Take Action - Ealing Friends of the Earth https://ealingfoe.org.uk For the planet for people - locally Thu, 07 Dec 2023 18:32:27 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 https://ealingfoe.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/cropped-FoE-Ealing-favicon-32x32.png Take Action - Ealing Friends of the Earth https://ealingfoe.org.uk 32 32 Climate Justice march: Saturday 9 Dec. https://ealingfoe.org.uk/climate-justice-march-saturday-9-dec/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=climate-justice-march-saturday-9-dec Thu, 07 Dec 2023 17:57:21 +0000 https://ealingfoe.org.uk/?p=6707 Friends of the Earth UK have made the following arrangements for FoE groups to meet up. 11:30 – we will meet at the entrance to Embankment Gardens on Villiers Street, just next to Charing Cross station (and the exit from Embankment Underground Station), where we will take some photos as a group; 11:50 – head […]

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Friends of the Earth UK have made the following arrangements for FoE groups to meet up.

11:30 – we will meet at the entrance to Embankment Gardens on Villiers Street, just next to Charing Cross station (and the exit from Embankment Underground Station), where we will take some photos as a group;

11:50 – head to St James’s Square (BP’s HQ) where there will be a rally at 12;

12:30 – walk to BAE Systems HQ, for a 20 minute rally;

12:50 – climate justice march and rallies end.

This event is organised by the Climate Justice Coalition

More information

For more information about climate change and to see what you can do , click below.

See also our selection of short videos.

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How to make your money work… for the planet! https://ealingfoe.org.uk/how-to-make-your-money-work-for-the-planet/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=how-to-make-your-money-work-for-the-planet https://ealingfoe.org.uk/how-to-make-your-money-work-for-the-planet/#respond Sun, 08 Oct 2023 21:24:36 +0000 https://ealingfoe.org.uk/?p=6608 Ealing FoE member Jon writes about ethical banking… As a father of a three-year-old daughter living in South Ealing, with my wife and I expecting a new baby any day now, I increasingly find myself looking for ethical choices to contribute towards a sustainable future. Looking for ways that can make me feel proud to […]

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Ealing FoE member Jon writes about ethical banking...

As a father of a three-year-old daughter living in South Ealing, with my wife and I expecting a new baby any day now, I increasingly find myself looking for ethical choices to contribute towards a sustainable future. Looking for ways that can make me feel proud to protect the world we are handing down to future generations. Having some kind of an answer when my children inevitably ask me: What did you do to help look after the world we are inheriting?

Finding ways to answer that question can be daunting, whether it lies in lifestyle, work and life choices, or acts of campaigning or activism. But an area I overlooked for too long, whilst I was busy sorting the recycling and  cutting down on meat and personal travel by car, is who I choose to bank with.

So when I recently looked to open a children’s savings account for my daughter, I wanted to make an ethical decision that was not only contributing to her future in some way but also, at the very least, not contributing to the destruction of the planet’s ecosystem. This small life choice opened up a world of ethical banking to me that I had previously been embarrassingly ignorant of, and led me to clean out the fossil-fuel tainted skeletons in my banking closet.

One of the most significant changes we can make in our lives to protect our environment, climate and our society is to make ethical choices for our savings, debts, loans, mortgages and pensions. To ask ourselves what our banks are doing with our money whether it is good or bad for our world. And with a growing number of ethical banking choices out there, it’s also one of the most straightforward changes we can make, with very little impact on our lifestyle.

What does ethical mean?

Now, ‘ethical banking’ can be a vague and slippery term ranging from questions about transparency in business practice and investments, to how staff are treated, to active investment in the non-profit and environmental sector, or simply whether they avoid investing in particular industries such as weapons, tobacco and fossil fuels. Ultimately your ethical priorities are up to you.

