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News and views from the RSPB on climate change and what you can do about it.
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  • A few days left to add your support for our wildlife

    olly watts
    olly watts

    Jim Densham, Senior Policy Officer RSPB Scotland

     ‘Harvey is what climate change looks like’ - shouted media headlines recently, http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2017/08/28/climate-change-hurricane-harvey-215547 highlighting that the impacts of climate change are happening here and now, not a future threat. ‘Kittiwake chick starvation is what climate change looks like’ or ‘capercaillie dying out is what…

    • 19 Sep 2017
  • Renewable costs are falling fast, so why is the Government still supporting risky and costly fracking?

    Matt Williams
    Matt Williams

    The UK Government has today announced a new set of contracts that it’s awarding to support renewable energy technologies. The price offered to offshore wind has fallen by around half compared to 2015. This demonstrates how substantially the cost of renewable energy has fallen over recent years. Offshore wind is becoming very cost competitive compared to fossil fuel technologies.

    Offshore wind turbine, rspb-images…

    • 11 Sep 2017
  • Climate change - what does it mean for birds?

    Matt Williams
    Matt Williams

    By Matt Williams and Melanie Coath

    Climate change can pose real challenges to wildlife. Here we explore a bit about how birds are affected, what the RSPB is doing, and one simple thing you can do to help.

    Seeing an osprey fly south over my garden a few days ago, I realised that autumn migration is well underway for many of our birds. I can’t help but wonder what difficulties that osprey and other birds will encounter…

    • 30 Aug 2017
  • Aviation, fracking, bioenergy: three sectors that could break the UK carbon budgets

    Matt Williams
    Matt Williams

    By Ananya Mukherjee and Matt Williams

    Our colleagues Olly Watts and Melanie Coath recently wrote about the Committee on Climate Change’s (CCC) latest progress reports. These annual reports set out the Committee’s assessment of how the UK is doing in tackling emissions and preparing for the impacts of climate change.

    This blog focuses on three specific areas covered in the reports: fracking, aviation and…

    • 23 Aug 2017
  • An end to fossil fuel vehicles in the UK by 2040: a policy heading in the right direction, but is it at the right speed?

    Matt Williams
    Matt Williams

    Yesterday we heard the welcome news that the Government intends to end the sale of petrol and diesel vehicles in the UK. Make no mistake, the end of sales of fossil fuel vehicles is a good thing. But the plans have received short shrift from groups concerned about air pollution.

    What does the announcement mean for the climate, and for nature, though? The news came hot on the heels of a similar announcement by the French…

    • 27 Jul 2017
  • Not just for scientists: using climate change projections

    olly watts
    olly watts

    I’m working with the Met Office on new climate change projections for the UK, due next spring. A version of this post appeared in the project team’s newsletter.

    Nature – the animals and plants which provide the setting and powerhouse for our own lives - is beset by a range of impacts from climate change.  A climate signal has been widespread across nature in the UK for some 30 years now, and I work to…

    • 24 Jul 2017
  • Buying an electric car: our journey to helping the climate

    Matt Williams
    Matt Williams

    By Naomi Goody (Sustainable Development Adminstrator) and Matt Goody 

    With additional research by James Stephenson (work experience student) and Matt Williams (Climate Change Policy Officer).

    There’s nothing quite like feeling ahead of the curve, which is how we felt a few weeks ago when we bought an electric car. This was followed by a string of announcements about the bright future and new support for electric vehicles…

    • 18 Jul 2017
  • A new Climate Change Bill for Scotland: our hopes

    Matt Williams
    Matt Williams

    By Rebecca Bell, Senior Policy Officer.

    Last week the Scottish Government launched a consultation (https://consult.scotland.gov.uk/energy-and-climate-change-directorate/climate-change-bill) on a new Climate Change Bill, to bring Scotland’s climate change targets in line with the Paris Agreement.

    The 2009 Climate Change (Scotland) Act (http://www.legislation.gov.uk/asp/2009/12/contents) was a ground-breaking piece…

    • 6 Jul 2017
  • Solar independence day!

