Eight English Cities Pledge More Climate Action
UK: November 9, 2007
LONDON - Eight provincial English cities pledged on Thursday to take extra
steps to combat climate change, echoing the actions of several counterparts
in the United States.
Birmingham, Bristol, Newcastle, Sheffield, Leeds, Nottingham, Liverpool and
Manchester promised to meet or exceed the goal of cutting carbon emissions
by 60 percent by 2050 to be set out next week in the Climate Change Bill.
They also pledged to "show leadership" by getting the public and private
sector actively involved and to build climate impact into all
decision-making processes including procurement, transport, housing, waste,
water and land use.
Environmental campaigners welcomed the declaration, signed in Nottingham
after a two day meeting, and urged the government to raise the 60 percent
target in the Climate Change Bill to 80 percent.
"The best city leaders now realise that the success of their city depends on
them becoming low carbon economies, said Paul de Zylva, head of Friends of
the Earth England.
"The government must now strengthen its proposed climate law to help
England's cities make this shift and turn today's welcome pledge into more
than just warm words," he added.
London has also set out its own plans to cut the city's climate-warming
carbon emissions by 60 percent within 20 years.
Mayor Ken Livingstone has also made the city a driving force in the C40
grouping of mayors of major cities worldwide who are setting their own
cutting-edge climate action programmes covering building, emission and
energy efficiency standards.
(Reporting by Jeremy Lovell; Editing by Steve Addison)
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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