Engage your community

25 Big Local Actions

Inspiration read

Step forward with Carbon Literacy

The Carbon Literacy Project

From the start, The Carbon Literacy Project has been designed to be a big collaborative project. It’s an ambitious initiative that involves people and organisations from all sectors and walks of life, contributing time and working together, to advance understanding and wider action on climate change. The Carbon Literacy Project trains trainers to deliver carbon literacy courses, accredits learning materials and certifies all the participants following successful completion of their course – which covers the basics of climate change science, impact of our actions and what we can do to help. The movement is growing rapidly as more people participate, with more than 800 courses already designed; 8,000 organisations engaged; and 100,000 people certified as Carbon Literate. And the impact of this widening community engagement is tangible – 400,000 tonnes of carbon emissions have been saved to date by the resulting actions.

Manchester Carbon Literate City

When enough of us join together with a shared purpose, we reach a social tipping point and things can change exponentially. This is the phenomenon behind Manchester’s aim of becoming the UK’s first Carbon Literate Locality, where 15% of the population will be formally certified as carbon literate. The initiative is co-ordinated by Manchester City Council and involves an exciting range of organisations across the public, private and third sectors. The target is bold: an eight-fold increase in the 10,500 people from 160 organisations across Manchester that are already carbon literate. So too is the intended outcome: a culture shift across the city, as groups and organisations publicly show their commitment behind bigger changes towards a more welcoming and liveable city.

From Carbon Literacy to climate collaboration

It’s about much more than a training programme. A shared understanding of our collective impact locally on climate and nature can mark the beginning of something new. By engaging the wider community, and giving more people a louder voice and agency, we are better able to shape the places where we live to serve the needs of all. Although people may not agree with everything that comes out of an organisation’s or area climate action plan, the cross-sector collaboration and community building that happens through this process is in itself a key factor in adapting to our changing climate and building resilience.

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What if?

What if we organised regular community assemblies across the UK? Which of these bigger impacts on society is possible? 

Radical inclusivity

✓ True

Local empowerment

✓ True

Community cohesion

✓ True

Carbon Literacy Project workshop
Carbon Literacy Project
Community assembly as part of the Hay Resilience Initiative.
Hay Resilience Initiative
Dyffryn Ogwen's first community assembly
Dyffryn Ogwen’s first community assembly

With special thanks
to our partners
: