gloucestershire Core Strategy issues and options for consultation (April 2008) Green infrastructure is included within Key Issue 7 on improving health and wellbeing. Reference is made to the importance in terms of community benefits and urban cooling. North Somerset Futures Local Development Framework Core Strategy Consultation Draft (November 2009) includes green infrastructure within a Living within Environmental Limitsthemeas Policy CS9. Specific priorities are identified

  15. Community planning context for green infrastructure in the West of England The 20:20 Plan - Bristol’s Sustainable City Strategy (in prep) does not refer directly to green infrastructure. However, green infrastructure has a role in delivering all 4 primary priorities - stronger, safer communities; reduce health and wealth inequalities; raise aspiration and achievement of young people and families and make our prosperity sustainable. South Gloucestershire’s Sustainable Community Strategy 2008 has a priority to enhance South Gloucestershire’s attractiveness with well-managed and maintained streets and green spaces The West of England Multi Area Agreement (August 2009) includes a specific section on green infrastructure and states “The West of England is seeking to inform decision-making and more joined up thinking to support urban and regional environmental planning through work that informs from a sub-regional perspective the provision to be made for green infrastructure.” North Somerset Sustainable Community Strategy 2008 - 2026 makes clear that green infrastructure is a requirement of all regeneration and development plans under a maintain and improve environmental quality in urban areas aim. and aims for better green infrastructure (including allotments) in urban and rural areas under “improvements we want to see”. Bath & North East Somerset Local Strategic Partnership Sustainable Community Strategy 2009 - 2026 includes improved green infrastructure as part of the vision. And explains that strategies that will help deliver this vision include a green infrastructure strategy

  16. What’s already being done? • Initial Scoping Study into Green Infrastructure in the West of England • West of England Green Infrastructure Toolkit • West of England Green Infrastructure Pathfinder Project • Avonmouth/Severnside HRA Study

  17. Taking it forward in the West of England • A cross boundary approach at all levels is essential • Common vision and principles for GI within Core and other Strategies and Plans in the West of England • Clear strategic spatial links with GI networks in adjacent Unitaries • Bring together relevant organisations to support collaboration and delivery • Bring in appropriate funding sources for capital works and management • And energy!

  18. Thank you

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