Including 8 closely related terms such as reduce, reduce carbon, and term carbon.
…. Croydon has high a high proportion of properties with poor energy effciency standards, meaning there is great potential to reduce carbon emissions from this sector. A detailed analysis of energy effciency installations since 2005 and potential measures to 2015 has been carried out. So far partners within the ECCP have enabled a saving of 6.13Kt/CO2/yr as a result of cavity wall, loft and top up loft…
… centre benefts from regeneration while local character is preserved. There will be sustained investment in core infrastructure to enable this growth while also helping to reduce carbon emissions and adapt to the impacts of climate change. But sustainability is not just about development. Residents and businesses will also be inspired to take greater pride in their environment and to take…
… has declined. However, as the economy recovers we must plan for long term carbon reduction. Croydon has set a target of a 34% CO2 reduction by 2025, based on a 2005 baseline. An overall carbon reduction target for the whole strategy has been set, which in some places has been broken down for specifc actions. This is an ongoing process and for some specifc areas such as the transport…
… for behavioural change to be co-ordinated by the partnership board and aligns timescales for different strategy work in relation to the long term carbon reduction targets for the whole borough. The structure of the ECCP is presented in the table below, demonstrating the collaboration of work between strategic groups working on climate change mitigation within the residential housing, transport and waste…
… the borough will contribute considerably to CO2 reduction. • The objective is to ensure development and regeneration activity within the borough supports the achievement of our priorities and LAA targets, for example by requiring low carbon developments. • Our targets are ambitious but the benefts are many. Action will not only ensure carbon reduction targets are met and the catastrophic effects…