Since my own number one concern right now is the climate crisis, I set my minimum bar at whether the bank or building society avoids any investment in the fossil fuel industry. With any other ethical benefits a positive bonus. So, for my daughter, I went with Yorkshire Building Society, which has no investment in the fossil fuel industry according to bank.green and has the added benefit of having a branch in Ealing. Plus with their One Day account, which at the time of writing has a very competitive interest rate, you get a nice little passbook which is fun for kids!

Jon and daughter with checque sm
YorkshireBuildingSocEaling

How to switch

I quickly shifted my other accounts to more ethical choices, with fossil free banks as my priority, and couldn’t believe how quick and simple it was, kicking myself for not making the move before. Moving current accounts is made super easy by the Current Account Switch Service, a guaranteed service that shifts your money and direct debits and triggers the closure of your old account. You simply set up the new account, tell them where you’ve moved from and the switching service does the rest within about a week.

So if, like me, you’re late to the party on ethical banking I encourage you to check the credentials of your bank, and make the change if you’re unhappy with what you find. A comprehensive online resource is Ethical Consumer. But bank.green is a quick and easy place to start if you are time-poor and especially concerned about climate change. Money Saving Expert also offers a short guide to Ethical Banking, and of course you can cross-check any of MSE’s lists of top-rated banks against ethical credentials using other ethical banking sites.

What next?

If you don’t know where to start, Friends of the Earth have a longstanding relationship with Triodos Bank, which is considered pretty much the gold standard on environmental banking. Triodos invests in socially and environmentally beneficial projects. And Friends of the Earth Ealing use Co-operative Bank which has a solid reputation across a range of ethical practices according to Ethical Consumer. Also with a branch in Ealing.

It’s important to stress that ethical banking choices are not small or niche, and there are plenty of current accounts, savings, ISAs, and business accounts available at banks that strive for higher ethical and environmental standards. Most with the usual FSCS protections (do check).

Co-opBankEaling

Mortgages and Pensions

Mortgages can be a little more complex, especially if you’re locked in to a fixed term, and it’s always best to speak to a financial advisor. But as a starting point, Ethical Consumer rate Nationwide and Ecology Building Society highly.

Pensions are very much another day’s work, but a large and growing range of ethical funds are available and according to Make My Money Matter, greening your pension can cut your carbon footprint twenty times more than going veggie, giving up flying and switching energy provider combined. So it’s absolutely worth investigating, and I myself changed to a fossil free fund some time back but again, make sure to seek proper financial advice!

So if you want to feel good about an ethical choice with minimal effort, check out the credentials of your bank and switch today!

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Do your DofE with EFoE https://ealingfoe.org.uk/do-your-dofe-with-efoe/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=do-your-dofe-with-efoe Mon, 04 Sep 2023 11:39:41 +0000 https://ealingfoe.org.uk/?p=6559 If you are doing your Duke of Edinburgh’s Award (DofE), two of the sections you will need to complete are Volunteering and Skills. Ealing Friends of the Earth (EFoE) is the local group of Friends of the Earth UK, which is an environmental charity dedicated to protecting the natural world and tackling problems like climate […]

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If you are doing your Duke of Edinburgh’s Award (DofE), two of the sections you will need to complete are Volunteering and Skills.

Ealing Friends of the Earth (EFoE) is the local group of Friends of the Earth UK, which is an environmental charity dedicated to protecting the natural world and tackling problems like climate change and air pollution. There are Friends of the Earth groups all over the world.

We are offering the opportunity to do your Volunteering or Skills section with us, on a project related to the environment.

Getting Started

Check out our full draft offer sheet. Then talk to your school DofE Leader to check our availability (we can be contacted via email or the contact form on this website). Confirm that you have your DofE Leader’s approval for the proposed activity before starting. We are a campaigning organisation, so projects will be related to that. We do not have premises, so you will be working by yourself or selves; therefore it would probably be better if there is a small group of you (2 or more) able to cooperate on a project..

