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Environment, Climate and Transport Scrutiny Committee - Tuesday, 14th January, 2025 7.30 pm

January 14, 2025 View on council website Watch video of meeting Watch video of meeting
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Summary

The meeting discussed the Environment, Climate and Transport Committee's reviews into the Council's work on greening, green jobs and the circular economy, and how the Council is delivering on its Climate Action Plan. All of the Committee's recommendations to the Council on these reviews were accepted. Councillors also heard a presentation about the Council's new Climate Action Supplementary Planning Document and its accompanying Retrofit Handbook, which are being consulted on.

Greening

The Council has set a number of targets to improve greening in the borough:

  • Covering 50% of the borough with Liveable Neighbourhoods by 2026.
  • Planting 600 more trees a year than are lost annually.
  • Increasing the borough's tree canopy cover from 25% to 30% by 2050.
  • Achieving a 1.5 hectare increase in public green space by 2030.

Councillor Ruth Hayes asked what was being done to reduce the number of trees lost in the borough. John Ryan, Head of Natural Environment, said that around 300 trees are lost each year from a stock of nearly 40,000 trees and that this was about right given the finite lifespans of trees and the harsh urban environment they grow in.

The Council is currently developing a green infrastructure strategy that will act as a policy framework for future greening schemes. It hopes to have a draft strategy ready by March or April.

Councillor Caroline Russell asked if the Council had any plans to retrofit the borough's existing Low Traffic Neighbourhoods (LTNs) to turn them into Liveable Neighbourhoods. Matt Bonamy, Head of Transport Projects, said that it was something the Council was hoping to do but that they did not have a date for when it would happen in Highbury. He also said that the Council was prioritising new Liveable Neighbourhoods in areas of greatest need. Councillor Diarmaid Ward, Executive Member for Environment, Air Quality and Transport, explained that this was so that if we can change the space across a wide area of Islington, then you start changing people's ability to move around differently, as well as their experience of their own homes.

Stub road conversions

The Council has identified approximately 250 stub roads1 across the borough that could potentially be converted into pocket parks.

Councillor Russell asked if these stub roads had been mapped and how the Council intended to work with ward councillors to deliver them. Mr Bonamy explained that these locations have been mapped and that their conversion would be integrated into the Council's Liveable Neighbourhoods programme. He gave the example of the Cali Liveable Neighbourhood in the Cally, where a number of stub roads off Cali Road will be converted into pocket parks.

Councillor Hayes asked about the Council's plans to use green finance to create pocket parks. Andrew Bedford, Assistant Director for Green and More Active, explained that the green finance market was still very immature but that Islington was working with partners across the country, including UCL, the National Trust and the consultancy firm WSP, to develop a pipeline of investable projects and a model for urban greening that could attract green finance.

Islington Greening Together

Councillor Gary Heller asked how the Council intended to sustain the Islington Greening Together programme, given that the funding for its volunteer champions is due to end. Mr Bedford explained that the Council was looking at ways to coordinate environmental volunteering across the borough, working with Sarah Hitchcock, the Council's Head of Climate Action.

Climate Action Supplementary Planning Document

Councillor Heller asked how the Council intended to respond to the increased level of enquiries from residents that it expects as a result of the new Retrofit Handbook and Climate Action Supplementary Planning Document. Sakiba Gerda, Head of Planning Policy and Development Viability, explained that the Council has appointed a specialised officer to provide free advice to businesses and residents on retrofitting, and that this role has been funded for an unlimited period.

The Council intends to turn sections of the Retrofit Handbook into leaflets to publicise specific measures and funding opportunities to residents.

Councillor Hayes asked if the guidance would make it clear when residents needed to seek permission from their landlords to make changes to their properties. Ms Gerda explained that this would be a matter for further discussion with housing associations and the council's own legal team, but that the council hoped to ensure that tenants could make some energy efficiency improvements without their landlord's consent. She said that the council would seek to use the licensing process to encourage private landlords to do the same.

Councillor Paul Convery expressed concern about the poor energy efficiency of council housing, and asked if anything could be done to address this. Ms Gerda replied that although there would be funding for improvements to windows and heating systems in some council properties, a lot of work needed to be done, and that the new guidance would set out a roadmap for how the council could improve the energy efficiency of its housing stock in the future.

Circular Economy and Green Jobs Review

The meeting considered the Committee's review into the Council's progress on creating a circular economy and green jobs, and its recommendations to the council, which have been accepted.

Councillor Heller asked what impact the Eat Like a Londoner campaign had had on food waste, and if there was a timetable for the review of the Islington Community Energy Fund. Councillor Ward explained that whilst communication officers had collected data on the reach of the Eat Like a Londoner campaign, it was too early to say what impact it had had on behaviour.

The Committee also discussed the demise of the food waste social enterprise WINGS, which had appeared before the Committee previously. Councillor Ward expressed sadness at its closure, and explained that the council was working to ensure that its schemes to promote the circular economy and green jobs were sustainable in the long term.

Net Zero Carbon Plan Review

The meeting considered the Committee's review into the Council's progress on delivering its Net Zero Carbon Plan, and its recommendations to the council, which have been accepted. Ms Hitchcock explained that one of the key challenges for the Council was the rising cost of retrofit projects and the difficulties this posed to viability.

Councillor Heller asked for an update on the trial of food waste collections from flats above shops. Ms Hitchcock explained that the trial had been successful and that new funding from the government would enable the council to provide food waste collections to all households by 2026.

Councillor Russell asked if the Council had considered the density of food waste bins on streets where flats above shops were located, and whether residents would be able to easily access them. Councillor Ward replied that she would look into this, and acknowledged that this might have been a barrier to participation in the trial.

Councillor Ward also mentioned that she intended to write to government ministers about the need for additional funding for retrofit projects.

Finally, Ms Rock, a member of the public and a Greener Together champion, thanked officers for their work on greening the borough. She raised the issue of providing space for the storage of mulch for greening projects, and asked the Council to ensure that its support for greening projects, particularly tree pit gardens, was practical.


  1. Stub roads are short sections of road that have been closed off at one end, often by traffic calming measures. They are usually found on residential streets and are used to reduce through traffic.