Manchester To Lead On UK Carbon Cutting Programme

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Manchester, along with the nine other members of the Association of Greater Manchester Authorities, have recently become part of a unique partnership.

The Low Carbon Cities Programme (LCCP) will work with the ten members of the Association of Greater Manchester Authorities to put in place a comprehensive plan to deliver on the challenge of climate change.

Manchester is one of three UK cities selected by the government to develop a tailored action plan to slash CO2 emissions under a new scheme announced by Minister for Climate Change Joan Ruddock, with Manchester City Council's Green City Team helping to beat off stiff competition from other UK cities to sit alongside Bristol and Leeds as the Government's key partners.

The pilot will aim to deliver on a ground breaking new compact that highlights the leadership role cities need to take for the UK to deliver on climate change, and agrees key action areas to accelerate the rate at which we cut emissions and adapt to a changing climate.

The lessons learned and plans developed in Manchester can then be deployed across the UK. Under the LCCP, the Carbon Trust and the Energy Saving Trust
will work with Manchester to develop a significant GM wide-wide plan to achieve a low carbon economy which is both prosperous and sustainable.

Manchester will share a £250,000 fund with Leeds and Bristol to plan new
and innovative ways to achieve cuts in carbon emissions, including the generation of renewable energy and trigeneration (locally generating electricity, heat and cooling from a single source such as waste water or biomass).

It will aim to make it easier for people to take action on climate change, by simplifying and improving measures that help residents, businesses and public agencies achieve and support low carbon lifestyles, and implement the practical actions needed to cut their carbon footprint.

Emissions across Greater Manchester are currently over 19 million tonnes a year. In order to avoid climate change reaching catastrophic levels, those emissions need to be cut by as much as 6 million tonnes by 2020 and this new city partnership will help quantify the impact of the many policies and initiatives already in place and
identify the additional steps that public agencies, businesses and communities need to take in order to achieve this goal.

The experience Manchester gains from the LCCP will be shared with other major UK cities and the lessons learned will help create examples of best practice which could be followed by all major urban conurbations.
Another new programme from the UK Business Council for Sustainable Energy was announced to support the delivery of the plans, with millions of pounds available to implement practical measures to tackle climate change.

The UK BCSE will be running a series of events around the UK to help identify and deliver on opportunities for major carbon cuts.