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Anti-Idling protest at Acton Central Station https://ealingfoe.org.uk/anti-idling-protest-at-acton-central-station/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=anti-idling-protest-at-acton-central-station Mon, 05 Jun 2023 20:14:15 +0000 https://ealingfoe.org.uk/?p=6450 When: Saturday June 10 from 11am-1.30pm. Where: At either side of level crossing on the pavements and in front of the crossing (only when the barriers are down). Friends of Friars Gardens in collaboration with the Churchfield Rd Community Association and Ealing Friends of the Earth are organising a protest to raise awareness among drivers […]

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When:

Saturday June 10 from 11am-1.30pm.

Where:

At either side of level crossing on the pavements and in front of the crossing (only when the barriers are down).

Friends of Friars Gardens in collaboration with the Churchfield Rd Community Association and Ealing Friends of the Earth are organising a protest to raise awareness among drivers of the harm they are doing to the lungs of residents and themselves – not to mention the planet – by idling their engines while waiting at the level crossing.

Meet: from 10.45am at the main entrance to Acton Central Station.

It will be a polite and non-confrontational protest. The organiser has spoken to the police to ensure that it’s legal and peaceful.

We will be educating drivers with a leaflet from Friends of the Earth with the message”Switch off your engines to protect children’s lungs” (pictured).

There is more about idling here.

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People’s Question Time – Ealing https://ealingfoe.org.uk/peoples-question-time-ealing/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=peoples-question-time-ealing Wed, 22 Feb 2023 21:20:28 +0000 https://ealingfoe.org.uk/?p=6152 7pm Thursday 2nd March, at Ealing Town Hall The London Mayor, Sadiq Khan, and members of the London Assembly are holding a People’s Question Time at Ealing Town Hall. The Mayor is responsible for ‘The London Plan’ and this plan dictates to a considerable extent Ealing’s ‘Local Plan’, which has just finished a public consultation. […]

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7pm Thursday 2nd March, at Ealing Town Hall

The London Mayor, Sadiq Khan, and members of the London Assembly are holding a People’s Question Time at Ealing Town Hall.

The Mayor is responsible for ‘The London Plan’ and this plan dictates to a considerable extent Ealing’s ‘Local Plan’, which has just finished a public consultation. People’s Question Time is a rare opportunity for local people to question the Mayor about the Plan and policies more generally. Click below to book a place.

Questions will be taken at random from the audience, covering 6 topics:

  1. Transport,
  2. Policing and safety,
  3. Air quality [pollution] and the environment,
  4. Housing,
  5. London’s economic recovery,
  6. Other (culture, education).

Ealing Friends of the Earth cannot ask questions, but individuals in the audience who care about the environment can. We have therefore compiled a list of suggested questions which people may like to ask. Most of the questions could be asked under more than one topic.

Suggested Questions

  • Q1. The sewage system is already unable to cope, with sewage regularly discharged into our waterways. Should the Mayor be forcing Ealing and other boroughs to build large numbers of flats until the sewage problem is resolved?
  • Q2. Ealing Council is proposing to ‘de-designate’ pieces of its Green Belt Land and ‘Metropolitan Open Land’. Does the Mayor agree with this idea?
  • Q3. Does the Mayor agree with building housing on land with Green Belt or ‘Metropolitan Open Land’ status?
  • Q4.The Mayor is forcing Ealing to build large numbers of housing units (21,750 over 10 years). This will generate large quantities of emitted and embedded carbon. Is this consistent with the urgent need to address climate change and achieve ‘Net Zero’?
  • Q5. Why are so many tower blocks permitted in London when research by University College London’s Energy Institute shows that they use more energy per square metre than high-density low-rise equivalents.
  • Q6. Should opposition from the ‘car lobby’ be allowed to stop plans to reduce traffic, air pollution and climate change, by means such as Low Traffic Neighbourhoods, Ultra Low Emission Zone and parking constraints.
  • Q7. Does the Mayor consider that a policy of economic growth is desirable, where growth is defined simply as the increase in total size of the London economy, as opposed to per capita growth?
  • Q8. In assessing and supporting economic recovery and growth, will the Mayor use a measure (metric) based just on the financial value of goods and service consumed? Or will the Mayor use a metric that reflects human health, welfare, equality and happiness?
  • Q9. Around half of the world’s wildlife has already been destroyed and the figure is far higher in London. What plans does the Mayor have to try and recover the situation?
  • Q10. Building large numbers of new housing units in London will inevitably have a negative impact on existing residents. Should developers and landowners be required to recompense communities fully, in accordance with the Polluter Pays Principle’?

