Zero Carbon Britain from two different authors
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Zero Carbon Britain from two different authors
I've just bought ZED Life - How To Build A Low Carbon Society Today by well known green architect Bill Dunster of ZED Factory fame. It's published by RIBA Publishing, ISBN 978-1-85946-999-6 at £30.
I'll let you know what its like when I've finished reading it. On previous form, though, that could take a couple of years.
The CAT Zero Carbon Britain report - Making It Happen - is available as a free download from the Zero Carbon Britain website.
I'll let you know what its like when I've finished reading it. On previous form, though, that could take a couple of years.
The CAT Zero Carbon Britain report - Making It Happen - is available as a free download from the Zero Carbon Britain website.
Action is the antidote to despair - Joan Baez
- BritDownUnder
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Me too, but I wasn't interested. After the 1st 10 pages of mutual backscratching, he gave us the unimaginative limits of politics versus climate.
How about we ban all physical travel to meetings? You know like those climate gurus swanning around the world for a taxpayer expensed love in? There will be plenty video conferencing solutions possible. To get round the foaming anti-centralists all you need to do is ban expenses for marketing, travel, + wages for time away from your day job. From the litter pickers [who get no perks anyway] all the way up to the £400000pa clown running the Redcross in London. If you want to talk to people, switch on your computer at your place of work. That should offer the useless eaters in gov something to legislate.
How about we ban all physical travel to meetings? You know like those climate gurus swanning around the world for a taxpayer expensed love in? There will be plenty video conferencing solutions possible. To get round the foaming anti-centralists all you need to do is ban expenses for marketing, travel, + wages for time away from your day job. From the litter pickers [who get no perks anyway] all the way up to the £400000pa clown running the Redcross in London. If you want to talk to people, switch on your computer at your place of work. That should offer the useless eaters in gov something to legislate.
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Not quite so bad, but I am travelling from Newbury to Machynlleth in West Wales for their Zero Carbon Britain course at CAT in May. I'll be going by train and then taxi from the station to Centre for Alternative Technology but it is still travelling all the way to about as far west as I can go in Wales. They do usually offer Welsh Rainwater in jugs from their own water collection and treatment system though.
I have always been struck by the irony of the situation where one of the country's premier sustainability centres is in about as unsustainable position for a visitor attraction as you can get. It was a cheap bit of land in the early 1970s when CAT was set up, I suppose, and they perhaps didn't realise just how many people would want to visit and take courses there.
I will be going again in July to run the Earth Building course for them. Hopefully, I will be able to go by train this time instead of taking a 20mpg Discovery with a 3.5t GVW trailer on the back with a tonne or more of clay soil in it.
I have always been struck by the irony of the situation where one of the country's premier sustainability centres is in about as unsustainable position for a visitor attraction as you can get. It was a cheap bit of land in the early 1970s when CAT was set up, I suppose, and they perhaps didn't realise just how many people would want to visit and take courses there.
I will be going again in July to run the Earth Building course for them. Hopefully, I will be able to go by train this time instead of taking a 20mpg Discovery with a 3.5t GVW trailer on the back with a tonne or more of clay soil in it.
Action is the antidote to despair - Joan Baez
Of course that's one of the main reasons why CSE was established!kenneal - lagger wrote:I have always been struck by the irony of the situation where one of the country's premier sustainability centres is in about as unsustainable position for a visitor attraction as you can get. It was a cheap bit of land in the early 1970s when CAT was set up, I suppose, and they perhaps didn't realise just how many people would want to visit and take courses there.
https://www.cse.org.uk
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CAT specialises in education, short courses and post grad, and the Zero Carbon Britain Reports rather than research projects.
Last edited by kenneal - lagger on 22 Mar 2018, 13:19, edited 1 time in total.
Action is the antidote to despair - Joan Baez
- RenewableCandy
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Did that include luggage and using the stairs off the plane?RenewableCandy wrote:... in the end £9 from RyanAir won the day...
Action is the antidote to despair - Joan Baez
Indeed, I contributed to the first ZCB report and am a trustee at CSE. CSE spun out of CAT as the 'implementation' arm of CAT - specially getting to the people, realising the change CAT was visioning. Today there's no connection between the two organisations.kenneal - lagger wrote:CAT specialises in education, short courses and post grad, and the Zero Carbon Britain Reports rather than research projects.
Here are some example of CSE's work: https://www.cse.org.uk/our-work
- RenewableCandy
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I actually thought of that song while I was writingkenneal - lagger wrote:Did that include luggage and using the stairs off the plane?RenewableCandy wrote:... in the end £9 from RyanAir won the day...
It included Hand Luggage, which turned out to be the only 'extra' I needed. (Back in the day, you could drop me from a Great Height without doing any serious damage...)