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Broadland District Council declares a Climate and Biodiversity Emergency

At Main Council on Thursday 27 July, Broadland District Council voted to declare a climate and biodiversity emergency.

The cross party motion was brought to Council by Cllr Jan Davis (Green) and Cllr Sue Holland (Lib Dem).

The text is as follows:

Motion on Declaring a Climate and Biodiversity Emergency

Submitted for Main Council Meeting scheduled for 27 July 2023

Proposer:   Cllr J Davis      Seconder: Cllr S Holland

This Council Notes:

That the Special Report on Global Warming of 1.5 degrees C (IPCC, October 2018)  describes the enormous harm that a 2 degree C rise in global temperatures is likely to cause compared with a 1.5 degree C rise, and that limiting Global Warming to 1.5 degree C may still be possible with ambitious action from national and sub-national authorities, civil society and the private sector.

The rate of climate change is increasing and lack of rapid action to address it is causing alarm in the scientific community (IPCC Progress Report to Parliament 28 June 2023, IPCC Sixth Assessment Report: Climate Change 2021: The Physical Science Basis).

Norfolk’s councils are cutting carbon emissions in their areas, but not as fast as the science demands.  BDC adopted an organisational 2030 target for achieving net- zero carbon emissions on 13 October 2022 but this does not address wider district carbon emissions.

The UK Parliament and approximately 300 Local Authorities (75%) have declared a climate emergency (LGA,2022)

Biodiversity is essential both to humans, through the provision of ecosystem services such as food, fuel, flood prevention and enjoyment; and in its own right as part of the natural world.

Biodiversity is under severe threat.  Nearly 500 species have become extinct in England in the last 200 years, 40% of the UK’s reedbeds have disappeared since 1945, 75% of England’s lowland heaths have been lost in the last 200 years, nearly 50% of England and Wales’ ancient woodland has been destroyed and current rates of extinction may be 1,000 times greater than global natural background levels.  (Norfolk Biodiversity Partnership).  

The Environment Act 2021 set out the importance of biodiversity net gain, an approach to development that aims to leave the natural environment in a better state than it was beforehand, together with a stronger legal duty for public bodies to conserve and enhance biodiversity.

Actions to restore nature and biodiversity are vital for their own sake, and increase storage of carbon, helping to address climate change.  Climate change and the loss of biodiversity will change the future for humanity and should be considered in conjunction with each other.

Motion 

1) Council recognises the dangerous and accelerating effects of unmitigated climate change and ecological destruction for Norfolk.

2) Council resolves to declare a Climate and Biodiversity Emergency.

3) Council resolves to take action accordingly within the limits of its resources and powers and report back annually on progress.