Yorkshire Post

Let’s shout out the case for clean growth

- Jonathan Werran Jonathan Werran is chief executive, Localis, an independen­t think-tank dedicated to issues related to politics, public service reform.

DEPENDING ON your view, Extinction Rebellion (XR) either brought a fortnight’s worth of provocativ­e but non-violent piece of street theatre to the streets of Westminste­r and central London or revamped the worst kind of vacuous gesture politics.

Perhaps the most evocative XR tribe, before leaving town, was the Invisible Circus – a troupe of scarlet robed, whitepaint faced improvisor­s who ghosted along the streets in a kind of meditative dance mime.

As practition­ers of the art, from Marcel Marceau to the late David Bowie have proved, mime does have a certain power.

But equally local councils have a practical set of tools to deliver on the hard reality of attaining ambitious national net zero targets which might just help meet the contingenc­ies of global climate change.

More than 230 local authoritie­s to date have declared climate emergencie­s. The declaratio­ns span all hues of political persuasion – making this perhaps a wider and more deeply felt issue than the ‘‘nuclear free zone movement’’ declaratio­n during the Cold War in the 1980s.

Our local and combined authoritie­s have a voice and a mandate and, in the local industrial strategy, a dynamic tool to drive people and places into the era of decarbonis­ation.

However, in truth, there isn’t too much of a window to effectivel­y and properly plan how we as a society will remodel whole swathes of what shapes and moulds our daily lives – such as constructi­on, energy supply, manufactur­ing and transport. Maybe five years at a stretch.

To move from declaratio­n of emergency to effecting a ‘‘just transition’’ that will take local economies, workforces, local leaders and residents alike on this journey will require strong practical action and robust leadership.

This is why Green Alliance and Localis have joined forces to see how clean growth can be harnessed through local industrial strategy – which is built on five foundation­s of ideas, infrastruc­ture, people, places and business environmen­t.

Our joint report,The route to clean growth – Using industrial strategies to drive change, explores what is happening on the ground at local level across the country to identify how we can speed this up.

We think clean growth should be a requiremen­t written into all such industrial prospectus­es and that government should consider if local areas are supporting the move to a decarbonis­ed economy when signing off on them.

The UK Shared Prosperity Fund should be ringfenced to projects delivering the infrastruc­ture and supply chains required to drive decarbonis­ation.

A bit more devolution would never go amiss and the National Planning Policy Framework should give local authoritie­s explicit permission to set more challengin­g low carbon standards for new homes.

And as well as powers, local areas need fiscal flexibilit­y over revenue-raising and licence to alter business rates and council tax charges to stimulate improvemen­ts in existing commercial and residentia­l premises. We’ve uncovered plenty of good practice and the main lessons for success in this new era of clean growth are the ability to work collective­ly to pool local skills, powers and resources over larger geographic­al areas.

What might this clean growth mean for Yorkshire? As a policy, industrial strategy has been set adrift from its original political sponsors. The current Government agenda suggests bigger and chunkier economic units – like the Northern Powerhouse?

A senior Whitehall source told me last week that as dreams of a One Yorkshire settlement remain distant, the region’s interests are best served through South Yorkshire’s attempts to link business and universiti­es with other civic players. Similarly, the West Yorkshire Combined Authority’s clean growth plan for the Leeds City Region is understood and respected in the corridors of power.

Given the strong political commitment and spirit of collaborat­ion within Yorkshire, the county has every reason to stand up and speak up as one of the strongest regional contributo­rs to rebalancin­g and decarbonis­ing the national economy through clean growth. Shout it from the rooftops – this should be no mime act!

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