South Wales Echo

‘Keep doing what you’re doing but do it differentl­y’

DETAILS OF COUNCIL’S CLIMATE CRISIS PLAN

- ALEX SEABROOK Local democracy reporter alex.seabrook@reachplc.com

THE action plan to tackle climate change in the Vale of Glamorgan has taken a step forward with a new board created to discuss the crisis.

Vale of Glamorgan council declared a climate emergency more than two years ago, pledging to take action to respond to the emergency by drasticall­y cutting carbon emissions.

The huge task has been delayed due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, but is still making some progress, with council bosses this week lauding recent work like using LEDs in lampposts.

The new board of council officers will meet every two months to discuss progress and explore possible steps for the council’s climate crisis plan.

But the council’s cabinet made clear the Project Zero climate plan would not mean “stopping everything” like major developmen­ts, but adapting and working in “a slightly different way”.

Council leader Neil Moore said: “It’s about still carrying on what you’re doing and what you have to do, but in a slightly different way to meet the Project Zero criteria.”

He was speaking during a cabinet meeting on Monday about the council’s programme to build new houses and schools across the Vale of Glamorgan,

using sustainabl­e constructi­on practices for zero carbon buildings.

He added: “It hasn’t gone as far as we could have done because of Covid-19, but that is still progressin­g and work continues. It doesn’t mean we have to stop and change everything we have to do, because we still have our statutory responsibi­lities too.”

The Vale council declared a climate emergency in July 2019, around the same time as the Welsh Government and many other councils in the United Kingdom.

When the Vale council voted to declare a climate emergency, some councillor­s questioned what actual effect on policy it would have. But the new Project Zero plan means staff considerin­g global warming in all areas the council works.

Cllr Lis Burnett, cabinet member for education and regenerati­on, said: “It’s very easy to put a tick box at the end of a report and say ‘have you considered the climate emergency’, but it’s a completely different thing to embed it in all our work.

“It doesn’t mean we’re going to stop building houses, because at the end of the day people still need somewhere to live. We still light our roads, but we light them with LED lights now, it’s those sorts of considerat­ions.”

Project Zero aims to cut the council’s carbon emissions to net zero by 2030, and encourage others in the

Vale of Glamorgan to reduce their emissions too.

Cllr Ben Gray, cabinet member for social care and health, said the project would not prevent new buildings and developmen­ts in the Vale of Glamorgan, but was rather a factor to consider when making key decisions.

He said: “It doesn’t mean stopping everything. It’s about adapting how we do things.

“There are still going to be buildings built in the Vale of Glamorgan and there are still going to be areas where planning comes in, where there’s going to have to be a complicate­d decision process and an understand­ing of how to most effectivel­y deal with those issues.”

 ?? ?? Penarth in the Vale of Glamorgan
Penarth in the Vale of Glamorgan

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom