UN Climate Change Conference (COP26)

Cop26

From 31 October to 12 November The UN Climate Change Conference will take place in Glasgow.

The Conference is the Conference of the Parties (known as COP 26)  to accelerate action towards the goals of the Paris Agreement and the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change.

It brings together leaders from all over the world to look at the pressing issue of our time - how humanity can take action to protect the environment and combat climate change to avert and hopefully reverse the huge detrimental environmental impact of climate change.

Throughout the COP 26 period we will be highlighting the measures that we have taken and suggesting things that we can do together as a community to support the environment, whether it’s questioning the ways that we travel, not idling our cars, recycling, being efficient with resources – and how we heat our homes  - the world’s focus is on this crucial issue that affects us all.

In June Newham Council endorsed the latest Climate Emergency Report. This is a raft of significant actions already in place to improve health, tackle the climate crisis and help kick-start economic recovery.

Action has been taken right across the council from promoting healthy school streets, revolutionising design to decarbonise buildings and retrofit housing that will create new green jobs – helping tackle the Climate Emergency, the wellbeing of residents and the economic recovery of the borough.

Newham declared a Climate Emergency in April 2019 and, following a year and a half of strategic planning and work, published a Climate Emergency Action plan in July 2020 to set out a path as the council strives to become carbon neutral by 2030 and carbon zero by 2050.

In line with the council’s commitment to publish an annual report on this work, the second and latest annual Climate Emergency Report published in June details the progress made in 2020-21 to tackle the emergency and secure a healthier future for residents and the planet.

Mayor of Newham, Rokhsana Fiaz said: “The climate emergency is the greatest existential threat to humanity and has been linked to the rise of new diseases such as the SARS-CoV-2 virus being transmitted between wild animals and humans.

“We have now begun to feel the devastating impacts scientists have been warning of for decades and as we continue to deal with the Covid-19 crisis we appreciate more than ever the need to guarantee a healthy, safe and sustainable future for our residents.

“This work runs right across the council including increasing air quality monitoring, introducing an emissions based parking scheme, decarbonising all our council buildings  switching all our street lights to 100 per cent renewable electricity, planting more trees, and transitioning our vehicle fleet to fully electric.

“This report shows that despite the unprecedented challenges of the pandemic the council has made huge steps forward this year.”

Over the past 12 months the council has:

  • Rolled out five Low Traffic Neighbourhoods and 11 Healthy School Streets along with other measures. The South Leytonstone and Forest Gate North Low Traffic Neighbourhood is the first cross-borough initiative in the Capital in collaboration with the London Borough of Waltham Forest. The measures are reducing emissions in Newham and protecting the health of our residents.
  • Launched with partners 50 Steps to a Healthier Newham strategy to improve the health and wellbeing of all residents in Newham. This strategy aims to improve air quality, tackle fuel poverty, encourage the use of green spaces to support the physical, emotional and mental wellbeing of local residents, and promote healthier lifestyles.
  • Significantly reduced investment in funds in the council’s Pensions Fund contributing negatively to climate change with another £200m of assets moved to more socially responsible funds.
  • Started to decarbonise all council buildings following the successful bid for a £2.7m grant through the Public Sector Decarbonisation Scheme.
  • Switched to 100 per cent renewable electricity for all council operated buildings, as well as all street lighting in the borough and communal lighting across all council owned housing estates.
  • Positioned Newham as one of London’s leading borough’s with the most extensive air quality monitoring networks to track progress on air quality improvements, alongside being part of the Idling Action London campaign aimed at stopping motorists from needlessly causing air pollution.
  • Accelerated the ‘Passivhaus’ standards in the council’s housebuilding programme so that all homes built are sustainable and green.
  • Embarked on the most significant council home retrofit programme in a generation, including cleaner, cheaper heating systems for all.
  • Involved young people in our response to the climate emergency, including organising a Youth Summit on the topic.
  • Expanded our network of Air Quality Health Champions to advocate our clean air agenda across the borough.

Mayor Fiaz added: “The pandemic has brought inequality into sharp focus here in Newham, particularly for those on low incomes and already struggling with poor health. That’s why the Towards a Better Newham strategy and action plan, to tackle these inequalities puts sustainability at the core of our recovery strategy.

“The COP26 this year, will bring an accelerated call for greater international commitment and action and we’ll be calling for greater resources from national government to maximise our efforts in Newham.

“Drastic action to address our Climate Emergency will remain central to the council’s approach in all that we do as we move towards our climate targets.”

The Climate Emergency Action plan (PDF)

The full climate report for 2020-21 (PDF)

UN Climate Change Conference UK 2021 website (COP26)

Published: 29 Oct 2021