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Event jointlystaged by
Richard RuggCarbon Trust
Local Housing Groups; Leading the way to sustainable, low carbon communities
Richard Rugg – Managing DirectorCarbon Trust Programmes24th November 2015
What I’m going to cover
1. Introducing the Carbon Trust
2. The global context for action on climate change
3. How local housing groups are responding to this challenge
› Created in 2001 by the UK government with the mission to accelerate the move to a sustainable, low carbon economy
› Now a fully independent not-for-dividend private company, with all surpluses from commercial activities reinvested in our mission
› Team of ~180 experts including engineers, scientists, entrepreneurs, financiers, consultants, policy specialists and project managers
› To date, we have reduced our customers’ costs by over £5 billion and carbon emissions by over 50Mt
Who we are
4
What we do
ADVICE FOOTPRINTING TECHNOLOGY
Business AdviceHelping businesses capture the opportunities in a sustainable low carbon world
Government AdviceProviding policy advice and insights on the transformation of markets
Public Sector AdviceEnabling the public sector to cut costs and emissions
MeasurementUnderstanding the environmental impact of an organisation, product or service
CertificationProviding independent verification of organisational or product footprints to endorse sustainable leadership
Implementation & FinanceProviding expertise and support to businesses to put energy efficiency plans into action
Innovation Partnering with companies and governments seeking to create value from the clean technology revolution
5
What I’m going to cover
1. Public sector opportunities to demonstrate leadership
2. Public sector leadership in action
3. How we can help
The Reality of Climate Change
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change What do scientists tell us?
› Scientists are now all but certain that climate change is mostly caused by human action, and that it is already leading to changes in regional weather patterns, with extreme events on the increase.
› “Warming of the climate system is unequivocal, and, since the 1950s, many of the observed changes are unprecedented over decades to millennia. The atmosphere and ocean have warmed, the amounts of snow and ice have diminished, sea level has risen, and the concentrations of greenhouse gases have increased”
› “ Limiting climate change will require substantial and sustained reductions of greenhouse gas emissions”
Economic growth supports a bigger, healthier, better educated and aspirational population
› UN projects world population will grow from 7.3 billion today to 8.9 billion in 2050
› OECD forecasts that the global middle class will increase by three billion people over the next 20 years
› Demand for energy, food, water and materials (such as steel) is expected to increase by 30% to 80% by 2030
But stress on energy, water, land and material resources will bring new pressures
› Economic impacts driven by scarcity
› Resource price increases
› Increased price volatility
› Environmental impacts driven by use
› Increased carbon emissions
› Water stress
› Land use
› Resulting in
› Reduced security of supply
› New regulations
Renewable energy(inc. subsidies)
'Typical' business investments
Energy efficiency
0 10 20 30 40 50 60
Internal rate of return (%)
Typical investment returns
40%
10%
5%
Source: Carbon Trust analysis
Rising energy pricesWith energy prices rising, energy efficiency makes even greater business sense
1984198519861987198819891990199119921993199419951996199719981999200020012002200320042005200620072008200920102011201220132014
0.0
20.0
40.0
60.0
80.0
100.0
120.0
140.0
160.0
Coal Price Index
Gas Price Index
Electricity Price Index
Energy Price Rises – UK
Source: DECC
› Financial › Volatile fuel prices› Value at stake› Energy generation opportunities
› Reputation› Sustainability and leadership› Community leadership› Staff morale & engagement
› Legislation and regulation › Climate Change Act 2008 & Carbon Budgets › Display Energy Certificates & Building Regulations› Carbon Reduction Commitment
The Case for Action
What I’m going to cover
1. Introducing the Carbon Trust
2. The global context for action on climate change
3. How local housing groups are responding to this challenge
Just some of our customers
Early action on managing your carbon emissionsThe Benefits
› Cost savings› Compliance with legislation› Raised awareness of climate change amongst staff, stakeholders
and the public› Positive community leadership› Contribute towards Government targets
The business case is compelling…And reduction targets are ambitious
Pipeline savings
93m tCO2 £2.6bn net
07/08 08/09 09/10 10/11 11/120%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
28%Average 5 year carbon
reduction target
Our support for local housing groups
1.) Carbon Management StrategyFootprinting, target setting & strategic planning
2.) Technical Support Supporting project identification & implementation
3.) Decentralised Energy & District Heating ServiceOvercoming the barriers to off-grid energy generation
4.) Low Carbon Behaviour ProgrammeStructured approach to long term employee engagement
5.) Carbon Trust Empower™Online engagement tool for employees, suppliers &
partners
Technical & strategic support
Behaviour change
expertise
Overview
› Carbon Trust‘s Public Sector Carbon Network is an online community designed as a platform for energy, facilities, sustainability, estates and other public sector professionals to share best practice, advice on overcoming barriers and useful resources/innovations
› Users engage with the closed Network to seek trusted opinions about the direction of the industry and to better understand what solutions are on offer
› Users subscribe to daily, weekly, monthly or sector specific email updates which are used as a source of regular information
› Currently 3,653 public sector body subscribers› publicsector.carbontrust.co.uk
Our Public Sector Carbon Network helps to share best practice
The Carbon Trust’s Annual Public Sector Conference, London 2016
› Bringing together up to 250 public sector delegates, with a programme of lectures, workshops and break-out sessions, this event has become the largest public sector conference focussed on low carbon in the UK
› Date - Wednesday 10th February, 2016› Venue - 155 Bishopsgate › Capacity - up to 300 cabaret style (already over 200 signed
up)› Headline Sponsor - GE Lighting confirmed › Workshop sponsors & exhibitors – Mitsubishi, British Gas› Key note speakers
› Baroness Tessa Jowell confirmed
The contents of this presentation are the copyright of the Carbon Trust and may not be copied or republished without the prior written consent of the Carbon Trust. The trade marks, service marks and logo used in this presentation are the
property of the Carbon Trust and no licence or right is granted to use any such marks or logo.
Keep in touch!
› 0207 832 4614› [email protected]