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Wednesday, 19 March 2008

Eco Centre Of Expertise Set Up To Advise Whitehall

A new Centre of Expertise is to be set up to help Whitehall departments achieve their targets for reducing carbon emissions and waste across the government estate.

The Centre of Expertise for Sustainable Procurement (CESP) will support Whitehall departments in reducing carbon emissions and waste.The initiative comes as a response to today’s report by the Sustainable Development Commission, which urges the government to meet sustainability targets and present a role model on the issue.

According to the report, the government had made small improvements in its green commitments, such as cutting estates’ carbon emissions by 4% by the end of 2007. However, it should build on current initiatives.

Yesterdays 6th annual Sustainable Development in Government (SDiG) report by the independent watchdog and adviser on sustainability called on departments to urgently build on initiatives already taken to ensure targets can be met and to demonstrate that the Government is leading by example on sustainability.

The CESP will be set up within the Office of Government Commerce (OGC) alongside the Government's Chief Sustainability Officer, a new post to be appointed to take forward a culture of change across all departments in sustainable operations and procurement.

Cabinet Secretary Sir Gus O'Donnell, who took personal charge of work in this area last March, has made sustainability of the government estate one of his four priorities for the civil service. Sir Gus said:"The Civil Service must be fully committed to sustainable working, reflecting the increasing priority placed on environmental responsibility by the public we serve. We must find new and innovative ways of raising the bar for sustainable working, planning and procurement...There is still a long way to go but the establishment of the Centre of Expertise for Sustainable Procurement marks the culmination of significant progress over the last twelve months. This central co-ordination and guidance will help all government departments work to deliver sustainable working practices for the future."

Environment Secretary Hilary Benn said:

"In the year that has elapsed since the period covered by this report, departments have been working to cut emissions, waste and water use and to increase recycling levels...The measures we're announcing today will help us to do better in the year ahead."

The Government accepts in principle all the recommendations made by the SDC, and among the steps that will now be taken are the following:

* From April 2008 all departmental heads will have a specific objective to meet Sustainable Operations on the Government Estate (SOGE) targets, against which their performance will be assessed

* A major Green Government IT programme will be launched in the summer 2008

* From 2010 all central Government departments will be included in a pioneering emissions trading scheme, the Carbon Reduction Commitment (CRC), which will compel them to improve their energy efficiency. This mandatory emissions trading scheme will cover around 5000 public and private organisations, including government departments, retailers, banks and local authorities, which combined account for 10 per cent of the UK economy's emissions

* Action to achieve the work space efficiency standard of 12 square metres per FTE will be published in April 2008

* From this summer all vehicles used by ministers and permanent secretaries (except a small number exempt for operational and security reasons) will have carbon emissions below 120g/km

* The use of bottled water for meetings and other official business is to be phased out across the whole government estate by the summer.

In its response to the report, the Government accepts the need for better and more accurate data against which the progress of departments can be measured. A major validation exercise to upgrade the quality of data provided to the SDC and the baselines used to assess performance has been undertaken in the past two months.

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