Lincolnshire County Council performing poorly in tackling climate change

Councils across the country were tasked with reducing carbon footprint

Climate protester
Published 18th Oct 2023
Last updated 18th Oct 2023

Lincolnshire County Council have been revealed to be the worst administrative body in England, in their progression to reaching net zero.

The report by Climate Emergency UK found councils across the country generally are struggling to make progress on net zero, this has been revealed in research by a campaign group.

Four years after councils in the UK started formally declaring a climate emergency, a series of scorecards has shown the majority of local authorities are “underperforming” when it comes to action on climate change.

Only 41 of 388 authorities scored above 50% in the nine-month exercise, with the average score being just 32%.

Lincolnshire County Council was rated as being at just 12%, the lowest of all County Councils.

Councillor Colin Davie, the Executive Councillor for Environment at Lincolnshire County Council, said:

“We have spent the best part of 20 years putting solar panels on the roofs of our buildings, investing in new environmentally friendly technologies, and reducing our carbon footprint.

“These scorecards take into account things like whether the council has declared a climate emergency; something which has no bearing on our actual carbon emissions.

“We know we’re doing the right thing for Lincolnshire, and we will continue to make the right decisions that support the environment for the residents and businesses of the county for years to come.”

The scorecards, published today, (Wednesday 18th) marked councils in a range of areas including buildings, transport, planning and biodiversity.

London councils scored highly, with seven featuring among the top 10 unitary and metropolitan councils and Westminster coming top of that list with 62%. Only two London authorities – Bromley and Bexley – scored below the national average.

Climate Emergency UK co-director Annie Pickering said:

“The low scores across the board shows that there are national barriers for local authorities that make it harder for most councils to deliver the necessary climate action.

“A lack of funding and government policy U-turns are some of the barriers to effective local climate action.”

The top-performing authorities were the Greater London Authority and the West Midlands Combined Authority, which both scored 65%.

Scottish and Welsh councils also performed well, with most gaining above-average scores and Edinburgh and Aberdeen appearing in the top 10 unitary authorities.

Ms Pickering said:

“Scottish and Welsh councils on average score higher, with no Scottish or Welsh councils in the bottom-performing councils.

“This demonstrates that, when a national government provides greater support, funding and power to local authorities, the climate action of every local authority in that nation increases”.

Just four district councils scored above 50% – Lancaster, Exeter, Cambridge and Oxford – while Oxfordshire, Norfolk and Devon were the only county councils to get above that score.

No Northern Irish authorities scored more than 50%, but Belfast came top of the region’s list with 43%.

The worst performing authority was Tamworth, which declared a climate emergency in November 2019 but scored just 8%.

Stockton-on-Tees was the worst performing unitary authority and Lincolnshire was the worst performing county council, both scoring 12%.

Of the councils that scored above 50%, most were Labour controlled, although some had changed hands only recently. For instance, Westminster City Council was Conservative-controlled until May 2022.

Ms Pickering said:

“These scorecards are an essential tool for councils and campaigners alike to show them what is possible for local climate action and encourage councils to go further, to mitigate and adapt to the climate and ecological emergencies we are facing.”

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