research
Climate Citizens
10th November 2020
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The UK has committed to reducing carbon emissions to net-zero by 2050. How will people respond to this challenge? What scope is there for people to live their lives differently, and how can government enable this shift? How can citizens work with government, to shape a climate strategy that works for them?

Climate Citizens, a new research initiative enabled by a UKRI-funded Fellowship, investigates citizen engagement in energy and climate governance (here’s the website). It will use deliberative methodologies, bringing citizens together with experts to develop new understandings of the role of the individual in governance, and to co-design » Continue Reading.

recentprojects
Please see research page for details of current work
11th February 2020
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Details of my current work on political responses to climate change can be found on the research page.

news research
How do politicians understand and respond to climate change?
12th October 2018
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With the IPCC’s latest report showing the urgent need for action on climate change, attention has turned once again to that tricky issue of ‘political will’. In the words of Christiana Figueres, previously head of the UN’s climate body, there is “an acute need for speed, radical collaboration, and more visionary political leadership”.

But what do the politicians themselves think? What does the deceptively simple phrase ‘political will’ mean to elected representatives, who are called on to act?

This is a question I have been studying since 2014, in a collaborative research project with Lancaster University and Green Alliance. » Continue Reading.

recentprojects
Cultures of Community Energy: Research for the British Academy
22nd October 2015
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This project, for the British Academy and in collaboration with Lancaster University, looks at the cultural factors that influence community energy projects.

The project will gather twelve case studies of community energy projects, from different countries including the UK, Denmark, Germany, Belgium and South Korea, to look at the cultural factors that influence community energy. It will ask what motivates people to be part of a community energy project; and how local circumstances affect that project. It will ask how national institutional and political cultures affect the way we produce and use energy, and whether the UK could learn from » Continue Reading.

research
Understanding political responses to climate change: A collaborative research project with Lancaster University
2nd March 2015
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In 2009, I helped to establish Green Alliance’s Climate Leadership Programme, which since then, has worked with politicians to develop their understanding of climate change, and what it means for their role at both national and constituency level.

But how do politicians navigate climate change? How do they understand the issue, and how do they decide what to do about it?

In a collaboration between Lancaster University and Green Alliance, I’m now conducting research to gain a deeper understanding of climate politics, and how to support politicians in their efforts to tackle the issue.

Funded by the Economic and Social » Continue Reading.

recentprojects
Community Energy: advice and consultancy
19th September 2014
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I have worked on community renewable energy for over twelve years, and have experience of working with all stakeholders in this debate: national and local government, community organisations, commercial energy companies and universities.

Current and recent work in this area includes:

A jointly-authored research report for the British Academy, investigating the cultural influences and impacts of community energy (2015-16) Strategic advice to the Esmée Fairbairn Foundation, looking at how they could support community renewable energy, both through grant-making and through their social investment arm (2014) A role as Vice-Chair of the » Continue Reading.

recentprojects
Climate Leadership: Constituency Voices
12th September 2014
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Green Alliance’s Climate Leadership Programme aims to give members of parliament the knowledge and skills they need to lead a proactive and ambitious climate change agenda.

Constituency Voices, part of the Programme, works with small groups of MPs on low carbon initiatives and policy within their constituencies, helping them to take climate action to the national level.

In 2013 we focussed on community energy, with MPs in Edinburgh, Sheffield and Wells; and on the City Deals programme, with MPs in Swindon, Stockton and Warwickshire. This year, we focussed on climate science and impacts, looking in particular at the aftermath of » Continue Reading.

recentprojects
Paris 2015: getting a global agreement on climate change
12th September 2014
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At the Paris summit in December 2015, 196 countries will meet to sign a new climate change agreement. But will it be meaningful and result in climate action?

This report outlines what needs to be agreed at the summit, sets out what has changed since the first Rio summit in 1992, considers the prospects for this agreement and why it is needed.

Written for and with Green Alliance, Christian Aid, Greenpeace, RSPB and WWF.

Download the report here

recentprojects
Demanding less: Why we need a new politics of energy
20th December 2011
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A Green Alliance pamphlet, co-authored with Nick Eyre, of the UK Energy Research Centre.

This pamphlet argues that energy policy needs to be refocussed around demand, rather than supply.

From the moment that our ancestors first discovered fire, energy use has been closely linked to progress. Agriculture is basically a way of diverting solar energy into useful crops – and farming liberated people from the daily hunt for sustenance, allowing modern societies to flourish. And, of course, the industrial revolution was essentially an energy revolution: exploiting fossil fuels to change radically the way that we live, work and even eat. » Continue Reading.

recentprojects
Co-operatively owned energy
20th December 2011
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Co-operatively-owned energy generation is a vibrant and growing sector in the UK. The first co‑operatively-owned wind turbines, Baywind in Cumbria, started turning in 1997. Since then, over 7,000 individual investors have ploughed over £16 million into community-owned renewable energy.

But it’s far from easy to make an energy co-op happen, and they are still the exception, not the rule. The market for large-scale, commercial renewables is well established. At the other end of the scale, it is now relatively easy for individuals with a bit of money saved to invest in energy generation, thanks to the feed-in tariff. But the » Continue Reading.