    Matt Williams
    Matt Williams

    By Melanie Coath, Senior Policy Officer

    Today is solar independence day! This is the UK’s annual solar celebration showcasing solar homes, solar schools, commercial solar rooftops and solar farms. You can read more about it on the Solar Trade Association’s website.

    While it is true that we are not yet independent of fossil fuels and there is still a long way to go, you may have seen reports that last month nearly…

    • 4 Jul 2017
  • Committee on Climate Change progress reports: maintaining success requires clear plans and policy

    olly watts
    olly watts

    By Olly Watts and Melanie Coath, Senior Policy Officers.

    There was a curious mix of optimism and the urgency to do more, at the launch of the Committee on Climate Change (CCC) Report to Parliament on reducing emissions and preparing for climate change.

    It was good to hear members of the Committee talk positively about the current situation. Minister Claire Perry was upbeat and strong: the world does still look to the…

    • 1 Jul 2017
  • We oppose a new opencast coal mine in England on climate grounds

    Matt Williams
    Matt Williams

    In April this year, we saw the groundbreaking headlines ‘British power generation achieves first ever coal-free day’. For the first time since the Industrial Revolution, the UK power network didn’t need any coal. This milestone is part of the inevitable trajectory towards coal coming off the UK power grid entirely in the next few years. Coal is one of the dirtiest forms of energy production used in the UK in terms…

    • 16 Jun 2017
  • The winds of change: UK renewables set record, but not without dirty bioenergy

    Matt Williams
    Matt Williams

    The winds of change have certainly blown hard this week, hard enough in fact that on Wednesday they helped to set a new record for renewable energy. National Grid was able to report that wind, nuclear and solar power combined had produced more electricity than fossil fuels combined, for the first ever time.

    This was a landmark moment, and is perhaps the mirror image of other recent headlines marking the rapid demise…

    • 10 Jun 2017
  • RSPB consultation response: Draft Government proposals for new runway published without plan for controlling climate change emissions

    Matt Williams
    Matt Williams

    Aviation is one of the fastest growing global sources of emissions. If the UK upholds its commitment to help limit temperature rises to 1.5C, then aviation could make up half of the UK’s remaining carbon budget by 2050. And as we know, climate change is the greatest long-term threat to wildlife. New airports or runways would worsen this situation, potentially placing an unrealistic burden on other sectors of the…

    • 26 May 2017
  • Compost calling: it’s time to garden without peat

    olly watts
    olly watts

    It’s April, spring getting nicely underway. Planning permission for a Scottish peat bog causes a ripple across media channels. Largely good weather brings a flurry of gardening at a late Easter-time. Garden centres are ready, stocked high for a seasonal retail boom after a late winter lull.

    Shouldn’t we question those stocks, find out about what’s behind the bags of compost we bring into our gardens?…

    • 13 Apr 2017
  • New UK Government reports reveal use of high-carbon biomass in UK power stations

    Matt Williams
    Matt Williams

    The UK Government yesterday released a new set of reports on bioenergy. Bioenergy can pose risks to both the climate and to wildlife and our recent Energy Vision report called for measures to ensure that only sustainable bioenergy is used. Scientific evidence shows that some types of bioenergy can result in meagre emissions savings or even increases in emissions. And because of its significant reliance on land use, and…

    • 9 Mar 2017
  • New reports reveal a bioenergy emissions 'black hole'

    Matt Williams
    Matt Williams

    The Climate Coalition’s Show the Love campaign this year has made it clear that the public, including RSPB supporters, are concerned about the effects climate change could have on the things they love. If Government wants to address their concerns it needs to honour its Paris Agreement commitments (to pursue efforts to limit temperature rises to 1.5 degrees) by delivering action on climate change at home.

    Climate…

    • 23 Feb 2017
  • RSPB Energy Futures on RTPI awards shortlist

    Matt Williams
    Matt Williams
    By Melanie Coath, Senior Policy Officer
     
    Earlier this month we were delighted to learn that the RSPB’s ground breaking Energy Futures project has been shortlisted for the prestigious RTPI planning awards. This project, also a finalist in last year’s Energy Institute awards, sets out our vision for how it is possible to deliver a low carbon energy future in harmony with nature.
     
