38 min

[080] COUNT US IN – CLIMATE ACTION FOR A BILLION PEOPLE Sustainable(ish)

    • Earth Sciences

I am SO excited for this episode! Last month I was aimlessly scrolling through Twitter waiting for the kettle to boil and stumbled across a tweet about a project called Count Us In - which is aiming to get a BILLION people taking climate action!!DID YOU KNOW:Individual lifestyles actually make up more than 65% of the total global carbon pollutionThe world's wealthiest 10% are responsible for just over 50% of global greenhouse gas emissionsYou are part of the world's wealthiest 10% if your salary is above £27k a year. The average salary in the UK is somewhere around £30k.These stats aren't to make you feel guilty, I'm sharing them to empower you and to help you to recognise the enormous power we hold to create change.Count Us In have got the experts to pull together 16 steps that they agree are some of the most impactful things we can do an individuals, and now they want us to pledge to do them! We don't have to do all of them, we might already be doing some of them. But according to their website:"If 1 billion people made changes in how they travel, the energy they use and the food they eat, this could directly reduce carbon pollution by almost 1/5 of the total reduction needed."And the beauty of Count Us In is that they've joined forces with so many of the other existing platforms and campaigns out there to provide one place, one voice, one carbon counter, that brings together all of our climate actions under one umbrella.Today I'm chatting to Angela Terry, founder and CEO of One Home, who is also one of the founding partners of Count Us In, all about the project - how it came about, what it's hoping to achieve, and really importantly, how WE can get involved.Enjoy! Useful linksCount Us In- Website- Facebook- Instagram- TwitterOne HomeCOP 26The Paris AgreementIPCC report 2018Green Homes GrantI've put together a blog post with the 16 Count Us In actions, and Sustainable(ish) resources from the archives to help - you can find it herea class="tve-froala" href="https://www.facebook.

I am SO excited for this episode! Last month I was aimlessly scrolling through Twitter waiting for the kettle to boil and stumbled across a tweet about a project called Count Us In - which is aiming to get a BILLION people taking climate action!!DID YOU KNOW:Individual lifestyles actually make up more than 65% of the total global carbon pollutionThe world's wealthiest 10% are responsible for just over 50% of global greenhouse gas emissionsYou are part of the world's wealthiest 10% if your salary is above £27k a year. The average salary in the UK is somewhere around £30k.These stats aren't to make you feel guilty, I'm sharing them to empower you and to help you to recognise the enormous power we hold to create change.Count Us In have got the experts to pull together 16 steps that they agree are some of the most impactful things we can do an individuals, and now they want us to pledge to do them! We don't have to do all of them, we might already be doing some of them. But according to their website:"If 1 billion people made changes in how they travel, the energy they use and the food they eat, this could directly reduce carbon pollution by almost 1/5 of the total reduction needed."And the beauty of Count Us In is that they've joined forces with so many of the other existing platforms and campaigns out there to provide one place, one voice, one carbon counter, that brings together all of our climate actions under one umbrella.Today I'm chatting to Angela Terry, founder and CEO of One Home, who is also one of the founding partners of Count Us In, all about the project - how it came about, what it's hoping to achieve, and really importantly, how WE can get involved.Enjoy! Useful linksCount Us In- Website- Facebook- Instagram- TwitterOne HomeCOP 26The Paris AgreementIPCC report 2018Green Homes GrantI've put together a blog post with the 16 Count Us In actions, and Sustainable(ish) resources from the archives to help - you can find it herea class="tve-froala" href="https://www.facebook.

38 min