Carbon footprint for England’s local councils is revealed
07 July 2010
A ban on councils selling green electricity into the national grid is to be overturned, Climate Change secretary Chris Huhne (pictured) said today as the carbon footprint of every local council was published. In a speech to today’s Local Government Association annual conference, he said he wants local councils to be allowed to sell electricity they produce from renewables to the national electricity grid.
“It’s ridiculous that the 1976 Local Government Act prevents councils from selling electricity from local wind turbines, or from anaerobic digestion," said Mr Huhne.
“I want to see this repealed and by the end of the year I hope local authorities will be able to sell electricity from renewables – generating revenue to help local services and keep Council Tax down. Local communities can truly benefit from the low-carbon transition.”
The carbon footprint of every local council in England is also published today, for the first time. The new figures calculate the CO2 produced by councils in powering and heating their buildings, such as libraries, schools and leisure centres, as well as emissions from business travel, fleet vehicles and even refuse trucks. Mr Huhne continued:
“By calculating their own emissions and the estimated costs of energy use, local councils will be able to identify how to save emissions and save money.
“Wasting energy means that money that could be spent on local services is also being wasted. These new statistics should put energy wastage and energy efficiency at the forefront of the minds of councillors and council officials.”
The emissions data was collected from local authorities across England for the 2008/2009 financial year. It shows that:
East Cambridgeshire (574 tonnes), East Northamptonshire (606 tonnes), Broadland (806 tonnes), Isles of Scilly (854 tonnes), and West Somerset (881 tonnes) local authorities were the lowest emitters
Birmingham (177,360 tonnes) Hertfordshire (168,570 tonnes), Lancashire (157,890 tonnes), Leeds (136,900 tonnes) and Hampshire (133,950 tonnes) local authorities were the highest emitters.
In total, local authorities were responsible for 8.3 million tonnes of CO2 which is about 1.6% of the UK Total Net CO2 emissions for calendar year 2008 (532.8 MtCO2).
The data also shows how much electricity local authorities have generated themselves, with over 600,000 KWh generated from onsite wind or solar power, and 33,800,000 KWh from onsite biomass.
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