ENVIRONMENT AGENCY GET TO THE ROOT OF CLIMATE CHANGE

Environmental Panorama
International
March of 2007

 

Holly Smith - 16-Mar-2007 - The Environment Agency will get to the root of climate change on 23 March 2007 when they join forces with The National Forest to plant 650 trees.

The trees will offset the miles travelled on business by our staff in the Lower Trent area. A team of approximately 20 volunteers will plant the native broad-leaved trees at 1pm on 23rd March at a National Forest site at Ibstock.

Mark Haslam, an Environment Manager for Leicestershire and the Soar Valley said; "I am thrilled that we are planting these trees at Ibstock to reduce our carbon footprint. We all cause carbon dioxide emissions by burning fossil fuels: oil, coal and natural gas for heating and through the use of oil based fuel for travel."

"At the Environment Agency all our offices are supplied with green electricity which is sourced from renewable energy such as Wind Power, or Hydroelectric Power. Therefore our major impact is through business travel, which is why we are taking a major step to reduce and offset this."

"All business mileage undertaken in the Environment Agency is monitored which enabled the total carbon footprint of our patch to be calculated. We want to set a challenge to others and basically say if we can do it so can you."

Notes to editors

The National Forest

To find out more about The National Forest log on to http://www.nationalforest.org/

How we tackled out carbon footprint

Last year we introduced some other simple initiatives in the Lower Trent Area to help to reduce our carbon footprint. These changes have not only reduced our business impact on our environment but realised significant cost savings and efficiencies.

We have:

Introduced double sided printing and copying of all documents, saving 30% on stationary costs.
Developed a business travel plan, reducing our mileage by 20%.
Installed waterless urinals in all male toilets and placed Hippo-bags in all cisterns, reducing our water consumption by 20%.
Placed recycling facilities on all floors throughout our buildings, cutting our waste production by 25%.
Installed motion detectors on all corridor lighting, reducing our electricity costs by 10%.
Utilised BT Meet Me teleconferencing, reducing business travel time by 15%.

+ More

Environment Agency improvements to south London “Oasis”

Lucy Harding - 12-Mar-2007 - The Environment Agency will start improvements on another section of the River Darent today (Monday, 12 March). The latest work on the river will affect a 300 metre stretch at Franks Lane, near Horton Kirby.

The work will restore a section of the River Darent to a more natural state. The Environment Agency will move the gravel in the river around to reinstate features like pools, riffles and gravel bars – all of which will provide a better habitat for wildlife such as invertebrates, fish and water voles.

Work by the Environment Agency and partners, including water companies and the local community, has brought the river back from the brink of disaster. The Darent is a chalk stream and is fed by groundwater – water that is stored under ground. Over time, more and more of this water has been taken out – or abstracted – from groundwater for public supply, which almost devastated the river. The Darent Action Plan aims to reduce abstraction close to the river to improve river flows.

The Franks Lane rehabilitation project is the third in a series of restoration stretches on the Darent. Previous restoration work has been carried out at Hawley Manor near Dartford and Lullingstone Castle near Eynesford.

Tom Cook, who is managing the project for the Environment Agency said:

“The River Darent is an important chalk stream habitat. Due to our restoration works in recent years, we have seen improvements for river invertebrates, which are an important food source for fish. The works will create better habitat for water voles and birds too. These are all indications that the river is improving. There is still a lot to do, but the work at Franks Lane will make an important contribution to the river, creating a better place for wildlife and the local community.”

 
 

Source: Environment Agency – United Kingdom (http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk)
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