 

Feel free contact us if you have any queries about the suggested questions.

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Dates for your diary 2023 https://ealingfoe.org.uk/dates-for-your-diary-2023/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=dates-for-your-diary-2023 Thu, 19 Jan 2023 15:06:19 +0000 https://ealingfoe.org.uk/?p=5942 Ealing Friends of the Earth stalls at … Acton Market Reduce & Recycle Hub, Saturday 4th February, 10.00am to 2.00pm. The Reduce and Recycle Hubs are usually held on the first Saturday of every month, on the Mount in Acton, Outside of Morrisons. Ealing Animals Fair, Saturday 4th March, at Hanwell Methodist Church, Church Road, […]

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Ealing Friends of the Earth stalls at …

Acton Market Reduce & Recycle Hub, Saturday 4th February, 10.00am to 2.00pm. The Reduce and Recycle Hubs are usually held on the first Saturday of every month, on the Mount in Acton, Outside of Morrisons.

Ealing Animals Fair, Saturday 4th March, at Hanwell Methodist Church, Church Road, Hanwell, London W7 1DJ, 10.30am to 4.00pm.

Hanwell Carnival, Saturday 17 June, Elthorne Park, Boston Road W7 2AA.

Brentford Festival, Date TBA (a Sunday in September?), Blondin Park, Blondin Ave, London W5 4UL.

FoE-UK Campaigns and Training

FoE-UK run some Training and Events.

They are also starting welcome webinars this month. Welcome webinars are designed for new members and groups to come along and learn about Friends of the Earth, our network and connect with like-minded people. If you have new members or would like a refresher, why not come along?

Engagement with Ealing Council

EFoE is responding to these consultations, but individual members and any Ealing resident, can too. We will make our responses available on this site – please take a look.

New Ealing Local Plan. Consultation runs until 8th February 2023.

Air Quality. Consultation runs until 30th January 2023.

ALL Current Consultations.

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We are at the Reduce and Recycle Hub at Acton Market, Saturday 4th February 2023 https://ealingfoe.org.uk/we-are-at-the-reduce-and-recycle-hub-at-acton-market/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=we-are-at-the-reduce-and-recycle-hub-at-acton-market Wed, 02 Nov 2022 21:58:46 +0000 https://ealingfoe.org.uk/?p=5794 Our Stall Ealing Friends of the Earth will have a stall at Acton Market again on Saturday 4th February 2023, from 10am. Visit us for the latest on the crisis facing Ealing’s green spaces with the Council’s proposals in its draft Local Plan to strip them of their Green Belt status or of the similar […]

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Our Stall

Ealing Friends of the Earth will have a stall at Acton Market again on Saturday 4th February 2023, from 10am. Visit us for the latest on the crisis facing Ealing’s green spaces with the Council’s proposals in its draft Local Plan to strip them of their Green Belt status or of the similar MOL (Metropolitan Open Land) status – more on Green Belt here. We also discuss other aspects of the Local Plan and whether it really tackles climate change in our detailed response.

This has alarmed CPRE London (part of the national CPRE countryside charity) who have also expressed deep concern at Ealing Council’s proposals to remove protections from seven large green spaces in the borough. They say, “Metropolitan Open Land sites, which have the same level of protection as Green Belt, including Acton Park shown here, will lose their protection completely if residents don’t act now“.

You can also ask about our United for Warm Homes campaign, for tips on reducing your home electricity bills, and on what we as citizens need to do to make the UK more energy self-sufficient and tackle climate change.

