1 / 15

The Council’s Role

A Greener Economy: Time for Change The Council’s Role 23 February 2011 David Reed Strategic Director Canterbury City Council. The Council’s Role. To improve the environmental performance of the Council’s own operations as an organisation – to lead by example

rafael-duke
Download Presentation

The Council’s Role

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Greener Economy: Time for ChangeThe Council’s Role 23 February 2011David ReedStrategic DirectorCanterbury City Council

  2. The Council’s Role • To improve the environmental performance of the Council’s own operations as an organisation – to lead by example • To provide services and facilities for the local community and businesses to help improve their environmental performance • To join with others in providing community leadership, to encourage and support organisations and individuals to take action for themselves

  3. City CouncilEnvironment PolicyApproved July 2009

  4. The seven key themes • Minimising waste and recycling • Tackling pollution – air and water quality, land contamination, noise and light pollution • Reducing the need for travel and promoting sustainable modes of transport • Reducing energy use and the consumption of natural resources • Protecting and enhancing the natural and built environment • Adapting to changing climatic conditions • Public information and promotion

  5. Minimising waste & recycling • Alternate weekly household waste and recycling service introduced in 2005 – now achieving 48% recycling • East Kent Waste Partnership recently established – changes to the collection system in Canterbury will commence in 2013 when new contract in place • Building site waste management plans a legal requirement for construction projects over £300,000 in value • City Council/SERCO trade waste recycling scheme – 300 businesses use the service achieving 7% recycling • Businesses have a legal duty to sort their waste and the financial savings from recycling will grow • 41% of City Council’s own office waste now recycled

  6. Tacking pollution • Poor air quality from traffic along Canterbury ring road the biggest issue - consultation on scope of the Air Quality Management Area underway • Noise from night flights at Manston Airport a serious issue for Herne Bay – the council will carefully scrutinise emerging proposals from airport operators Infratil

  7. Reducing travel and increasing sustainable transport • Quality bus partnership, concessionary fares, freedom pass and high speed trains delivering improved passenger numbers on public transport • Longstanding park and ride strategy still very important for the city • Network of cyclepaths continues to expand – Reculver to Whitstable cyclepath phase 1 nearly finished, consultation on phase 2 later in the year. Chartham cyclepath now completed. • KCC city traffic information system installed but not yet operational

  8. Reducing use of energy & natural resources • Energy efficiency measures in Leisure Centres – combined heat & power, pool covers, insulation, efficient pumps • New Marlowe Theatre being constructed to “very good” BREEAM standard • Woodchip boiler being installed at main council offices • Sheltered housing schemes at Ellen Court and Franklin House to include photovoltaic electricity generation • Since April 2010 the council have required Code for Sustainable Homes level four in new housing • Extension of “competent persons” scheme enabling approved contractors to install renewable energy schemes

  9. The council’s carbon footprint -overall figures Tonnes CO2 / yr

  10. The natural and built environment • 90% of recent housing built on brownfield land • Whitstable Castle, Memorial Gardens, Westgate Gardens improvement schemes complete, underway or planned • Ownership of green gap site between Whitstable and Herne Bay secured • Improvements in positive management of local wildlife sites & SSSIs achieved, Seasalter Marshes scheme • Canterbury West station improvements complete; forecourt enhancement and better footway to St Dunstans planned

  11. Adapting to the changing climate • Looking at grass cutting regimes - saving fuel & encouraging biodiversity • Continuing introduction of low maintenance shrubs & drought resistant planting reducing water consumption • Investment in coastal and river flood prevention schemes • East Kent green infrastructure plan being developed to protect biodiversity • Adaptation to be built into council service delivery planning

  12. Adaptation – the five trends for businesses to think about • Hotter, drier summers • Milder, wetter winters • More intense downpours • Heatwaves in summer • Sea level rise

More Related