• Events
  • Masters Course
  • Members area
  • Jobs
  • Media Centre
  • Contact UK
  • | USA
Home
  • Home
  • About
  • Our Work
  • Projects
  • Blogs
  • GreenFutures
  • The Lab
  • Forum Network
  • GreenFutures

What we work on

  • Food
  • Energy
  • Finance
  • Other sectors

How we do it

  • Futures & Diagnosis
  • Innovation
  • Scaling up
  • Sustainable Business
Home › Blogs › Show All › Never waste a good crisitunity

Filter

  • Show All
  • Forum Blog
  • Jonathon Porritt
  • Weak Signals

Never waste a good crisitunity

7th February, 2011 by Zoe Le Grand | Add a comment
Tags :
  • Carbon
  • Public sector

I’ve never been one for corporate jargon – I don’t “push the envelope”. My thought processes are never “blue sky” or “out of the box”. So when I came across the latest bit of business-speak I had to laugh – apparently, if you turn a crisis into an opportunity it’s a “crisitunity”.

Despite the cringey new word, the sentiment behind it makes a lot of sense – when you are faced with a crisis, look for the opportunity. And you don’t have far to look for a crisis now. Public spending is being slashed, but people still demand better services and legislation requires huge cuts in carbon emissions.

But what if we started to view the financial crisis as an opportunity to approach service delivery in a totally new way? One which resulted in better services with lower carbon emissions?

A study by Forum for the Future and ADEPT (the Association of Directors of Environment, Economy, Planning and Transport) aims to help the public sector to seize these opportunities. “Building a Low-Carbon Britain” presents four scenarios of a low-carbon UK in 2030 and explores how the public sector might respond to each.

The study makes five recommendations for actions that councils can take now to seize the opportunities presented by a low-carbon economy. They should:

  1. Redefine the role of local government in a low-carbon economy
    As the local economy changes, so will the role of local government. The current financial crisis makes it imperative to seek out new revenue streams and re-orientate business models to encourage low-carbon behaviour.
  2. Invest in low-carbon infrastructure and set favourable planning conditions
    Opportunities range from intelligent energy saving solutions in council buildings to using planning policy and community engagement to facilitate development of large renewable infrastructure.
  3. Build resilience at the local level
    Investing now in climate change adaptation and emergency planning to cope with extreme weather events is essential. Water management and the maintenance of biodiversity are also vital to future-proof food, transport or biological systems.
  4. Prevent low-carbon social exclusion
    The drive for a low-carbon society may make some groups more vulnerable, such as rural communities isolated by higher carbon and oil prices. E-government offers a means to support these people but councils may need to make sure they have the necessary skills and access to the relevant technology.
  5. Foster low-carbon innovation
    Councils need to make radical changes in their own internal operations and service delivery. They also need to invest in low-carbon industries to encourage businesses and communities to reduce their carbon footprint, and they need to build links with universities to ensure the local workforce has the skills these industries need.

To help bring councils together, exchange ideas and find where the real opportunities for low-cost, low-carbon projects lies a series of local events are also being planned.

Some local authorities are already forging ahead and finding ways to reduce carbon emissions and deliver better services cost effectively. Cornwall County Council, for example, is investing in a huge solar park, which will bring in a new revenue stream, improve energy security and provide carbon-free energy for residents. Click here to find out more.

The Birmingham Energy Savers scheme is creating jobs and supporting the growth of green businesses by providing insulation and solar panels to residents and companies. It will help the council meet its carbon targets and lower fuel bills for the community. Click here to find out more.

Examples like these should inspire all local authorities to seek out projects that have multiple benefits – for the community, the public purse and the environment. Otherwise this “crisitunity” could go to waste.

Add your comment »

Comments

Julia Lawrence (not verified), 9 February 2011 - 22:57
  • reply

The phrase used to be a "burning platform" - the idea being that you will gladly follow anyone who can lead you off. FFF does a good job of providing that leadership.

One must of course encourage a little caution first - check the carbon gains as well as the total economic cost before taking action. The solar park will work because of the generous feed-in tariffs. Solar in the UK is typically less good value for money, in carbon terms, than most other renewables, and only survives here because of subsidy. Do we want to invest our limited tax-funded resources in technologies that don't deliver as much carbon savings as wind and biomass? Of course, solar is easy, quick, and planning-friendly. That may be enough to tip the balance, but decision-makers should be aware of the carbon savings compared to total cost, even though some of the cost is borne by taxpayers.

Add your comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions. Case insensitive.
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.

Our Partners

Contact

  • Forum in the UK
  • Forum in the USA

Keep in touch

  • Join us on Facebook
  • Follow us on Twitter
  • See us on LinkedIn
  • Forum pics on Flickr
  • Forum on YouTube

 Sign up to our newsletter

About Us

  • Meet the team
  • Our history
  • Our achievements
  • Our governance
  • Who do we work with?
  • Annual reports

Forum Network

  • Work with us
  • Members area

Our Work

  • What we work on
    • Food
    • Energy
    • Finance
    • Other sectors
  • How we do it
    • Futures & Diagnosis
    • Innovation
    • Scaling up
    • Sustainable Business

Projects

  • Show all
  • Food
  • Energy
  • Finance
  • Other Sectors
  • Futures & Diagnosis
  • Innovation
  • Sustainable Business
  • Scaling Up

Blogs

  • Show All
  • Forum Blog
  • Jonathon Porritt
  • Weak Signals

© 2011 Forum for the Future | Terms of Use | Accessibility | Privacy Policy | Site Map | Login | Logout

Site built by : New Digital Partnership

The Forum for the Future is a registered charity and a company limited by guarantee, registered in England and Wales. Registered office: Overseas House, 19-23 Ironmonger Row, London, EC1V 3QN, UK. Registered charity no. 1040519. Company no. 2959712. VAT registration no. 677 7475 70