Local Environment and Economic Development (LEED) Toolkit

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Local Environment and Economic Development (LEED) Toolkit

Transcript of Local Environment and Economic Development (LEED) Toolkit

Page 2: Local Environment and Economic Development (LEED) Toolkit

Chris Saville Senior Advisor Sustainable Places

Keith Moore Eastern Area Sustainable Communities Account Manager

Tim Sunderland Economist

Tom Butterworth Senior Adviser – Local Government

Mark Durk Policy Advisor - Green Infrastructure

Presenters

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Introduction to LEED

1) Purpose of the LEED toolkit

2) The Defra Network Offer

3) How does it work?

4) Trial and development

5) Where are we now?

6) Key messages and communication

7) The support we can provide

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1) Purpose of the LEED toolkit

The toolkit will support Local Enterprise Partnerships to make operational sense of complex environmental information, so that it can support vision development through feeding in to SWOT analysis.

Internal External

Strength Opportunities Positive

Weaknesses Threats Negative

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Outputs

• an assessment of the opportunities and threats to the LEPs plans for increasing local Gross Value Added (GVA),

• based on the economy’s dependencies upon the environment

• Solutions which require a change in the economic plan (strategic solutions)

or

• Solutions which do not require a change in the economic plan, and can be addressed through specific programmes of projects (tactical solutions)

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Disclaimers

• Not new research – making sense of existing data

• Quantitative and qualitative

• Varying levels of accuracy, confidence and uncertainty

• Will not provide a ‘value of the natural environment in x’

• Will not provide the optimal development pathway for your area (i.e. provides input into the planning process. Does not do any planning).

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Defra Network Offer to LEPs and City Deals

• Defra network will ‘make available a toolkit that helps LEPs and their partners better understand the relationship between the economy and the environment in strategic economic planning.’

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HOW DOES IT WORK?

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3) How does it work?

1.Economic planning

socio-economic situation

Goals

2. Physical economy

resource usewaste &

emissions

3. Relationship with the

environment

Provisioning services

Regulating services

Cultural services

4. OutputsOpportunities and Threats

Strategic Solutions

Tactical Solutions

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Inputs and outputs

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Ecosystem Services

• Producing goods and services requires natural capital as well as human and manufactured capital

• As well as direct products – such as apples for cider - nature offers many less tangible, but equally important services

Apples •Natural capital

Staff •Human capital

Factory•Manufactured

capital

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The Ecosystem Service Framework Provisioning services

Fresh water

Food (eg crops, fruit, fish, etc)

Fibre and fuel (eg timber, wool, etc)

Genetic resources (used for crop/stock breeding and biotechnology)

Biochemicals, natural medicines, pharmaceuticals

Ornamental resources (eg shells, flowers, etc)

Regulatory services

Air quality regulation

Climate regulation (local temp. /precipitation, GHG sequestration, etc)

Water regulation (timing/scale of run-off, flooding, etc)

Natural hazard regulation (ie storm protection)

Pest regulation

Disease regulation

Erosion regulation

Water purification and waste treatment

Pollination

Cultural services

Cultural heritage

Recreation and tourism

Aesthetic value

Spiritual and religious value

Inspiration of art, folklore, architecture, etc

Social relations (eg fishing, grazing, cropping communities)

Supporting services

Soil formation

Primary production

Nutrient cycling (water recirculation in landscape)

Water recycling

Photosynthesis (production of atmospheric oxygen)

Provision of habitat

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The Ecosystem Service Framework Provisioning services

Fresh water

Food (eg crops, fruit, fish, etc)

Fibre and fuel (eg timber, wool, etc)

Genetic resources (used for crop/stock breeding and biotechnology)

Biochemicals, natural medicines, pharmaceuticals

Ornamental resources (eg shells, flowers, etc)

Regulatory services

Air quality regulation

Climate regulation (local temp. /precipitation, GHG sequestration, etc)

Water regulation (timing/scale of run-off, flooding, etc)

Natural hazard regulation (ie storm protection)

Pest regulation

Disease regulation

Erosion regulation

Water purification and waste treatment

Pollination

Cultural services

Cultural heritage

Recreation and tourism

Aesthetic value

Spiritual and religious value

Inspiration of art, folklore, architecture, etc

Social relations (eg fishing, grazing, cropping communities)

Supporting services

Soil formation

Primary production

Nutrient cycling (water recirculation in landscape)

Water recycling

Photosynthesis (production of atmospheric oxygen)

Provision of habitat

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The Ecosystem Service Framework Provisioning services

Fresh water

Food (eg crops, fruit, fish, etc)

Fibre and fuel (eg timber, wool, etc)

Genetic resources (used for crop/stock breeding and biotechnology)

Biochemicals, natural medicines, pharmaceuticals

Ornamental resources (eg shells, flowers, etc)

