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Home News

Four reasons why Cumbria could benefit from green recovery plan

by Cumbria Crack
13/03/2021
in News
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Wind farm

A professor at a leading university has earmarked Cumbria as a place “that could really benefit from a green recovery plan”.

The document is co-authored by Nick Robins, professor in practice for sustainable finance at the London School of Economic’s Grantham Research Institute, and Ciara Shannon from Eden Works, a project that looks to drive the move to net-zero.

Cumbria is a county with a strong industrial heritage and unrivalled natural assets, explained Ciara.

The proposed Woodhouse Colliery site near Whitehaven has catapulted Cumbria into the national headlines.

“The decision is widely seen to be wholly incompatible with the UK’s climate objectives: the Climate Change Committee (CCC) states that “a new coking coal mine in Cumbria will increase global emissions and have an appreciable impact on the UK’s legally binding carbon budgets,” said Ciara.

“A better route to economic prosperity after COVID-19 is urgently needed, one that is anchored in the industries of the future, rather than those of the past,” continued Ciara.

“Cumbria County Council’s recent decision to review the plans for the colliery is a welcome step and presents a perfect opportunity to change course and throw its weight behind a robust green recovery plan.

A green recovery plan could be built around four key pillars:

1. Cumbria’s rich potential for green economic development

“Harnessing Cumbria’s unique green assets for the national effort to build a resilient, net-zero economy by 2050. Here, the county has two core strengths: its renewable energy resources and its rural landscape.

“Historically, Cumbria’s ‘energy coast’ focused first on coal then on nuclear; now it is moving rapidly into the renewable era. The Walney Extension Offshore Wind Farm, located 15km west of Barrow-in-Furness, is one of the world’s largest, and the area hosts over a fifth of the UK’s wind farm generation capacity.

“Cumbria also has a ‘first of its kind’ £12.7m hydrogen research facility currently being built and this will investigate how existing transmission assets could supply hydrogen to heat homes and deliver green energy to industry.

“Add to this the Cumbrian coast has one of the UK’s highest tidal ranges, with plans to develop a variety of tidal lagoons being mooted, as well as an ‘electric bridge’ across the Solway Firth.

“Inland are many of the UK’s fastest flowing waterways with more than half of the north west’s potential for small scale hydropower generation. Community-owned energy also offers a route for connecting renewables with local empowerment.

“What is missing, however, is a clear strategy to seize all this clean energy potential in ways that can provide high-quality local jobs and supply chains.”

She also states that improving the management of peatland in the Lake District could be key, as this holds about 23 million tonnes of carbon. The reshaping of agricultural subsidies could also pave the way for new business models built around enhancing natural capital, not least through carbon storage, she said.

2. Economic renewal through local net zero plans

“This pillar would focus on the development of local net zero plans to drive economic renewal, not least for the housing sector and transport system. The county’s economic strategy already highlights the construction sector as a strength, supporting 14,000 jobs and involving over 800 small businesses.

“This sector will provide the foundation for retrofitting every building in the county that needs it, to be energy-efficient, net-zero and resilient to flooding.

“There is also the option in some areas to include large-scale district heating networks, along with area-based retrofits focusing on entire streets and communities. Here, a special focus on social housing and low-income households presents the prospect of a triple dividend: lower energy bills, better health and reduced pollution.

“Transport infrastructure will also need rethinking to deliver zero-emission connectivity across this rural region, rolling out electric vehicle infrastructure as well as expanding public transport and rail links. Taking an active approach to the net-zero transition could also be the basis to realise Cumbria’s ambitions in advanced manufacturing across the industrial, transport, built environment and nature-based solution sectors.”

3. Community participation in plans

“The third pillar of the strategy should focus on the vital role of citizen engagement across Cumbria in the design and delivery of plans. A striking conclusion of the UK’s Citizen Assembly last year was the need for climate action to be fair, in terms of people’s jobs, families and communities.

“Too often in the past, economic transitions have been something done to the people rather than shaped by them. New approaches to citizen involvement are needed: Kendal has already set up a climate change citizens’ jury.

To be successful, the plans to reach net-zero have to be rooted in community participation across the county, particularly by those whose lives and livelihoods have been hit hardest by the pandemic. A number of cities and regions are setting up broad-based ‘climate commissions’, to drive this process, for example in Yorkshire and Humber across the Pennines.”

4. Investment to make it happen

“A ‘wall of money’ is building up from UK investors and banks committed to net-zero and many are now supporting climate action through a ‘just transition’. The challenge is the absence of a pipeline of bankable projects that not only deliver financial returns but also generate real benefits for local communities.

“Cumbria, like every part of the country, needs to work out how to access the new UK Infrastructure Bank whose missions will be to tackle climate change and support regional development. Importantly, this also means drawing on local finance: one estimate suggests there is around £4 billion of investable wealth per 100,000 people in the UK, which means that for the 500,000 in Cumbria there could be around £20 billion.

“Currently, there are very few mechanisms to enable people to channel their savings and pensions into investments that deliver returns and support the local economy. Recently, local authorities in Warrington and West Berkshire have issued Community Municipal Investments to tap growing demand from savers. The same could be done in Cumbria.”

Ciara concluded: “This course correction will not be easy. Yet Cumbria has perhaps more potential to prosper from a just transition to net-zero than many other parts of the UK, given its wealth of green assets.

“Drawing up a green recovery plan in 2021, based on these four pillars, could set the county on its way.”

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