Also at the Hub …

RECYCLE by bringing along your old or unloved: REUSE by getting help to:
  • Borrow from Hammersmith library of things
REPAIR by getting help to:
  • Learning to fix your Clothes ealingrepaircafe
  • Gardening and Kitchen Tools sharpened
  • Getting your Bikes checked (2 pm-5 pm) in association with Ealing Council
REDUCE:
  • Stir it up Family Recipe Bags with minimal packaging.

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Energy Solutions & Saving at Home https://ealingfoe.org.uk/energy-solutions-saving-at-home/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=energy-solutions-saving-at-home Tue, 27 Sep 2022 14:43:25 +0000 https://ealingfoe.org.uk/?p=5747 Tips for reducing your home electricity bills, plus what we as citizens need to do to make the UK more energy self-sufficient and tackle climate change. In your own home Below we list suggestions for reducing electricity usage that can save from £350 to over £700 a year, for a typical three-bedroom home, based on […]

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Tips for reducing your home electricity bills, plus what we as citizens need to do to make the UK more energy self-sufficient and tackle climate change.

In your own home

Below we list suggestions for reducing electricity usage that can save from £350 to over £700 a year, for a typical three-bedroom home, based on an electricity price of 34.0p/kWh.

You can find more ideas on the Energy Saving Trust website. Friends of the Earth have also launched a campaign United for Warm Homes.

Vote for clean, safe & economical energy

We can only do so much in our own homes. To get a long-term solution to the energy crisis, we need government action. The same is true of tackling the climate emergency. The good thing is that the same set of solutions will tackle both issues.

Had governments listened to the scientists 30 years ago we would already have warm homes that consumed minimal power and be benefitting from extensive deployment of renewable energy, which would have protected us from the recent energy price increases.

As citizens we have the power to influence government policy through our vote, by contacting our political representatives, and by campaigning. Some of the areas on which we need to press for action are listed below. For more information see also Friends of the Earth’s Take Climate Action website.

Buy green energy

As well as pressing for government action, you can also directly support the shift to green energy. Here are some of the ways you can do that:

1) Switch Energy Supplier

The simplest is to switch the energy supplier you use for your home or business to one of the green suppliers recommended by Friends of the Earth: Ecotricity or Good Energy. Note that many major suppliers offer a green tariff but switching to it may not actually generate new investment in renewable energy because they simply assign a bit of the green generation they already have to you, and assign their fossil-fuel generated electricity to customers not on green tariffs. By contrast, Ecotricity invest their profits in building only new renewables.

Please note that Green tariffs and the companies named above are not usually the cheapest, so this might not be for you if you are on a tight budget.

Both companies have a scheme whereby they make a donation to Friends of the Earth when you switch. If you’d like to do that, please use the button below to go the national Friends of the Earth and find out more.

2) Install Solar Panels

You can generate some of your own electricity by isntalling solar panels on your house roof. To be suitable it needs to be unshaded and facing somewhere between East, South or West, but not North.

There are many suppliers. You will get a better price if you join a bulk buy scheme. Such schemes are run from time to time by Councils. The London scheme is called Solar Together London.Ealing Council also have information about the scheme on their website here.

3) Invest in an Energy Cooperative

If you have some savings, you could also invest in an energy cooperative and actually own part of a wind farm or solar farm. An umbrella organisation that looks after several such co-ops is Energy4All. One of their co-ops puts solar panels onto schools including several schools in Ealing – you can find out more about Ealing’s solar schools on the Ealing Transition website.

Note however that investments in energy co-ops are long term (typically 20 years), unsecured, and it’s not easy to withdraw money early.

Eco Houses

Houses can be almost energy independent.  Below we summarise some of the energy technologies that save or generate energy. We will have to retro-fit existing houses. It is simpler and cheaper to include all these features when a house is built so we need the government to make this a requirement for all new-builds.

For more information, The Centre for Alternative Technology and The Energy Saving Trust are independent sources.

