One Planet Framework

#MoveTheDate Solutions

One Planet Framework

Personal / Community: Community project

Population sub-categories: Legislation, regulation, mandate, Education, training

Description: Briefing note: Towards a 'one planet' UK The problem: We have climate & extinction emergencies because environmental & social costs have been left off the balance sheet. If everyone in the world lived the way we do in the UK we would need three beautiful planet Earths to support us. Already 1.6 Earths are needed to support world needs. The solution: A comprehensive 'one planet' framework that will cause system change over time to reduce the impact of our way of life to the level that the planet can provide, and reintroduce more nature into our environment. It entails more local production and supply, an end to waste, more jobs, greater prosperity and improved health. There is everything to gain! The framework helps optimise planning & spending decisions to help the UK reduce its ecological & carbon footprints to a measurably sustainable level – as the Well-Being of Future Generations Act in Wales requires. The time period is defined. The tools heighten awareness of the impacts of different decisions. The 5-step path towards 'One Planet' UK 1. Obtain stakeholder buy-in and awareness-raising through exploring which standards, data sources and goals to use. 2. Determine the baseline – the current state of biocapacity and resource use. 3. Set targets to ratchet down consumption and boost biocapacity for each sector over realistic timescales (e.g. 5-year intervals up to 2040). 4. Set in place easy ways to measure them. 5. Keep checking and refining. The 5 basic ‘One Planet’ UK requirements 1. An aim to reduce the ecological footprint to 'one planet' by (say, 2040) would become an underlying principle of all planning and procurement policy as a verifiable regenerative strategy. 2. The same set of social and environmental criteria are used to assess all planning and infrastructure/supply chain decisions (e.g. a reduction of ecological footprint and increase in biocapacity, step-changing incrementally over time, similar to the planning criteria currently applied to One Planet Developments in Wales). 3. The criteria are informed by indicators including carbon and ecological footprint analysis, using a simple tool that compares different project designs for their social, ecological and economic costs and benefits. 4. Official policy would support all areas and sectors to become more productive and biodiverse – regenerative. E.g. supporting more food growing & a circular, low carbon economy. 5. Reduction of the impact of production and consumption by a shift to a closed loop, more local procurement, believing that meeting basic needs is sufficient for all. How spending bodies could proceed Every project initiated by spending bodies would be evaluated relative to the overall goal as follows: • Where does the UK want to be resource-wise in 2030 and 2050 to position itself for success? • What Ecological Footprint reduction does this imply? (relative to a baseline survey) • What is the expected financial budget for projects over the time period (e.g. to 2030 or 2050)? • By dividing the reduction by the expected budget, one gets a minimal performance standard for all projects – a benchmark. • Every option that does not beat this benchmark becomes a liability and should be avoided. Favour the best performing projects and learn from them. 2 questions about all spending To make sure ALL of the UK's investments are effective in helping to achieve the defined objective they would need to pass two evaluations: 1. Is the investment producing a positive financial return (ROI)? If not, the project will not be replicable. The higher the ROI the faster it can be scaled. 2. Is the investment improving resource security rapidly enough? If not, the UK won't be prepared for the future. (Resource security includes biocapacity and local capacity). Tools to help: 1. Ecological Footprint accounting • Provides a biological view & joins all the human pressures – water, climate, biodiversity, food, energy, etc. This allows us to solve them all together. • Ecological Footprint results are understandable by ordinary people (unlike carbon). • Makes the economic self-interest clear and obvious. • It allows policy analysts to identify which options reduce the resource dependence of an economy and by how much. • Sustainable investments that satisfy investors need to meet both the resource and the fiscal criteria. To achieve this use: 2. The Net Present Value+ tool • Expands on classical NPV. See: https://www.footprintnetwork.org/npvplus/ • It compares different scenarios for a given spend. • Can help you evaluate how much the spending benefits social, financial and environmental criteria. • It also clarifies what the assumed future is within which the spend has to operate. • Ensures all the relevant costs & benefits are counted within the WBFGA's 5 ways of working. Produced by The One Planet Centre in partnership with the Global Footprint Network MORE INFO: ‘One Planet’ Cities: Sustaining Humanity within Planetary Limits by Founder/Director David Thorpe Post-graduate Certificate in One Planet Governance Website: https://theoneplanetlife.com Tel. 07901 925671 Email: info@theoneplanetlife.com © The One Planet Centre

Website about this solution: https://theoneplanetlife.com/

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