Ethical Pulse - from the Ethical Junction membership

Posts Tagged ‘home’

Better Generation Community Newsletter

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009

It’s already been ten weeks since we launched the Power Predictor, and you’re starting to generate some great information about the suitability of your sites for wind turbines and solar panels.

Exmoor farmer George Halliday appeared in our Case studies section when the Power Predictor helped him to determine the energy savings he could make and the most appropriate wind turbine for his farm (in this case a Proven 15kW).

He
has since been trying to secure planning permission for this turbine,
which, as he is in a National Park, is proving challenging. However, an
application for a 20kW turbine was recently successful on the West Ilkerton Farm in this National Park, so we’re crossing our fingers for George. We will keep you posted on his progress.

Our news . . .

Last week we appeared in the guest spot on The Guardian’s ‘Ethical Living Blog’. For anyone who would like to catch up on what was discussed, find our more here.

We’re pleased to introduce our Irish partner C-Mc Energy, distributor for the Power Predictor in the Republic of Ireland. Those interested in site assessment in Ireland can purchase a Power Predictor by contacting C-Mc Energy via their website.

We’ve set up a ‘Green Energy Blog’
on our website, which will be updated several times a week. Look out
for our pick of useful developments in green energy that we think you
should know about!

In the news . . .

This month in the news : A new generation of turbine has been developed, we’ve seen ideas to replace roads with solar panels
and we’re saying goodbye to the incandescent light bulb. Zopa and a new UK financing initiative can help finance your microgeneration project,
10 new
Low Carbon Zones have been proposed in London, but can someone tell us why Britain is still investing in coal power?

Competition!

And finally, are you FEELING LUCKY?! We have just launched our free competition to win a Power Predictor! To enter simply pop over to www.bettergeneration.com. Good luck!

For daily updates join us on Twitter and Facebook!

All the best,

the Better Generation team

E-charger in the Metro!

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

E-charger was picked as one of the three best portable chargers by the Metro on Friday 10th July 2009
Here is what they said
E-charger Pack this compact emergency charger and you’ll never be caught out with a dead phone, BlackBerry or iPod.£15, www.echarger.co.uk

Echarger Ltd is a small company
aiming to make a big difference to the environment by offering a range
of environmentally friendly – and extremely useful – battery and
mobile chargers for people on the move or out of reach of a standard
power supply.

Offering the following products: 
- emergency charger 
- solar mobile charger  
- solar bags ranging from business bags  
- messenger bags  
- city style bags  
- pouch  
 
Echarger’s range of fashionable, energy efficient and solar travel
chargers is available in a variety of formats to suit a wide range of
portable gadgets.  
 
The solar mobile charger, emergency charger and solar bags supplied
by the business are just right for any occasion. Available on the website,
the products are beautifully constructed and last for life.  
 
Echarger Ltd has an expanding network of clients, located in and around
London, including Eco friendly sites. The company is managed by Tony
Momoh who has been focusing on the business for many years. Having previously
worked for the IT industry, Tony Momoh is more than qualified to look
after the company.  
 
With a fully fitted workshop and fully qualified staff, the company
provides a professional b2b to businesses. The service is designed to
cost effective, enabling clients to make a difference to save the planet
economically. 
 
 Link to product review article  

http://www.lifegoggles.com/1738/echarger-emergency-charger-product-review/

New Eco-Directory BOOK OF GREEN makes green living easy

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

Appearing
this month on the shelves in WH Smith and Borders nationwide, new eco-living
directory BOOK OF GREEN is the most comprehensive guide for everybody to
genuinely and easily green their lifestyles.

With
the general public currently becoming more receptive to living a more
eco-friendly life, this completely free guide points the consumer in the right
direction – it includes hundreds of approved ethical providers in a wide range
of sectors including business services, health and beauty, home and garden,
green energy, travel, parenting and food & drink.  All the companies
in the directory are in some way mostly or completely environmentally friendly,
sustainable, fair trade, organic,  ethical and socially responsible.

Book
of Green is intended to show everybody how to easily reduce their carbon
footprint, live a healthy lifestyle and make  a personal positive 
impact on the environment by integrating truly ethical products and services
into their daily home and family lives.

