Dear
all,
welcome
to another “in-between” email bulletin of Manchester Climate
Fortnightly. The next MCFly will be published on Sunday February
22nd
a) Local news
Cllr
Richard Cowell and Dr Victoria Johnson spoke at a Manchester Climate
Forum meeting on Tuesday. Cllr Cowell spoke about the Council's
“Call to Action”, and Dr Johnson spoke about her experiences at
Poznan and the international negotiations leading to Copenhagen.
A
report can be fond here. http://manchesterclimatefortnightly.blogspot.com/2009/02/local-and-global-manchester-climate.html
Arwa
Aburawa won the MCForum essay contest, with an essay that highlighted
how white the usual climate campaigning scene is, and giving a whole
series of practical steps that should be taken. Congrats to her, and
you can read her winning entry here-
http://manchesterclimatefortnightly.blogspot.com/2009/02/essay-contest-winner.html
The
Sustainable Cities Institute (yes yes, the one sponsored by Tesco)
hosted an interesting lecture on carbon emissions from production and
consumption and who is really responsible for what. It was delivered
by Dr John Barrett of the Stockholm Environment Institute, who
travelled all the way from... York, to deliver it.
The
next meeting is on Tuesday March 10, and details will appear in MCFly
in due course.
On
Saturday the “Call to Real Action” group, which is writing a
report about what the Council and the people of Manchester could do
about climate change, met for the first time. It meets again this
Saturday Feb 21st,
and is planning a half day conference on Saturday 7th
March, on the way to launching their report in early April. For more
information, and to get involved-
http://www.calltorealaction.wordpress.com
calltorealaction@googlemail.com
Council
gossip
The
Environmental Strategy Board, set up as part of the Council's “Call
to Action” on climate change, and chaired by MCC's chief executive,
Sir Howard Bernstein has already met twice. MCFly sources are
well-impressed with the speed and vigour with which things are
moving.
In
unhappier council news, the post of Director of Environmental
Strategy remains unfilled, despite interviews taking place. The job
is, MCFly is told, to be re-advertised.
b)
Upcoming local events
Tuesday February 17 at 7:00pm.
University of Manchester Students Union - Meeting Room 1Environmental Direct Action in Britain - a Short History "a look back with academic Brian Doherty at our recent past including Reclaim the Streets, the Anti-Roads movement, Mayday Protests, the Climate Camps and more......"
Friday 20 February 6.30 for 7pm
Tar Sands: The Most Destructive Project on Earth?
CUBE, 113 Portland Street, Manchester M1 6FB
On Friday 20th Feb, Jack Woodward, Canada's top aboriginal lawyer and legal council to the Beaver Lake Cree Nation, will be in Manchester to talk about his fight against Canadian tar sands.
Tar sands are an unconventional source of fossil fuel which emit on average three times more carbon emissions in their extraction and production than conventional oil. The processing involved is highly polluting and if the planned expansion of tar sand developments goes ahead unchallenged, it threatens to cause not only local ecological and social disaster, but also runaway climate change - in comparison to a list of 207 nations ranked by greenhouse gas emissions, Alberta's tar sands come out higher than 145 of them.
Sat 21 Call to Real Action from 12 noon to 2.30pm. Forming writing groups, getting the questions right, brainstorming who to ask for answers/ideas. Mingling and meeting etc.
email calltorealaction@googlemail.com for more info.
international
news stories of interest/importance
Dr
Chris Field, one of the lead authors of the last Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change, has told the American Association for the
Advancement of Science that "We now have data showing that from
2000 to 2007, greenhouse gas emissions increased far more rapidly
than we expected,"
and that- as some environmentalists said all along, the last (2007) report was too small c-conservative
The AFP story (see link below) concludes with the cheerful lines
'The
2007 fourth assessment presented at a "very conservative range
of climate outcomes" but the next report will "include
futures with a lot more warming," Field said: "We
now know that, without effective action, climate change is going to
be larger and more difficult to deal with than we thought."'
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20090214/sc_afp/usclimatewarming_20090214150716
d) "other stuff"
Competitions
“Do
you want to do something positive that benefits others?
Young
people aged 16-25 who live in Manchester can apply to the Green
Machine seed fund for up to £500 along with support and
guidance to start up their project.
Deadline
for applications: Friday
27th February
For
more information call 0161 228 0459, or email:
greenmachine@myvp.org.uk
Blog posts
Boff,
we've gone on a bit of a blogging frenzy of late. Don't believe us?
Check it out...
manchesterclimatefortnightly.blogspot.com
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