13 Nov 2009
It may be the level of alcohol I consume, but in a typical week I swing from bouts of acute depression thinking that we will never solve the climate crisis through to optimism. On Wednesday hope kicked-in as I was on the judging panel for a major company assessing the environmental ideas that had been developed internally.
Initial dread that I would be bored stupid listening to 16 different presentations was quickly replaced by pleasant surprise at the quality and variety of the ideas. In particular it was massively encouraging to see how close we are to a commercially viable new generation of LED lighting. The new bulbs are predicted to save one tonne of carbon and £500 over their lifetime. I have put one in at home. It works perfectly on a dimmer switch, the quality of the bluish-white light is far better than the harsh yellowness of a CFL and, unlike a CFL, it doesn’t contain any mercury. It is possible that the introduction of the bulbs could be supported under one of the Government's energy efficiency initiatives making them easily affordable.
We are going to add one of the bulbs to our Energy Bike display to demonstrate their energy efficiency and the quality of the light they produce. Yet another good reason to hire the displays!
Compact Awards
On Tuesday, I spent a surreal evening at the Dali Museum on the South Bank which was the venue for the Compact awards. The Compact is a brilliant concept that is designed to help improve the relationship between Government and the voluntary sector. Unfortunately, the idea has had as much traction as an eel on skates and I sense a diminishing level of enthusiasm for it.
For four years I co-Chaired DEFRA's Compact Group which was why I was invited to the award dinner. Much to my amazement DEFRA won the Central Government award. I do feel that the Department has achieved some good things largely due to the dedication and enthusiasm of a small group of volunteers but I do find it concerning that it was sufficient to win and suggests that other central Government Departments need to do more.
Nuclear
I started my time in the environmental movement being passionately anti-nuclear, a position that was reinforced by the Chernobyl disaster. I am still convinced that if Government had made significant investment in our energy infrastructure over a decade ago we could have had a diverse and de-centralised energy infrastructure that would not require nuclear.
However, this investment was not made and in the intervening years the scientific evidence around climate change impacts has become more robust and worrying. Given these two things I am now a reluctant nuclear convert and therefore support the Government's announcement to build 10 new nuclear plants.
Obviously the announcement poses many questions. What is the public appetite for nuclear, will the fact that the Government has "cleared the planning undergrowth" enable them to build the plants quickly, how is the Government going to be able to hide the level of public sector subsidy that will be required to build the plants and will we suffer from short term supply problems and rising energy costs because of the slowness of the decision-making?
10:10
Last week I committed to participating in the 10:10 initiative and have decided to measure my personal carbon footprint. This week I started on the process by looking at what should be the easiest bit the carbon produced from my use of electricity.
The first step is to discover how carbon intensive is my electricity supplier. My supplier is Good Energy and I visited electricityinfo.org to see how much carbon is produced for each kilowatt of electricity I use. The great news for me is that Good Energy is the only supplier which gets all its electricity from renewable sources (the average for most suppliers is just 5.9 per cent) and as a result my emissions from this source are counted as zero. The average across all the other suppliers is 0.460kgs per kwh. A good start, next week I will look at my gas use.
Trewin Restorick is chief executive of environmental charity and advisory body Global Action Plan
This article first appeared on his weekly blog Trewin Says
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WHAT DO YOU THINK? Add your comment
That bit about hope...
It isn't linked to drinking on my part, but I also walk the thin line between despair and hope quite often in a week concerning the climatic crises. I'm happy to read someone else (and then many others probably)do feel the same way and the same urgency. It's a bit confusing to me that it would feel to someone as if they're back at zero only by paying back their deeds. But it also soothes me to read about discoveries and faith in the future.
Posted by Catherine Craig-St-Louis, 16 Nov 2009
Carbon emissions from electricity
Hi Trewin. As far as i'm aware 1010 (and the majority of carbon calculators etc out there) wont count a 100% green energy tariff as zero carbon. You still have to use grid average carbon intensity against your electricity use. Rightly so too ... Paying a premium to buy a nice little bundle of green energy all for yourself from the tiny amount of renewable energy that's on the grid doesnt do anything to reduce the uk's carbon emissions. It's like putting your rubbish outside someone elses house ...
Posted by Dave Angel, 16 Nov 2009