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March 10

Monday 1st March

No Scrubs at Murlough

Tuesday 2nd March

SDUK 2010

Foundations of the Ulster Way

03
04

Friday 5th March

Wetland Birds Tour

Saturday 6th March

Mammal Tracking

Sunday 7th March

Tantalising Tittle-Tattle

Hedge Laying

08

Tuesday 9th March

W5 Local Heroes Lectures

The History of Helens Tower

Wednesday 10th March

Monitoring NI's Whales, Dolphins and Porpoises

Thursday 11th March

Sustainable Community Allotments - Regional Seminars March 2010

Learning for Change Connecting Local and Global Education

The first Eco Information Event for consumers in Ireland

Friday 12th March

Festival of Social Science

Exploring Places of Pilgrimage

Saturday 13th March

Mount Stewart House, Garden and Temple of the Winds

St Patricks Weekend at Carnfunnock

Ulster Plantation Workshop

Woodland Bird Identification

Solar Power

Sunday 14th March

Mothers Day

Woodland Management

15

Tuesday 16th March

Clandeboyes connection with Trafalgar

Wednesday 17th March

Slippery Feast

The American Wake

18

Friday 19th March

Be a Saint - Volunteer!

Saturday 20th March

Mamma Mia Mothers Walk of Belfast Castle

National Trust Bonus Time Initiative

Step into spring at Burntollet Wood

Sunday 21st March

Four Peaks Challenge

Meadows and Minibeasts

22

Tuesday 23rd March

Sustainable Community Seminars - Regional Seminars March 2010

Wildflower Power

Wednesday 24th March

Conference: Ecosystem Services

Sustainable Community Allotments - Regional Seminars March 2010

Batty about Bats

Thursday 25th March

Coastal Zone Talk

Friday 26th March

RSPB and BirdWatch Ireland All Ireland Conference - Seabirds: Life on the Edge

Saturday 27th March

WWF Earth Hour 2010

Easter Eggstravaganza at Creggan Country Park

Sunday 28th March

Ramble and Roast

Laurel Clearance

29
30
31
   

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February 2010

Events Top Line
18

Friends of the Earth
Climate Change and the Planning System

Thu 18th February 2010, W5

Climate change will have dramatic implications for all our cities and particularly those vulnerable to sea level rise.  Increased risk of flooding will have a disproportionate effect on those on low incomes who cannot access insurance cover or afford to move away from higher risk areas.  The planning system has a crucial role to play in reducing emissions and building the resilience of homes and communities.  There is a growing realisation throughout the British Isles that the familiar regulatory planning system will become but one component of a wider spatial planning programme driven by a new sense of urgent purpose in delivery.  The economic future of cities like Belfast will be directly related to success in developing low-carbon technology and in adapting to key climate impacts.  

The seminar which is organised by Friends of the Earth and the Town and Country Planning Association (TCPA) will explore the policy development on climate and planning in the rest of the UK and in particular the cross-sector coalition statement on planning and climate launched in Westminster in December.    It will report on adaptation initiatives from across Europe, focus on the future challenges for Belfast and identify real solutions on issues such as energy which can lead us to a low-carbon economy.

Speaking at the event will be: 

Dr Hugh Ellis, TCPA

Hugh Ellis will focus on the scale of the challenge facing us on climate change and what the planning system can do to find real solutions.  It will focus on the work of a wide-ranging coalition which published a position statement for England on how planning can help communities reduce emissions and adapt to climate impacts.

Declan Allison, Friends of the Earth

Declan Allison will consider what climate change could mean for Belfast, should inland flooding due to high rainfall coincide with a spring tide and the sea level rises predicted by the Copenhagen science. 

Dr Anna Watson, Friends of the Earth

Anna Watson will provide a socio-economic context for climate change, considering the impacts on the uninsured and those unable to move away from flood-prone areas.              

Diane Smith, TCPA

Diane Smith is senior manager for the Europe-wide GRaBs project which is exploring how we can respond to the climate adaptation challenge.  There is particular focus on the positive European experience of creating green and blue urban space to make communities more resilient and create better places to live.

Prof Greg Lloyd, University of Ulster

Greg Lloyd will expand on how spatial planning is key to delivering practical and effective responses to the demands of climate change and why thinking on spatial planning in the rest of UK and Europe will inevitably transform the values, ambition and delivery of the planning system in Northern Ireland.

Rob Shaw, AECOM consultancy

Rob Shaw has extensive private and public sector experience of planning for energy and was a major contributor to the planning and climate position statement for England.  His presentation will focus on possibilities for energy planning including heat maps and maximising the potential for decentralised energy networks.

On-site car parking is available at the Odyssey complex. Parking costs are charged at £0.80 per hour, although there is a pre-pay option available where cost for up to six hours is charged at £3.00.

Please enter via the main Pavilion doors of the Odyssey complex.

 

 

 

Time:
9am - 1pm

Contact Details for Climate Change and the Planning System www.foe.co.uk/ni
Stephanie Kerr
028 9023 3488
stephanie.kerr@foe.co.uk