Living in a Low Carbon World Conference 2008 - The Royal Geographic Society, London

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London's immediate plan for averting climate change - Ken Livingstone



Ken Livingstone - Biography

Ken Livingstone was born in Lambeth in 1945 and educated at Tulse Hill Comprehensive School. After eight years working as a technician at the Chester Beatty Cancer Research Institute in London, he entered Phillipa Fawcett Teacher Training College, qualifying in 1973.

He was a Labour member of Lambeth Council between 1971 and 1978, holding the position of Vice-Chair of the Housing Committee from 1971 to 1973. From 1978 to 1982 he was a member of Camden Council, where he was Chair of the Housing Committee from 1978 to 1980.

In 1973 he was elected as a Labour member of the Greater London Council. He was Vice-Chair of Housing Management from 1974 to 1975 and was elected Leader in 1981. He remained Leader until March 1986 when Margaret Thatcher abolished the GLC.

From 1987 to June 2001, he served as Labour Member of Parliament for Brent East. He was elected as member of the National Executive Committee of the Labour Party between 1987 to 1989, and from 1997 to 1998.

He was elected to the position of Mayor of London in 2000, having been expelled from the Labour party for running as an independent candidate. He was readmitted to the Labour party in 2004, shortly before re-election as Mayor.

He has written two books, If Voting Changed Anything They'd Abolish It (1987) and Livingstone's Labour (1989).
Background

Speaker: Ken Livingstone - Mayor of London
The Mayor recently launched his London Climate Change Action Plan - the first comprehensive plan of any major city on how it will cut carbon emissions. He will argue that Londoners don't have to reduce their quality of life to tackle climate change, but we do need to change the way we live. Reducing carbon change is about improving efficiency and we need to move from a high energy usage, high waste economy, to one that conserves energy - and puts money back into people's pockets in the process.

The Action Plan demonstrates that London can limit its total carbon emissions to 600 million tonnes over the next two decades. This would mean stabilising emissions in 2025 at 60 per cent below 1990 levels, double the government's target.





 
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