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Thursday, 08 March 2007 09:04

Government Fails to Get its House in Order on Carbon, Water and Waste

Government departments are failing to meet carbon, waste and water targets, according to a report published yesterday by the Government's watchdog, the Sustainable Development Commission.


The report, Sustainable Development in Government 2006, assesses Government operations to ensure that resources are managed sustainably. It finds patchy data and poor performance across most areas:


Waste:
- Departments generated more waste than last year. Total waste increased from 163,847 tonnes to 186,380 tonnes

- Nine departments could not provide proper waste data


Carbon:
- Departments are not on track to meet the carbon reduction target of 12.5% by 2010
- On average, departments have reduced carbon emissions by 0.5% since 1999
- However, 15 departments have increased carbon emissions since 1999*
- Most departments are using energy less efficiently than they did in 1999


Water:
- Departments failed to meet the target of 7.7m3 of water per person. Instead, departments consume an average of 10.2m3 per person
- The Cabinet Office was furthest from the target, consuming 19m3 water per person


Travel:
- From reporting departments, CO2 emissions from road transport have decreased by 14% since 2002
- But this performance was devalued as eight departments were unable to provide proper data
- The Department for Transport has increased CO2 emissions from road transport by approximately 40% since 2002


However, Sustainable Development in Government did identify some areas of progress:


Recycling:
- Overall, recycling has risen by 8%. The Department of Health now recycles 85.4% of its waste


Renewable energy:
- Government is buying 3% more of its electricity from renewable energy sources, compared to last year


Biodiversity:
- Sites of Special Scientific Interest are well managed across the Government estate


The SDC report goes on to assess the performance of individual departments. It highlights the strong performances of the Department of Trade and Industry, the Department of Health and the Department for Work and Pensions - but criticises the very poor performances of the Cabinet Office, the Department for Transport, the Department for Culture, Media and Sport, the Law Officers' Department, and the Export Credits Guarantee Department.


Jonathon Porritt, SDC Chair, says:
"Overall, Government performance is simply not good enough. Against a background of non-stop messages on climate change and corporate social responsibility, the Government has failed to get its own house in order. It's absolutely inexcusable that Government is lagging so far behind the private sector, when it should be leading the way.


"For Government to truly get to grips with this, it must ratchet up responsibility to the most senior level, instead of leaving it to hopelessly under-resourced officials down the line. It's time Permanent Secretaries were held accountable for meeting these targets."


Sustainable Development in Government concludes with recommendations for the future. According to the SDC, the Government must:


- Include sustainability targets in Permanent Secretaries' performance objectives
- Include all departments in a carbon trading system
- Provide departments and agencies with stronger support
- Focus on departments with the biggest impacts
- Extend targets to cover the entire public sector

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