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Greening Front Gardens https://ealingfoe.org.uk/greening-front-gardens/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=greening-front-gardens Fri, 21 Jan 2022 16:44:28 +0000 https://ealingfoe.org.uk/?p=4420 Everyone with a front garden has a great tool to counter the effects of climate change! By Christine Eborall, Ealing Front Gardens Project Like other suburbs, the London Borough of Ealing has a large number of front gardens (about 75,000), but many are paved or concreted over, usually for parking. But when you consider the […]

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Everyone with a front garden has a great tool to counter the effects of climate change!

By Christine Eborall, Ealing Front Gardens Project

Like other suburbs, the London Borough of Ealing has a large number of front gardens (about 75,000), but many are paved or concreted over, usually for parking. But when you consider the climate change benefits that a green front garden can provide, paving it over is the last thing you should do!

Paving a front garden causes at least ten major problems (see below). Each will be made worse by the effects of climate change. But each can be dramatically improved or completely eliminated by:

  1. keeping the front garden green – many plants are very low maintenance
  2. “depaving”: taking up most existing hard surfacing – you can do this little by little
  3. for parking, use reinforced mesh just for where the wheels will be when the vehicle(s) are parked
  4. the only hard surfacing being a path to the front door

For guidance, have a look at the front gardens pages of the Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) and the London National Park City websites and at “depaving” projects in L B Lambeth and elsewhere.

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10 climate change problems and why green front gardens help:

Problem 1 – Increased flood risk: every square metre of hard surfacing increases the amount of rain run-off. Even porous surfaces and drainage channels can’t cope with the increasingly torrential downpours that climate change is causing. This leads to flooding and outpourings of sewerage because the road drains can’t cope – we’ve already seen this in London.

A green garden with minimal hard surfacing (just the path) absorbs rainwater and allows it to percolate slowly through the soil, so there’s no sudden influx of water into the road drains.

Problem 2 – Over-heating: hard surfaces absorb heat in the daytime and release it at night, leading to hotter nights in built-up areas. This is the “heat island effect”. It makes town and cities unhealthily hot at night, especially as summers become hotter due to climate change. It also encourages people to install air conditioning – using yet more energy.

A green garden with minimal hard surfacing doesn’t absorb nearly so much heat. Not only that, but the plants in the garden provide shade and cool the air by evapo-transpiration. Walk down any residential street in summer – it’s like a frying pan where the front gardens are paved, but much cooler where there are trees and plants.

Problem 3 – Less carbon dioxide absorption: plants in gardens and trees in streets take up CO2 during the day for photosynthesis, but many paved front gardens have no plants at all. In addition, street trees and grass verges are sometimes removed to put in pavement crossovers (kerb drops) for parking.

A green front garden can have plants over nearly all its surface, even if used for parking. Add boundary hedges and climbers up walls. It all helps to add to the trees and plants we’re relying on to counter climate change (by sequestering the CO2 created by burning fossil fuels).

Problem 4 – Worse air pollution: paved front gardens next to roads don’t absorb traffic-generated pollution and dust. This leads to higher levels of air pollution, especially from particulates which are known to damage to human health.

A green front garden will absorb roadside air pollutants, particularly if it has shrubs, hedges and trees. Research shows that many hedges trap air pollutants, so a front garden with a hedge reduces air pollution, forming a barrier to help to protect the occupants of the house.

Problem 5 – Water pollution: climate change is increasing rain run-off. Run-off from paved front gardens picks up oil and heavy metals from the road surface plus pesticides, herbicides and other chemicals used in gardens and on pavements. This adds to the pollutant load and poorer water quality in local streams and rivers – in this borough the River Brent in particular.

A green garden with hedges, plants and minimal hard surfacing (just the path) absorbs rainwater and allows it to percolate slowly through the soil. This process helps remove pollutants from ground water as it flows slowly to rivers.

Problem 6 – Loss of biodiversity: not only do paved front gardens have few or no plants and fewer street trees, the soil underneath becomes dry and sterile. The result is lack of habitat and support for all kinds of wildlife – soil dwellers, insects, birds and more – leading to measurable declines in their numbers.