With
an initial print run of 30,000, the guide comes in a handy A5 format and is
printed in vegetable inks on 100% recycled paper.  An online flip magazine
version is also available at www.bookofgreen.com 
 Book of Green will be available in WH Smiths this July, attached to the
front of Permaculture Magazine as well as distributed across the UK in high
street eco stores, online eco stores, and at events during the summer as well
as at the Eden Project and the Kent Eco Village, the Kent Show by The
Ecologist, July 17-19.

Book
of Green is co-founded by Sue Jueno (founder of Allthingseco) and Katie Keegan
(founder of One Green Earth),
 whose combined experience of 6 years in the eco/ethical business arena
has given them the experience, knowledge and contacts to create a guide for
green living which everybody can trust.

“Being
green is more than reducing the threat of climate change, it’s also about
ethical trading and personal health.  The companies found within Book of
Green provide solutions across all sectors through their products &
services to help build a positive foundation for your family’s future
generations,”  says Katie Keegan.

“With
credit crunch in mind and a passion for promoting green shoot businesses we
have made Book of Green extremely affordable to advertisers and free to the
public to show off exceptional companies that are solving environmental
problems and that will be leading us into the future,” says Sue Jueno.

Food for Thought

Monday, June 8th, 2009

Throughout the months of June
and July, top chefs including Atul Kochhar (Benares restaurant), Vivek
Singh (Cinnamon Club & Cinnamon Kitchen), Navin Bhatia (Dockmasters
House), Mehernosh and Sherin Mody (La Porte des Indes), Sriram
Aylur (Quilon), Kuldeep Singh (Mela), Ajay Chopra (Mint Leaf Restaurant
and Bar, and Mint Leaf Lounge and Bar) and Sanjay Anand (Madhu’s)
will all come together to support Food For Thought
by adding a voluntary £1 to every bill in their restaurants. 

Hunger and malnutrition are
common experiences for families living in rural India.  Over the
months of June and July, the top Indian eateries will be joining forces
with charity Find Your Feet to strive to ensure that hunger and poverty
become experiences of the past for thousands of families living in northern
India.  The money raised from the Food for Thought promotion will
help FYF develop and expand its work to reach a further 6,000 families
in the coming year – so that 24,000 families have the opportunity to
build a better future.   

Recognized as their country’s
greatest culinary exports, these top chefs feel they are best placed
to raise the awareness of the plight of hunger and poverty that still
affects millions of families in rural India.

“Sharing a meal with good
company is one of life’s great pleasures. While we are enjoying the
delicate spices and vibrant flavours of our food, thousands of people
in my home state of Jharkhand in India are going to bed hungry every
day. I’m proud to be an ambassador for Find Your Feet’s Food
for Thought
promotion.  Together, we can help make sure some
of the poorest families in rural India have enough food to eat not just
today but all year round.”

Atul Kochhar,
Chef Director, Benares
 
 

“Food has given us (the chefs)a
great living and  has propelled us into the media spotlight. We
must now use our status to in turn bring food to families in rural India
that are suffering from hunger and malnutrition.”

Vivek Singh,
Chief Executive and Chef, Cinnamon Club & Kitchen
 
 

To celebrate the launch of the
Food for Thought promotion, the chefs held a champagne reception at
Langtry’s Restaurant, Cadogan Hotel just off Sloane Street. Guests
included top food journalists and supporters of Find Your Feet and were
treated to mouth-watering canapés created by the award-winning Indian
chefs in the elegant surroundings of the historic Langtry’s restaurant.

 

For more information visit http://fyf.org.uk/news/foodforthought.htm

Warren Evans named in Sunday Times Green List

Friday, May 29th, 2009

The Warren Evans team is celebrating today after triumphing at
The Sunday Times Best Green Companies Awards 2009, one of the most coveted
green awards of the year.

The London-based bespoke bed and furniture maker was named
the 40th best green company in the UK, out of hundreds of entries,
beating off stiff competition from major retailers including Asda. It’s
not the first time that Warren Evans has triumphed in The Sunday Times Best
Green Companies Awards; it was also named as one of the top green companies in
the UK
in the 2008 awards.

The Sunday Times Best Green Companies Awards recognises
those businesses in the UK
most dedicated to environmental issues, implementing green initiatives and
engaging their workforces.

Zoe Robinson, Sustainable Development Manager at Warren
Evans, is delighted at the win. She says: “It’s fantastic to be
recognised for a second year running. It’s a great boost for our team and
our customers to have this independent recognition that we’re doing our
bit for the environment and are using working practices that are as sustainable
as possible.”

Sustainability has been at the heart of Warren Evans’
philosophy since the company was established over 30 years ago. And for the
past two years, the company has been working hard making measurable changes, adapting
the way in which it works to minimise the impact it has on the environment. As
such Warren Evans:

  • is still the ONLY UK
    bed manufacturer to be officially certified by the FSC
    (Forest
    Stewardship Council). All beds and furniture are made using woods from
    renewable sources
  • offers a fully organic and
    orthopaedic mattress range for those keen to avoid chemicals and man made
    materials
  • avoids using packaging. They wrap
    beds and furniture in reusable blankets rather than using cardboards and
    plastics, minimising unnecessary waste
  • has consulted Government green body
    ‘Envirowise’ and government funded service Business Link for
    practical advice on efficiencies such as workflow, machinery and gaining staff
    support
  • moved the traditional Camden workshop to a new,
    self created, green and efficient work space in Walthamstow. With help from an
    interest-free loan by the Carbon Trust, they were able to make this super green
    by purchasing environmentally friendly equipment including a bio-mass boiler
    (that heats the entire building using waste wood and sawdust as fuel) and
    intelligent wood cutting machinery to minimise waste
  • … they also use recycled pens,
    print leaflets and price lists on recycled paper and even use recycled envelopes
    made from elephant poo!
  • and scooped a further two
    environmental awards last year, a BCE Award and an Observer Ethical Award,
    recognising its total dedication to the environment and to its customers.

The awards ceremony was held on Wednesday evening in Covent
Garden, London,
with Warren Evans receiving the prize from Alastair McCall (pictured above).

Warren Evans is also nominated in the Best Local Retailer
category in The Observer Ethical Awards 2009; the winners will be announced
next month.

Jungle Berry Sale

Friday, May 22nd, 2009


Ethical Fashion and Homewares that
don’t cost the earth – Jungle Berry Sale

Ethical retailer Jungle Berry is
running a breathtakingly brilliant spring sale, with loads of
bargains across their exclusive ranges of homewares, rugs, bags and
jewellery.

Sale products include naturally-dyed
rugs, gorgeous clutches, handwoven cushion covers, oil burners and
placemats, as well as fashion jewellery designed by Suzanne Campbell
for Jungle Berry. You won’t find Jungle Berry products anywhere
else!

Beautiful because they’re
beautiful, and beautiful because they’re ethical.

With an extensive product range
designed in the UK and made in Brazil and Mexico, Jungle Berry’s
philosophy centres on the idea that fair trade products should be
intrinsically desirable, not just because they’re associated with a
good cause, but because they’re stylish and beautiful.

A Berry Good Idea

Founded in 2004, Jungle Berry works in
partnership with indigenous cooperatives in the heart of the Amazon
rainforest and southern Mexico to create sustainable livelihoods for
local people by making fair trade jewellery, homewares and
accessories.

Jungle Berry has been recognised as a
fair trade importer by the British Association of Fair Trade Shops
(BAFTS) since 2005.

Eco Ezee Reusable Paint Tray Review

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009


Review by The Green Familia

I was really intrigued when I saw the
Eco Ezee Paint Tray – it seems such a simple idea. We are currently
renovating our house and are going to be doing a lot of painting.
When I have decorated before I’ve always used the traditional
plastic painting tray and roller. I never liked having to wash all
the paint out of the plastic tray when I finished and was impressed
by Eco Ezee’s claim that their tray can be reused without washing
it out! A brilliant idea! So, I gave it a go to see just how well it
works.

Concept: The Eco Ezee Paint Tray
is designed as an alternative to all the plastic and metal trays
currently available. It is made from 100% recycled waste material.
When you have finihsed painting, there is no need to use water to
wash the tray – just wipe out any excess paint and leave to dry. Any
paint left will soak into the tray and dry.

In use: The Eco Ezee tray is
very easy to use – it is just like any other paint tray. The tray
holds paint well and the roller section helps you get a good coverage
of paint on the roller. There is also a very useful little gap at the
end of the roller section which I found perfect for holding
paintbrushes. I thought the tray might become ’soggy’ when I used
it, but I was pleased to see that it held the paint well the whole
time I was using it. Although I could feel the paint soaking into the
tray, I never thought that it would ‘give’ or tear. It always
felt very strong.