Regulatory services

Air quality regulation

Climate regulation (local temp. /precipitation, GHG sequestration, etc)

Water regulation (timing/scale of run-off, flooding, etc)

Natural hazard regulation (ie storm protection)

Pest regulation

Disease regulation

Erosion regulation

Water purification and waste treatment

Pollination

Cultural services

Cultural heritage

Recreation and tourism

Aesthetic value

Spiritual and religious value

Inspiration of art, folklore, architecture, etc

Social relations (eg fishing, grazing, cropping communities)

Supporting services

Soil formation

Primary production

Nutrient cycling (water recirculation in landscape)

Water recycling

Photosynthesis (production of atmospheric oxygen)

Provision of habitat

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The Ecosystem Service Framework Provisioning services

Fresh water

Food (eg crops, fruit, fish, etc)

Fibre and fuel (eg timber, wool, etc)

Genetic resources (used for crop/stock breeding and biotechnology)

Biochemicals, natural medicines, pharmaceuticals

Ornamental resources (eg shells, flowers, etc)

Regulatory services

Air quality regulation

Climate regulation (local temp. /precipitation, GHG sequestration, etc)

Water regulation (timing/scale of run-off, flooding, etc)

Natural hazard regulation (ie storm protection)

Pest regulation

Disease regulation

Erosion regulation

Water purification and waste treatment

Pollination

Cultural services

Cultural heritage

Recreation and tourism

Aesthetic value

Spiritual and religious value

Inspiration of art, folklore, architecture, etc

Social relations (eg fishing, grazing, cropping communities)

Supporting services

Soil formation

Primary production

Nutrient cycling (water recirculation in landscape)

Water recycling

Photosynthesis (production of atmospheric oxygen)

Provision of habitat

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The Ecosystem Service Framework Provisioning services

Fresh water

Food (eg crops, fruit, fish, etc)

Fibre and fuel (eg timber, wool, etc)

Genetic resources (used for crop/stock breeding and biotechnology)

Biochemicals, natural medicines, pharmaceuticals

Ornamental resources (eg shells, flowers, etc)

Regulatory services

Air quality regulation

Climate regulation (local temp. /precipitation, GHG sequestration, etc)

Water regulation (timing/scale of run-off, flooding, etc)

Natural hazard regulation (ie storm protection)

Pest regulation

Disease regulation

Erosion regulation

Water purification and waste treatment

Pollination

Cultural services

Cultural heritage

Recreation and tourism

Aesthetic value

Spiritual and religious value

Inspiration of art, folklore, architecture, etc

Social relations (eg fishing, grazing, cropping communities)

Supporting services

Soil formation

Primary production

Nutrient cycling (water recirculation in landscape)

Water recycling

Photosynthesis (production of atmospheric oxygen)

Provision of habitat

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Research Approach

Local Commissioning Consortium

• Local Enterprise Partnership•Local Nature Partnership• Local Authorities• Others

In-house experts and/or consultants

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• One day workshop focussed on identifying opportunities threats and potential solutions

• 2.5 days (1 to set up, 1 to run, 0.5 to write up)

Level 1

• Initial consideration of environmental relationships for opportunities and threats

• Meeting with key experts and representatives for each environmental relationship (0.5 days per relationship)

• Final workshop (2.5 days - 1 to set up, 1 to run, 0.5 to write up)

• Another 25 days work - approx £10K if using consultants

Level 2

• Detailed consideration of environmental relationships for opportunities and threats

• Detailed data collection and analysis on environmental relationships (3 days per relationship)

• Ranking of opportunities and threats

• Final workshop (2.5 days - 1 to set up, 1 to run, 0.5 to write up)

• Up to another 50 days work - up to another £20K if using consultants

Level 3

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4) TRIAL AND DEVELOPMENT

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New Anglia / Wild Anglia feedback

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Trial 1: Worcestershire, Staffordshire and Cornwall & Scilly Isles (11/12)

Trial 2: New Anglia LEP, Wild Anglia LEP, Norfolk and Suffolk CC (12/13)

Roll Out (July 2013)

Timeline

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6) Key messages

Growth that’s in tune with the environment: using the Local Environment and Economic Development (LEED) Toolkit

The LEED toolkit:

• systematically considers the economy’s relationship with the environment

• supports planning for growth which is resilient to environmental change

• identifies clear opportunities and threats to the economy from its dependence on the environment

• is an optional, non-regulatory method designed for Local Enterprise Partnerships and Local Authorities

• builds positive partnership working around issues of common concern

• has been piloted by New Anglia LEP who recommend it to other LEPs

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7) Support from the Defra Network

• Defra-Network support the use of LEED as a means to:

– Help LEPs and their partners understand the relationship between the economy and the environment; and

– Encourage constructive dialogue between local partners.

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Finding out more

• For more information on the toolkit please contact Tom Butterworth at:

[email protected]

– Mobile: 07500 608 458