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Nottingham City Council - Climate Change Conference

Jon Bresford | 15.10.2006 12:03 | Ecology

On 9 October I was hopeful and optimistic as I set off to the Nottingham City Council's climate change debate held in the council house. Unfortunately my optimisum faded rapidly.

My day started late as the bus didn't turn up as usual. I could have cycled but there's nowhere in the city to safely leave my bike. I eventually got in by bus which cost me considerably more than the using the more polluting option of driving by car. I then walked over the refurbished area in front of the council house covered in slabs imported from Spain and China. I passed two gas-guzzling chauffeur driven Bentley's for the Lord Mayor and his deputy.

Audio of the Climate Change debate at Broadway Cinema 4.6Mb [16kbps] - mp3 4.5M

Links: Economist claims Nottingham City’s climate protection strategy is too little, too late | Nottingham city council climate protection strategy | An Inconvenient Truth: Film & regional decision makers response at the Broadway

Video link with US politicians
Video link with US politicians


I walked into the debate held in a room with day light coming in from two sides, yet all the lights were on. We sat at tables surrounded with a mountain of paper, much of it only printed on one side and none of it on recycled paper.

So my original optimism faded, thinking if the council can't act to protect our planet with simple gestures like using recycled paper, providing an affordable and reliable bus service, using locally produced building materials and hybrid cars, then what hope do we have trusting in them to tackle this huge issue?

The audience were all concerned and extremely enthusiastic in their minds of what was needed to be done, but instead of harnessing this, Councillors showed presentation after presentation of what could be done, what other people are doing, but not what we are actually doing here in Nottingham now.

We all need to work together to tackle the greatest threat the planet has ever faced. Lets hope the council now empowers and involves community groups, NGOs and residents of Nottingham in working with them to turn this rhetoric into reality.

Jon Bresford
- e-mail: jon.beresford@ntlworld.com

Comments

Display the following 4 comments

  1. Bike parking — malcolm
  2. To clarify — Paul
  3. further clarification... — wheel progress
  4. Bikes & other stuff — Pat