The cleverness of the Eco Ezee’s
design really becomes apparent when you have finished painting.
Instead of having to wash the tray out, I wiped out the leftover
paint (if you have a lot of paint left you could pour that into a can
first to use again). Once all the excess paint was gone I just left
the tray to dry! No washing, which saved me time and water. When I
used the tray the next time, the paint had dried into the tray and it
was ready to use again. As the paint soaked into the tray, there is
no flaking or peeling like you get on plastic trays. The tray was
perfect and ready to be reused.

Positives: I loved everything
about this tray – it is made from recycled waste materials, it’s
easy to use, it can be used again and again and it needs no washing.
It will also last a long time. The paint that soaks into the tray
when you have finished using it, helps to make the tray stronger the
more it is used.

Negatives: None at all.

Cost: The Eco Ezee Paint tray
costs about £1.50, depending on where you buy it, which I think is
excellent value for money.

Where can I buy it?: A list of
suppliers is available on the Eco Ezee website, in the Where to Buy
Section. As well as being sold at Travis Perkins, the tray can also
be purchased from several online suppliers such as Ecotopia and My
Little Eco.

Verdict: 5/5 – a very clever
product.

Trusts and foundations should think again on financial risks

Sunday, May 17th, 2009

Trusts
and foundations should consider environmental, social and governance
(ESG) risks and opportunities in their investments to safeguard value
and protect the interests of future beneficiaries -according to new
research released today by the EIRIS Foundation.

Sustainable returns: The value of environmental, social and governance factors for Foundation investments
examines why issues such as climate change and corporate governance
pose financial risks and opportunities for trusts and foundations.

Despite
their role in supporting pioneering social and environmental projects
through grants, many trusts and foundations are still lagging behind
other asset owners when it comes to responsible investment. This can
lead to significant conflicts between mission and investments. 

The
financial crisis has highlighted the risks that all investors,
including trusts and foundations, are exposed to. It has underlined the
importance of responsible ownership and long-term investing which
require accountability, transparency, and the consideration of
‘extra-financial’ research in the investment process.

The
EIRIS Foundation’s new report sets out why these principles make sound
financial sense for trusts and foundations. It explores the growing
body of evidence to show how the integration of ESG risks and
opportunities into investment can safeguard and enhance value for
shareowners.

The paper also highlights the following steps
that trusts and foundations should take to ensure they are managing
investments in a responsible and sustainable way:

1) Agree a position on responsible investment
2) Research investment manager’s expertise and practice in ESG integration
3) Include ESG integration in the investment mandate
4) Join collaborative initiatives, such as the Carbon Disclosure Project
5) Vote shares on ESG related issues
6) Engage with companies directly or via investment managers
7) Invest in sustainability-themed funds such as greentech, microfinance or timber
8) Invest in responsible investment funds that use ESG integration

Report
author Sam Collin, Charity Adviser at the EIRIS Foundation, said
‘Responsible investment is nothing new – some charities have been doing
this for decades. There is compelling evidence that ESG issues have a
financial impact and this shouldn’t be ignored by trusts and
foundations. This fits clearly with the fiduciary duties of trustees
and with Charity Commission guidance. Trusts and foundations that fail
to take ESG  issues into account could be seen as acting imprudently
and failing to secure their long term financial sustainability.’

Alastair
Hanton, Chair of the EIRIS Foundation, added ‘The integration of ESG
factors into investment processes is now recognised by the mainstream
as a way to enhance value – as demonstrated by the $18 trillion worth
of signatories to the United Nations Principles for Responsible
Investment. It’s not enough to just assume that ESG issues are being
integrated into the investment process. Acting as responsible owners,
trusts and foundations should question and encourage their asset
managers to adopt and implement best practice in responsible
investment.’

Natural Home Products

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009


Bring Nature Inside
with a Beautiful Wooden Bed from Natural Home Products

Your bedroom may be a
haven from the outside world, but you can still bring a touch of
nature inside with a beautiful Shiva wooden bed from Natural Home
Products (www.naturalhome-products.com).
The handmade
wood beds

from Natural Home Products are made by expert craftsmen in Southern
Bavaria from European sustainably-forested beech, cherry and walnut
wood, and come in a variety of models to suit any style of bedroom.

Natural Home Products
are the leading online store providing luxurious all-natural,
chemical-free products for the bedroom, from natural
wood beds

to organic
mattresses

and pillows. The range of products combines luxury and comfort with
the finest of natural and organic credentials. A perfect example of
the company’s ability to provide products that are 100% free of
harmful chemicals without sacrificing luxury, style or comfort are
their wooden
bed frames
.

The natural colour and
grains of the beech, cherry and walnut woods used in the Shiva range
of wood
bed frames

add beauty, serenity and an element of nature to any bedroom. All are
handmade using traditional craftsmanship and are of the finest
possible quality, while being entirely free of chemical additives.
There are four styles in the range, from the modern lines of the
‘Logo’, to the classic and elegant simplicity of the ‘Piano 2′,
all of which have 3 colour options and 2 natural finishes, oiled and
waxed or varnished.

Natural Home Products
also has an extensive range of sprung slatted
bed bases

made from natural and solid ash or beech woods. These bases provide
excellent orthopaedic support and mattress ventilation and come in a
variety of models to suit people of all heights and weights. Like all
Natural Home Products, they are completely free from chemical
additives while also providing luxury and comfort.

Several of the slatted
bed base models have the additional benefit of adjustable tension in
the slats that run through the lumbar region of the bases, so that
these can be adjusted to provide the perfect measure of support to
suit any orthopaedic need or personal taste. Wider slatted bed bases
are made with two sets of slats, so that each side of the bed has
independent and individual support, which also greatly reduces the
disturbance between partners!

Natural Home Products
also pride themselves on their customer service and are able to make
the slatted bed bases to fit any width or length of bed frame.

Find out more about how
a beautiful wood bed or wooden slatted
bed base

can bring luxurious style and comfort into your bedroom in the most
natural way possible by visiting:

www.naturalhome-products.com.

How the recession is affecting environmental careers

Monday, April 13th, 2009

“This is the moment when we must come together to save this planet. Let
us resolve that we will not leave our children a world where the oceans
rise and famine spreads and terrible storms devastate our lands.”
President Barrack Obama spoke with
concern about the future of our planet calling for immediate action to
be taken to secure a sustainable future for the next generation. This
article identifies the impact the global recession is having on the
environmental industry and how environmental professionals may help to
bring us out of the current economic downturn.

The recession has been called the ‘downside of gloablisation’ as the crisis began in the United States, the most powerful nation in the world; a knock-on effect was seen in all the major economies. The collapse of global giants such as Lehman Brothers, Wachovia, Washington Mutual and other household names has seen the US unemployment figure rise to above 7%, with over 10 million Americans out of work.

Despite the obvious effect on many individuals one of the most unpredictable effects will be that of job losses across the globe.  The US saw 524,000 job cuts in December 2008 alone.

Across the UK we have also seen substantial job cuts and many environmental initiatives and developments ‘put on hold’ or abandoned. January saw Boris Johnson, Mayor of London of the Greater London Authority (GLA), cancelled the Green Homes Service, a scheme committed to insulation and renewable energy (such as wind power), in homes. This would have created many green roles in and around the London area. The GLA also announced a further £10 million project cut to the London Cycle Network Plus, which looked to improving the safety of cyclists and encouraging cycling in an effort to reduce carbon emissions.

The ‘restructuring’ City Hall project was put on hold with no less than 50 jobs being lost in the cost minimization process. Protests over potential redundancies have come from the Green Party, however these cuts look imminent and it is not only the GLA who are tightening their purse strings and consequentially trimming back their environmental spend.  

WRAP – Waste Resources Action Programme – is a government advisory body that provides resource efficiency advice for businesses and general households and is now to become the only body to deliver Government funded recycling and waste programmes. Businesses will feel an impact from this change as 30% of their funding is being cut from £59m to £43.2m alongside 31 redundancies made this year already and with the expansion, supposedly making it easier for businesses and individuals to access green advice and support, there may be additional job cuts, less services provided and a fall in the overall budget for WRAP.

The construction industry has been hit hard as the housing market has plummeted with 50,000 job losses in 2008 and more expected in 2009. A total of between 7.5% and 8% of the total workforce in the UK have lost their jobs in this market including a high number or environmental monitors, construction waste managers and land condition experts. The unseen effect here was that of the diminished cascade to the lower margin consultancies who support the various developments within construction and development, but for whom the previous abundance of work has dried up.

So how can we be positive about the environmental sector given all this gloom and doom?

