People all around the UK have been working towards tackling climate change. From turning their thermostats down by one degree Celsius to making an entire town carbon neutral, here are some of the bright ideas that you may like to try yourself.
Ipswich Town is aiming to be the UK’s first ever carbon neutral football club. The club is encouraging fans to make energy saving pledges, and is working to decrease its own emissions. The goal? To offset the entire 3,220 tonnes of carbon dioxide that the team generates in a season.
The community of Ashton Hayes wants to be England's first carbon neutral village. Through planting trees and encouraging energy saving measures, they have already cut their emissions by 20 per cent in the first year. Other communities in the UK are also working together to decrease their carbon footprint.
LogiCity is an interactive computer game set in a 3D virtual city. The aim of the game is to reduce the carbon footprint of an average resident, along the way picking up information about climate change and how to make a difference.
With road transport responsible for more than one fifth of the UK’s CO2 emissions, the Cycle Hero website aims to turn ordinary people into heroes – by getting them onto their bikes and reducing their emissions from transport. The website also gives information about climate change to the cycling community.
Some of the projects above were made possible through the Climate Challenge Fund (CCF). Since its set up in 2006, 83 projects have received funding from the government to tell people in the UK how and why the climate is changing, and how they can make a difference. To find out more about the CCF, email: ccf@defra.gsi.gov.uk
Nine Climate Change Champions from 10 to 18 years old have been spreading the word about climate change, designing leaflets, t-shirts, presentations, videos and even radio programmes to get the message out to their communities.
To contact your nearest Climate Change Champion, email: climate.champion@defra.gsi.gov.uk
There are many ways the government is helping to reduce emissions now and in the future: