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Corporate Environmental Sustainability
In 2000 Councillor John Sweeney signed the Nottingham Declaration on Climate Change on behalf of the Council, which signals that the Council acknowledges that climate change is occurring and commits us to taking action to mitigate the causes of climate change.
Our corporate plan Changing Gear 2008 – 2011 includes environmental sustainability as a key theme.
Our LDF Core Strategy contains a new Sustainable Construction and Energy Efficiency Policy EN6 to ensure that all new development in the District minimises its impact on the environment. This is supported by the North Norfolk Design Guide which provides further information on potential ways of achieving the policy.
In February 2009 the Council adopted an Environmental Policy and an Environmental Sustainability Strategy. The strategy outlines the activities we will undertake in order to move towards becoming an environmentally sustainable council.
A number of activities have been undertaken in parallel with preparing the Strategy and include:
- Since October 2007 our Head Office Electricity tariff has been Eon ‘Go Green’ which is sourced from 100% renewable energy.
- 200 Intelli-panels have been installed in the Cromer office to help reduce our energy use.
- There is currently a staff energy saving campaign underway in the Cromer office, which has already delivered significant results in cutting our energy use.
- Sustainable construction training has been delivered to key members and officers.
- A sustainable procurement policy is currently being progressed.
- We have begun implementing a Green Travel Plan. This was approved in September 2009 and aims to reduce our dependence on single-occupancy car travel and increase the use of more sustainable forms of travel such as walking, cycling, car sharing and public transport.
National Indicators
NI 185 - CO2 reduction from local authority operations
We are continuously monitoring the carbon emissions from our operations including transport, buildings and contractors. In April 2010 we approved a five year Carbon Management Plan, which had been developed with the Carbon Trust on their Local Authority Carbon Management Programme. This plan identifies a number of projects and initiatives to reduce our emissions by 33% by 2014, from a 2008/9 baseline. This equates to a total reduction of 1,267 tonnes of CO2.
We have already seen a decrease in our carbon emissions for the financial year 2009-2010 compared to 2008-2009, and hope to reduce the current annual figure of 3,529 tonnes of carbon dioxide by 10% over the 2010-11 financial year as part of our 10:10 target.
NI 186 - Per capita reduction in CO2 emissions in the local authority area
We plan to undertake a number of community initiatives, including the Council’s annual GreenBuild event, which will provide information to residents to encourage them to reduce their own carbon footprints.
NI188 - Adapting to climate change
The objective of this indicator is to ensure the council has assessed and addressed the risks and opportunities of a changing climate to our own service delivery and to our residents and businesses.
The Council recognises that future climate is likely to change as predicted by the UK Climate Impacts Programme in 2002 and the CRANIUM project at the UEA, as shown in the table below.
| Impact | Likelihood |
|---|---|
| Increased annual average temperature | virtually certain |
| Rise in annual average temperature of between 1-50c | extremely likely |
| Increase in heatwaves | extremely likely |
| Increased winter rainfall and intense rainfall events | likely |
| Sea level rise of up to +0.88m | likely |
| Drier summers, with average daily rainfall decreasing by as much as 100% | likely |
| Increase in duration of summer dry periods by up to 10 days | more likely than not |