    Of particular interest to…
    • 21 Feb 2017
  • The harm and the heal: stepping up on climate impacts and adaptation

    olly watts
    olly watts

    Two new reports, one for England and one for Europe, remind us of the seriousness of climate change’s impacts, and the position of the natural environment at the centre of much of this. Yet both are also a rallying call for action – indeed, Defra’s report heralds the development of the second National Adaptation Programme.

    Announcing the second Climate Change Risk Assessment, Defra Minister Lord Gardiner…

    • 2 Feb 2017
  • Bad news for wildlife as EU proposals for a 'Clean Energy EU' fall short

    Alice C
    Alice C

    Nature does not respect national boundaries. And neither do the threats faced by nature. Climate change is one of the greatest threats to wildlife (see Martin Harper's recent blog for more detail) and it is a global issue which requires action by all countries.

     As part of the Birdlife Europe partnership, we support strong action across Europe to reduce carbon emissions in order to reduce the extent of global temperature…

    • 12 Dec 2016
  • Changing with the times: restoration and more in Cumbria

    olly watts
    olly watts

    How should we develop landscapes now that climate change is bringing ever-changing conditions and, in many cases, increasing adverse impacts?

     

    I’ve had an inspirational visit to Cumbria looking at re-naturalisation projects with Natural England’s climate change adaptation people. Yes, the impacts are undoubtedly getting worse -  Storm Desmond was continually on the locals’ lips – yet there are enormous opportunities…

    • 25 Nov 2016
  • Already off course on emissions - Heathrow puts wildlife at greater risk

    olly watts
    olly watts

    Today the Government has signalled its preference for a new runway at Heathrow. A vote in Parliament next year will result in a final decision. The RSPB has long had an interest in the issue of airport development, most recently and notably when there was a proposal for an airport in the Thames Estuary, one of the most wildlife rich areas of our islands. We and others campaigned against this idea and it was rejected by…

    • 25 Oct 2016
  • Welcoming the new Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Committee

    Matt Williams
    Matt Williams

    The UK has announced that it will ratify the United Nations Paris climate deal before the end of 2016, striving to maintain its international reputation on climate change. This is great news and will be vital to putting the UK and the world on a course that avoids some of the worst risks of climate change to wildlife. Just last week the Committee on Climate Change concluded that meeting the Paris ambition of limiting…

    • 21 Oct 2016
  • 5 things you always wanted to know about bioenergy, but were too afraid to ask

    Matt Williams
    Matt Williams

    To begin with, what is bioenergy?

    Bioenergy involves the use of organic (very often plant-based) materials to generate energy for heat, electricity and transport. In some cases, bioenergy provides emissions reductions compared to fossil fuels, thereby helping to tackle climate change. In other cases it doesn’t result in these savings, or even increases emissions, and it can also pose risks to wildlife.

    That’s…

    • 19 Oct 2016
  • Fracking site approved in England, Underground Coal Gasification banned in Scotland

    Matt Williams
    Matt Williams
    There were two important announcements yesterday regarding 'unconventional fossil fuels' in the UK. First, the UK Government announced that it was approving fracking at a site in Lancashire for fracking firm Cuadrilla. They've postponed taking a decision on a second site. This fracking had been rejected by the local community but central Government decided to take the final decision and 'called in' both applications.…
    • 7 Oct 2016
  • Tackling climate change without harming wildlife

    Vanessa Amaral-Rogers
    Vanessa Amaral-Rogers

    Climate change is a very real threat, but one that the Government has made a commitment to take on. A new plan is being developed for England – can you help by contacting your MP and telling them to make sure that any new policies will help our wonderful wildlife.

    With the earlier half of this year set to become the hottest since records began, it’s clear that something needs to be done. The State of Nat…

    • 3 Oct 2016
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