The Director of Estates and Building Services
submitted a report on the Leicester City Council’s Climate
Emergency Action Plan.
The Chair introduced the item noting that Climate
Change was an ongoing priority for the Council.
An introduction to the Climate Emergency Action Plan
was made by Cllr Clarke, Deputy Mayor- Climate, Economy and
Culture. He thanked all involved for
their work and bringing their expertise.
He noted that Leicester was demonstrably
forward-thinking regarding climate action and was A-rated by the
Climate Disclosure Project (CDP) and was in the top 13% of over 900
cities globally reporting their progress to the CDP. This was a
huge credit to officers. However, the
city was still running behind where it wants to be and there was a
need to up the pace of improvements if the necessary government
support is forthcoming. The Commission
now had the opportunity to help set the pace and help the Council
lead the way and recognise where changes needed to be made and
where others needed to be called upon to make changes.
A presentation was made by Duncan Bell, Change
Manager (Climate Emergency) using the slides published with the
agenda papers. The presentation covered
the successes from the first action plan, the aims of the new plan
and the approach to achieving the net zero ambition. The aim was to make Leicester a climate-ready
city, meaning becoming net-zero by 2030
if possible, with the necessary government
support, trying to reduce the impact we have outside the city as
all goods and services brought into the city created carbon
emissions in other places.
Other key points
included:
- The
plan looked at the wildlife in the city and the infrastructure in
the city trying to adapt and make the city resilient as the climate
changed.
- There
was a need to try to link the climate change work to the wider
goals of the City Council.
- Co-benefits from the climate work included improving people's
health by improving the air quality in the city, making homes
healthier, reducing issues in buildings with damp and mould, better
insulating homes and helping the local economy to grow by helping
businesses save energy.
- The
Council aimed to lead by example.
- There
was a need to reduce demand for fossil fuels and energy use, for
example by insulating buildings and encouraging alternatives to car
travel and also promoting switching from petrol and diesel vehicles
to electric and switching from gas boilers to heat pumps as well as
trying to make use of renewable energy sources.
- Round
table discussions across different Council service areas were
undertaken to identify actions which formed the basis of the
consultation draft.
- A
public consultation was being undertaken and a workshop had been
conducted with young people.
The Committee were invited to ask questions and make
comments. Key points
included:
- With
regard to the co-benefits of the plan it was possible that there
could be scope for joint-work with Public Health.
- With
regard to a suggestion about getting sports clubs in the city
involved, it was relayed that since the document had been
published, Active Leicester had joined the partnership. Active Leicester coordinated a consortium of
sports organisations across the city.
- In
response to a suggestion that tiny forests be planted in places
other than schools, the Commission were informed that six more had
been planned and one of these would be in a park. Officers were considering where people would be
keen to have further ones, although issues such as vandalism needed
to be considered. It was noted that the
Council had more than any other Local Authority in the
country.
- It was
clarified that the wording in the document explained that if
tree-planting alone was used to neutralise carbon emissions then
trees would need to be planted outside the city. There was no
proposal to plant large numbers of trees outside the
city. Additional measures as well as
tree-planting would be used.
- Heat-pumps would not be effective in buildings that were not
properly insulated. As such a retrofit
process was being conducted, which included appropriate insulation
measures, based on assessments made.
Heat-pumps would only be installed in buildings where they worked
effectively. Resource was an issue in
this process. Whilst work was being
done on Council house insulation, it was dependent on government
grants. The Council were contributing
money from rents into the process, but it was not
enough.
- Concern was raised about energy efficiency in private rented
homes and the need for it to be improved.
- In
response to concern raised about lights being on in City Hall
whilst it was empty, it was clarified that City Hall lighting was
controlled by movement sensors, and as such lights would only be on
if the building was occupied.
- Officers were asked to give consideration to extending the
consultation period as it was suggested that many residents were
unaware of the consultation and had not had a chance to participate
in it. However, it was recognised that
extending the consultation period would jeopardise the timescale of
the Strategy Plan going to Full Council in March 2024.
- In
relation to action number 1.09 Ways of Working and its target to
reduce floorspace by at least 10% over 5 years, it was questioned
whether this is likely to be achieved given that staff in some
areas are being encouraged to return to offices. The importance of
addressing the issues surrounding the climate impact caused by
purchasing of products was raised.
- Concern was raised about the approval of planning applications
which involved felling trees due to them being an
‘inconvenience’. It was
suggested that the Council needed to be more assertive about
protecting what the city has.