In the current crisis it is hard to stay optimistic with only 21% of CEO’s confident their business will grow. The decrease in confidence has changed attitudes to do with the environment, now less than 1 in 10 CEO’s worry about diminishing natural resources and fail to put the issue high on the agenda. Sir Stuart Rose, M&S executive chairman, however insists that green remains high on the agenda. His Plan A is award winning and there is evidence showing that CSR is on an upturn as many more firms instigate their push towards the environment and energy improvements; RBS, Tarmac, Co-Op and Samsung are just some of the large corporates that see the crisis as an opportunity to focus on CSR and grow their business, establishing new positions in their markets above their competitors.

Allen & York Business Manager Joe Heppenstall said, “It is no longer the altruists that are telling people about their ‘Sustainable Strategy’ its becoming more and more common place in the boardroom. By no means is everything looking gloomy!”

Remaining optimistic is difficult but there is evidence that careers in the environmental sector are showing some elasticity and could drive new economic growth. Careers including ecologists, hydrologists, environmental chemists are expected to grow 25% over the next decade – basically jobs that are required and continue in demand when there is no extra discretionary money to spend.

Construction roles may have been reduced but this reduction is being counteracted by huge demand for climate change and carbon-reduction services as the Government introduces its’ low-carbon strategy to create a new green economy to pull us out of the recession and work towards a sustainable future.

Plans have been announced by the Mayor of London that 15,000 jobs could be created in an effort to cut energy and tackle climate change. Targets have been set in place of reducing London’s carbon emissions by 60%, contributing £600m to London’s economy by 2025 and being established as a low carbon hub. Green collar jobs would play an important role therefore employing green professionals would gain a company the best long-term value out of their investment.

The NHS announced a major campaign to reduce their carbon footprint, currently employing one and a half million people, in-house and contracted environmental professionals will lead the campaign. With low carbon targets to achieve and campaigns in place, the new global low carbon economy is worth £3 trillion employing 880,000 people in the UK.

The latter comes under the term the ‘green new deal’ which means spending money to stimulate the use of ‘green technology’ such as renewable energy and public transport to create jobs, environmental preservation and economic upturn.

The UN have been in talks proposing ‘a global green new deal’ to be presented at the G20 where economic stimuli of all countries are expected to devote billions of public spending to green projects. The US economic stimulus has amounted to more than $2,800 bn with around $430 bn (15%) going to be spent on green measures. The UK is only allocating £535 million (7%) of their economic stimulus which is said to be too small with MP’s suggesting the Treasury should spend £11 bn on green stimulus measures as this would lead to net job creation, cut emissions and improve energy security.

Greenpeace suggested that if £5 bn was invested in energy efficiency measures, 55,000 jobs could be created. Green job creation would range from the science behind clean energy systems to their physical installation including every function in between.

EU diplomats have viewed the election of President Barack Obama as the most positive change in the US as Obama commits the US to cut emissions 16% by 2020 and 80% by 2050. Obama also plans to spend billions of dollars on renewable energy. The Government in the UK has proposed for the creation of the Office for Renewable Energy Deployment to deliver targets of sourcing 15% of the UK’s energy by 2020. Governments are committing to energy efficiency projects as they are labour intensive creating construction sector jobs, which have been worst hit, energy sector jobs, reducing energy use, producing cost savings, a sustainable future and most importantly it is the best route to economic recovery.

Joe Heppenstall summed up the situation saying, “Lets face it, the US needs a boost and if building a better, bigger environmental industry is what Obama brings then good for them. In terms of the UK we have a great industry and for us it’s about how we adapt to these times in both the Public and Private Sector and what we can do to change in the face of the market conditions.”  He went on to say that “The consultants in the UK are some of the best in the world and have a habit of being able to switch strategy to meet demand through retraining, recruiting new skills and refocus on sectors that are very much alive. Similarly the blue chip organizations are recognizing that the green agenda will no away.”

The financial crisis has had large implications on the environment industry but at the same time created huge economic, social and environmental benefits likely to arise from combating climate change and pollution, generating many varied opportunities.

**ENDS**

Notes to the editor:

About Allen & York:
A&Y have established a market leading presence in Sustainable Environmental, Health & Safety, Planning and Energy by continually striving to be not just effective, but the best in their field. With worldwide experience of specialist recruitment knowledge, their results speak for themselves. Allen & York’s role is to take the hassle and uncertainty out of the recruitment process whilst at the same time freeing their client’s time to continue doing what they do best. As standard, Allen & York offer a bespoke, cost-effective service that is backed up by continuing commitment to ethical practice and professional excellence. www.allen-york.com


WordPress SEO fine-tune by Meta SEO Pack from Poradnik Webmastera