Author name: Steven Edwards

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Dangerous Junctions – Your Update from LCC


 Dear {, , , , , , , }

I’m Simon Munk, the LCC Campaigns Manager. I’m writing to you, as a signatory of our Dangerous Junctions petition, to update you on the progress of our work to compel the Mayor of London, and London councils, to end danger to cyclists at junctions, following the death of Dr Marta Krawiec in early August, and our protest ride against inaction on dangerous junctions on September 8th. Thank you for signing – I hope to persuade you to share the petition, calling on London’s politicians to do better, with your friends and family, and ask them to add their voice to ours, too.
Share the petition
The Mayor and Camden Council pledge action – but not enough

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The Guardian view on Insulate Britain: the art of protest | Editorial | The Guardian

A draconian police and crime bill is making its way through parliament, and on Tuesday the home secretary, Priti Patel, told her party’s conference that she planned to remove even more rights from political protesters. New offences of disrupting motorways and national infrastructure will be added to legislation that already dramatically expands police powers. Tory members applauded their illiberal home secretary loudly as she denounced the Insulate Britain protesters who have repeatedly blocked roads.

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SUVs are killing the planet — IrishEVs


Why You Shouldn’t Buy Into Marketing

Over recent years we have seen car companies pushing the development of bigger, taller, heavier models – a trend that started in the US, but which has now become a global phenomenon thanks to aggressive marketing.The rise of the SUV, and its siblings such as the crossover and the compact SUV, has been swift, but so have the emissions and safety implications – and the damaging effect of these vehicles to the environment and pedestrians, cyclists and other road users has come rushing to the fore.
Today we look at the rise of the SUV, and why you shouldn’t buy into the marketing of these vehicles – and why they are a leading cause of the global rise in carbon dioxide emissions.

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Fuel shortages prompt uptick in bike buying, but stock remains an issue – Cycle Industry News

Mark Sutton7 October, 2021
Several retailers, including national chains Halfords and Decathlon, are reporting an uptick in bike sales on the back of the UK’s fuel shortages, with motorists forced to consider alternative means of transport.
Halfords has seized upon the opportunity to drive a bit of modal share change, announcing the launch of free (excluding refundable £101 deposit), nationwide electric bike trials whereby potential customers can have a demo unit for six hours. On top of this the retailer revealed sales of e-Bikes rising 106% since the fuel shortages panic began.
Decathlon has likewise reported a doubling of bike sales across its 45 store UK network, up 119%, with commuter models in particularly high demand, up an astonishing 194%.

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Birmingham to become a super-sized low-traffic neighbourhood | The Guardian


Council plans to divert car traffic from city via a ring road while providing more buses and cycle lines

Carlton Reid 4/10/21
Birmingham has announced what it calls a “transformative” transport plan that will see the car-centric city becoming a super-sized low-traffic neighbourhood.
City officials hope that closing roads to through motor traffic, introducing a fleet of zero-emission cross-city buses and building additional protected cycleways will create a more liveable city.
With HS2 infrastructure rising from the ground and Birmingham hosting the Commonwealth Games next year, the Labour-controlled council believes removing through car journeys will be essential for the city to prosper.
“We’re one of the original motor cities,” said Birmingham city council’s transport lead, Waseem Zaffar. But like other UK cities, Birmingham suffers from an excess of single occupancy car journeys, he added.

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Analysis: When might the world exceed 1.5C and 2C of global warming? – Carbon Brief


…Here, Carbon Brief provides an analysis of when the world is expected to pass these limits in the absence of large future emissions reductions. This is based on the latest generation of climate models – known as ”CMIP6” (see Carbon Brief’s explainer) – that are being run in the lead up to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s (IPCC) sixth assessment report expected in 2021-22.
Our analysis shows that:
• The world will likely exceed 1.5C between 2026 and 2042 in scenarios where emissions are not rapidly reduced, with a central estimate of between 2030 and 2032. 

• The 2C threshold will likely be exceeded between 2034 and 2052 in the highest emissions scenario, with a median year of 2043. 
• In a scenario of modest mitigation – where emissions remain close to current levels – the 2C threshold would be exceeded between 2038 and 2072, with a median of 2052.
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A recent climate report has left me devastated – I beg you to read it | The Independent


Donnachadh McCarthy 6 days ago

Never before in my life have I read a report and felt to the core of my being that every parent who loves their kids must read it. And this is also the first time I have ever opened a column with a mental health warning that what follows may be emotionally disturbing. But when I read the Chatham House Climate Change Risk Assessment report last Friday, I was left devastated at how desperate our situation is.
As I thought how best to convey the essential, terrifying message of the report, I decided I should just lay out the raw facts and let them reach your soul.
The two most civilisation-shattering facts are these. Firstly, under the current global government commitments to cut carbon emissions, as laid out in the Paris Climate Agreement, we have only a 1 per cent chance of not breaching a 1.5˚C rise of global temperatures. This is the temperature that prompted 200 health journals around the world, including the British Medical Journal, to simultaneously issue an editorial last week telling governments that passing this 1.5C rise would pose the greatest catastrophic, irreversible threat ever to human health.

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Conservatives: Who funds them, and what’s in it for them? – BBC News


23 hours ago By Chris Mason Political correspondent, BBC News

Welcome to the One Million Pound Club.
To make the top ten donors to the Conservative Party since Boris Johnson became prime minister, you need to have stumped up a seven figure sum.
At the top of the chart, by a considerable margin, the providers of one of the most memorable political images of the last few years.
Boris Johnson at the wheel of a JCB, a polystyrene wall smashed, his ‘Get Brexit Done’ slogan in the mechanical shovel.
JC Bamford Excavators Limited has given just over £2.5m in the last two years. Lord Bamford, the chairman of the family owned company, has personally given £100,000 since 2010, when the Conservatives returned to government. He became a Conservative peer in 2013.
I’ve been trying to find out what motivates people to give money to the Conservative Party, how do they choose how much to give and how do they measure if it is worth it? 

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