- Referring to action number 4.02 Review of options to deliver the
LTP vision via demand management and funding support, it was asked
that the reasons for the references to workplace parking levies and
road user charges in the strategy plan be clarified. It was
clarified that, in common with a number of actions in the draft
plan, this action formed a continuation of work undertaken as part
of the first Climate Emergency Action Plan between April 2020 and
March 2023, during which a review of options had been started. This
had included consideration of a workplace parking levy, which had
been completed and concluded at the time.
- Speed
limits were one of a suite of actions.
Decisions would be taken separately on different
actions.
- With
regard to the retrofitting of private homes, government grants were
administered through the Green Homes Grants scheme and the Home
Upgrade Grants scheme, which were aimed at low-income and less
energy efficient housing – with the HUG scheme focusing on
homes which are not connected to the gas network. The Council’s contractor for administering
the schemes was EON, who then sub-contracted to installers to
deliver the work.
- District Heating had been providing low cost, low carbon heating
and hot water to many council tenants for many years and the heat
metering project currently underway would ensure tenants paid only
for the energy they used. Further ways
that the district scheme could be decarbonised were being explored.
This scheme saved the most carbon out of all the schemes in the
city. As electricity from the grid became steadily decarbonised,
the benefits of having the district heating on gas combined heat
and power (CHP) would become lower and there would be a need to
move it across to an electric or other low carbon fuel
source.
- In
terms of the involvement of businesses, the Council plan was based
on what the Council could do to support and encourage
them. Many private businesses would
take action of their own accord. The
Council sought resources to support businesses to take action,
particularly those small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs) with
less capacity to get started. If
funding became available for a grant scheme the Council would be
keen to look to support further business action in the city,
following its very successful Green BELLE grant scheme. The Council also had a Social Value Charter for
when it worked with businesses and undertaking
procurement.
- Leicester Nirvana FC had worked towards reducing their
carbon. They were working with the
Council on this.
- It was
important to have choices on transport and access to where people
needed to go. Diesel was an ongoing
issue on air quality.
- It was
suggested that investment in infrastructure such as Electric
Vehicle (EV) Charging Points had been made based on the
anticipation of legislation on the phasing out of petrol and diesel
vehicles in favour of EVs which now had an uncertain timetable. The
issue of EV charging points would be considered at the next meeting
of the Commission.
- It was
commented that, while the action plan referred to the
Council’s Food Plan for actions to promote lower carbon food
choices, there was very little action of that kind currently in the
Food Plan. The possibility of Council catering becoming plant based
was raised as plant-based food was more sustainable the rearing of
cattle and associated deforestation were a big contributor to
climate change. It was also suggested
that plant based catering was more cost-effective. The issue of diets and ingredients would be
considered when updating the Food Plan.
- The
impact of pension fund investments was highlighted and, while
pension-fund divestment was not within the Council’s direct
control, it was noted that action by Leicestershire County Council
to decarbonise pension fund investments had been actively
encouraged by the City Council’s representatives. This could
be recognised in the new action plan.
- The merits of
EV use were discussed. It was suggested that EV use could be encouraged by granting them free parking
and allowing them to use bus lanes.
- It was suggested that improving the bus service,
especially with regard to frequency, would encourage their
use.
A presentation was made by Dr Andrew Reeves,
Associate Professor, Institute of Energy and Sustainable
Development at De Montfort University, representing the Climate
Commission using the slides published with the agenda
papers.
Key points in addition to those on the slides
included:
- The
Climate Commission had been convened to feed back on the Action
Plan.
- The
Action Plan was a commendable piece of work that demonstrated a
clear understanding of the challenge.
The overall focus was well-put and it had clearly set out what the
scenario would look like if the goals were achieved.
- There
was a good principle on how to develop climate actions, and the
fairness of the actions had been considered.
- Challenges included the scale of the actions, and it was
recognised that the Council was not near to what was
needed. Another challenge was
resourcing and how the Council could obtain the money and resources
to make things happen on the scale needed.
- With
regard to the recommendations (as set out on the slide), it was
important to consider:
- What
the actions would look like.
- How to
quantify gaps – i.e. how to show what has been done and what
needs to be done.
- The
co-benefits, linking to UN sustainability goals.
- More
systematic mapping of opportunities.
- With
specific regard to the recommendation on Community Engagement, it
was important to consider what overall outcomes were needed from
the engagement plan and what success would look like.
- With
specific regard to the recommendation on Co-benefits, a more
systematic mapping of opportunities was needed.
- With
specific regard to the recommendation on Capacity Building, it was
recognised that the Council Sustainability Team would not have the
capacity to make all the necessary decisions, however, they could
be consulted on them. There was a need
to spread knowledge across different groups.
- With
specific regard to the recommendation on the Circular Economy, the
workings of businesses needed to be considered.
