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Carbon Management Plan 2023-2030

Carbon management and the use of renewable sources of power are increasingly significant issues as the impacts of climate change become apparent.

Burning fossil fuels produces large amounts of greenhouse gas emissions that contribute to global warming. Unless these processes are brought under control severe impacts are likely. They include major changes to weather patterns and the loss of habitats. Reducing the use of fossil fuels and replacing them with low or no emission, renewable sources of energy plays a key role in tackling climate change.

We take these issues very seriously and our Sustainability Projects Team has a remit to promote carbon reduction and energy management through:

  • Minimising energy consumption and carbon emissions.
  • Increasing the amount of renewable energy generated by Glasgow City Council.
  • Promoting renewable energy development within Glasgow.
  • Promoting behavioural change in Council operation and management.

Development of the Carbon Management Plan (CMP)

Glasgow City Council (GCC) has long recognised its role and responsibilities in mitigating emission from its own activities.

CMP Phase 1 saw the Council emissions reduced by 9% between 2008 and 2013.

Phase 2 of the plan, CMP2, built on this work and helped the Council to reduce its carbon emissions by 46.6% between 2013 and 2020. A full breakdown of this can be viewed here.

Carbon Management Plan 3 was approved at committee in March 2024 and will set out how the Council intends to support this ambition and utilise the Council Estate, assets and resources to catalyse this transition for the City.

In line with the ambitions for the City, the target for the Council estate and activities will be to achieve NCZ emissions by 2030.

Given the persistence of CO2 in the atmosphere, the rate of decarbonisation is, perhaps, more important than the absolute target.

Hence, this plan also endeavours to adopt the principal of 'reducing carbon early', in essence, prevention is better than the cure.

The ambition for any carbon strategy should be the integration of zero and low carbon technologies, methodologies and processes throughout all organisational plans, strategies and activities, hence this plan is an opportunity to support a number of other Council strategies and objectives that have begun to do so whilst setting out the Council's position for those that have yet to be developed.

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Last modified on 21 October 2024

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