Establishment
A group of 108 UK citizens, chosen to be representative of the UK population, were determined from randomly sampling the population. Invitations to enter a pool of 1,500 people for selection were sent to 30,000 people. Some places were reserved for people from more deprived postcodes, to combat an expected response rate bias. Participants were chosen with a view to be representative of demographics including age, gender, education, ethnicity, location and attitude towards climate change. Chris Stark, Jim Watson,Activities
The work of the convention was originally planned to be held in person over four weekends. The last weekend was moved online and split over three weekends due to the COVID-19 pandemic causing lockdown restrictions in the UK. Discussion took place over the internet, with printed resources sent in the post and the option to join via landline. It ran from January 2020 to May 2020. The group were first given talks by expert speakers on the subject of climate change. There were 47 speakers, including representatives from the Confederation of British Industry, Trades Union Congress, National Farmers' Union, environmental NGOs and renewable energy companies.Outcome
First principles
In the first weekend, the citizen chose their priorities. Aims included "informing and educating everyone" and making greener products and services affordable and accessible to all. They wanted a "clear, proactive, accountable and consistent" government leadership. Other priorities include natural world protection, engaging local communities and acting with "urgency". The group wanted cross-party consensus, as the changes are to be implemented in the next decades by different governmentsGreen Covid-19 recovery plan
80% of the assembly members voted that government's coronavirus economic recovery measures should be designed to also help the country to meet its target of carbon emissions reduction until reaching net zero in 2050.Final report
The assembly published its final report of 556 pages in September 2020. It recommended changes in all economics sectors. It encouraged meat-and-dairy consumption reduction, switching to zero-carbon heating and generation of clean electricity. Proposed measures include a levy for frequent fliers, a ban on the sale of petrol, diesel and hybrid cars by 2030-35 and a switch to a more biodiversity-focused farming system. They preferred "natural" carbon removal efforts, such as restoring forests, peatlands and other natural habitats to technical solutions, such as carbon capture and storage. Each measure is listed with the level of support received in the assembly and the advantages and disadvantages seen by the assembly.Reception
Chief executive Chris Stark declared that the Committee on Climate Change will consider the group's recommendations. The MPs that originated the assembly requested the prime minister to respond to the report before the end of 2020. Craig Bennett, ofImpact
In July 2021, the Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Committee published a report on the progress of the group's suggestions which stated "We are disappointed that the Minister has rowed back on the commitment given to us in oral evidence that the Government would provide a comprehensive and point-by-point response to the recommendations in CAUK’s ambitious report." In November 2021 theSee also
* Climate and Ecological Emergency Bill *References
Further reading
* *External links
* {{Official website, https://www.climateassembly.uk/ Climate change conferences Climate change organisations based in the United Kingdom Politics of the United Kingdom Citizens' assemblies Climate assemblies