- The
use of graphics in the presentation was praised and it was
suggested that in comparison the draft strategy was very dense and
could benefit from pictures and graphics and being more concise as
this could encourage greater engagement.
The Chair thanked Dr Reeves for the
presentation.
The Committee were invited to ask questions and make
comments. Key points
included:
- It was
suggested that a ‘Kite Mark’ could be issued to
businesses that were climate ready.
Officers agreed to look into this.
- With
regard to partners and getting involved with businesses, the
Leicester and Leicestershire Local Enterprise Partnership (LLEP)
had promoted the opportunity to join a network for businesses to
look at how they could lower carbon.
- A
concern was raised about the exclusion of most Scope 3 emissions
from the scope of the net zero ambition for the city and the
council. A reassurance was given by officers in response that it
was not a question of them being concealed, and that the plan did
aim to reduce them. However, it was
highlighted that emissions caused by producing and transporting
goods into the city were the joint responsibility of the suppliers
as well as the council and others in Leicester purchasing them. It
was therefore a reasonable approach for the Council to have a
measurable net-zero ambition focusing on those emissions it could
more significantly control while also trying to use its influence
to reduce Scope 3 emissions in terms of what it bought. However, in
the case of that latter it was recognised that the Council did not
have as much control.
- Officers would review the report on a line-by-line basis in
terms of how to respond to recommendations.
- Officers noted that there were already actions in the draft plan
which addressed certain of the Commission’s recommendations,
notably: there was an action (7.07) in the draft plan to carry out
a review of options on tackling residual carbon emissions. This
could consider the merits of adopting the Oxford
Principles.
- There
was an action (1.18) in the plan looking at the next steps in
decarbonising the council’s supply chain.
- There
was an action (7.06) in the draft plan for the Sustainability Team
to look at updating the Climate Adaptation Risk
Assessment.
- The
Chair noted that the recommendations had already made a difference
to the work of the Council.
A presentation was made by Dr Jose Hernandez,
Director, Head of Sustainability and Energy at Pick Everard,
representing the Climate Emergency Partnership using the slides
published with the agenda papers.
Key points in addition to those on the slides
included:
- There
had been significant engagement with the organisations involved on
how to align with the Council.
- When
discussing targets, it was important to focus not just on the end
result but on how quickly it could be moved towards.
- There
were significant challenges including the level of investment and
resources required, but it was necessary to see this as an
opportunity.
- There
had been discussion on what could be controlled and influenced
through the action plan.
- Changes announced such as EV charging and issues with private
housing had been discussed and it was important to see certainty
and direction.
- The
five-year plan aimed to provide direction. In some cases, this would be difficult to
achieve.
- Highlighted areas included:
- Refurbishments – Consideration of new construction and the
need to reduce energy and carbon in doing so. It was highlighted that refurbishment was an
important option to consider before making any decision to build
from scratch, as it could save a lot of ‘embodied
carbon’ from being wasted by demolishing existing buildings
and using new materials to build new ones. However, it was
acknowledged that refurbishment was not always
possible.
- Social
Value, Whole Life Carbon and Cost Analysis and Circular Economy
– It was important to understand long-term impacts of
proposals on carbon and cost before making decisions.
- Reinforcement of partnerships – The Council needed to look
at what had been done elsewhere and also look at the possibility of
undertaking a Local Area Energy Planning project.
- Businesses – it was important that the members of the
partnership were involved and committed to mitigating climate
change. It was very difficult for companies, so support would be
useful.
- It was
important to consider that assets might become
‘stranded’ as a result of climate change i.e. they
might not be usable or adaptable in future.
- Partnership members were showcasing their
commitment.
- DeMontfort University was committed to climate action, generating heat
renewably and supporting public engagement activity. Staff at the University were working on
‘net-zero fashion’, work was ongoing.
- Other
organisations that had made commitments included the NHS and the
National Space Centre, as outlined on the slides.
- Pick
Everard recognised that it was their moral duty to do their
utmost. They were looking at net-zero
in the city and were committed to social value.
The Chair thanked Dr Hernandez for the
presentation.
The Committee were invited to ask questions and make
comments. Key points
included:
- The
Building and Construction sector made up around 30-40%of global
carbon emissions in terms of both building and the inhabiting of
buildings. Operational carbon would
diminish. What came from the building
process was important.
- Refurbishment was key due to the lower embodied carbon
content. It was recognised that this
depended on how much was being done.
The importance of improving existing buildings was
highlighted. The reconstruction of St
Margaret’s Bus Station was used as an example as it had
re-used the foundations and structure.
AGREED:
That the Draft City Council’s Climate
Emergency Action Plan be NOTED.