A green front garden with functioning soil and plants supports all kinds of wildlife and adds to the “green chain” of support for the web of biodiversity.

Problem 7 – Less food for pollinators: many paved front gardens have no flowering plants, so provide no nectar and pollen for pollinators. But nectar in urban areas is an important resource for pollinators (which we need to pollinate our food crops!) and gardens provide the vast majority of it, much more than parks and public spaces, verges, cemeteries etc.

A front garden planted with a judicious mix of flowering plants and shrubs can provide nectar and pollen from March till October. Even a few pots with flowers in every front garden can make a big difference.

Problem 8 – Extensive environmental damage: the materials used for paving and concreting front gardens are dredged, quarried and processed. They are then transported over long distances – extremely long in the case of Chinese granite and the currently fashionable Indian sandstone. All this involves massive energy use and causes large-scale environmental damage.

A green front garden uses a much more limited range of materials. Furthermore, it is largely self-maintaining – there’s no need for toxic weedkiller or cleaning products, and no need to replace or repair the surface every few years.

Problem 9 – Subsidence: the soil under paved front gardens overheats and dries out. This can lead to movement of the ground and building foundations, especially in clay soils such as in London. It can be worsened by trees struggling to find water, so their roots grow further outwards and under buildings nearby.

A green garden with minimal hard surfacing (just the path) allows rainwater to sink in, maintaining normal soil structure and hydration for plants and trees.

Problem 10 – Unattractive neighbourhoods: there’s lots of evidence that lack of green space in towns and cities create stress, mental health and societal problems. Entire streets with paved front gardens and no hedges and street trees can look dirty, unattractive and threatening, and contact with neighbours is minimised.

Green front gardens create interest and stress-relieving green space. Plants, especially when in flower, have been shown to lift the spirits, and increase community cohesion by encouraging personal contact between neighbours.

 

Before
After. Ealing Front Gardens & RHS joint project in Greenford. CLICK IMAGE TO SEE VIDEO

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Do you know how the bank uses your money? https://ealingfoe.org.uk/do-you-know-how-the-bank-uses-your-money/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=do-you-know-how-the-bank-uses-your-money https://ealingfoe.org.uk/do-you-know-how-the-bank-uses-your-money/#comments Sun, 31 Oct 2021 18:31:31 +0000 https://ealingfoe.org.uk/?p=5189 About three years ago, I was working in a company in London. One day, while I was having lunch in a communal area, I started chatting to one of my colleagues about climate change and the financial system. I was working in Finance at that time, without stopping to think about what the two big […]

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Ethical banking

About three years ago, I was working in a company in London. One day, while I was having lunch in a communal area, I started chatting to one of my colleagues about climate change and the financial system. I was working in Finance at that time, without stopping to think about what the two big banks I was banking with were doing with my money. I felt ashamed, but I decided to do some research into this. The results shocked me. Here I was, someone who went to protests and thought that I was “doing things right”, but this whole time, my money was funding the exact things I was fighting against, extreme fossil fuels & nuclear weapons. After quite a bit of research, I found the right ones for me and made the switch.

I know it can be a bit of a hassle to switch banks, especially if you have a mortgage. But, if you want to do something about climate change and have no idea where to start, this is an important step that you can take to shift things for the better. An ethical bank or building society can use your money to support greener initiatives for individuals and communities across the UK. We are lucky. In the UK, there are quite a few options for ethical banks & building societies that you can choose. I’m not a financial adviser, so please talk to one if you can. Do your research and see what works for you.

Here is an article to get you started with your research. I hope you find the right bank for you that matches your needs and values.

https://www.ethicalconsumer.org/money-finance/shopping-guide/ethical-savings-accounts


Did you switch banks already? If you know of any other ethical banks, building societies that are not in the article, or any other articles about this subject, let us know in the comments below.

The post Do you know how the bank uses your money? first appeared on Ealing Friends of the Earth.

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