What next for local government climate emergency declarations? The gap between rhetoric and action

Aug 1, 2023

The UK, like other countries, has seen a proliferation of declarations of local climate emergencies. While these declarations have been interpreted as a demonstration of ambition, little is known about how and why they actually came about when they did and the implications this will have for what happens next. Focusing on London, UK, we present evidence collected via semi-structured interviews with experts and practitioners involved in the propagation of climate emergency declarations to critically explore how and why these declarations emerged, and the various different roles they are perceived to play for different local actors. Our findings reveal four journeys to local government declaration of a climate emergency (made actively from above, passively from above, actively from below, and passively from across) and three interwoven purposes (statements of intent, acting as a political gesture, and stimulating local action). We argue that these three purposes combine and coalesce to correlate the declaration of climate emergency with a local responsibility for emissions reduction, leaving little analytical space to question the scalar disconnect between the immediacy of the narrative at local scales and the slow-burning (and) global nature of the threat in question. If these emergency declarations are to be an opportunity for change in the governance of climate change, then the question of ‘what next?’ requires more in-depth, thorough and constructive engagement with the type of climate action the declarations are expected to induce while considering how this aligns with existing responsibilities and resource bases of local government.

Publication details
Theme(s)
The urgency of zero
Type(s)
Research paper
Author(s)
Fankhauser, Sam
Year(s)
2021
Climatic Change

Latest news

SBTi Releases Second Draft of Corporate Net Zero Standard: Key Updates for Professional Services
SBTi Releases Second Draft of Corporate Net Zero Standard: Key Updates for Professional Services

The Science Based Targets Initiative (SBTi) has released the second draft of its updated Corporate Net-Zero Standard, marking the first major revision in more than four years and introducing significant new guidance for professional service ... Read more

New plan aims to make public procurement a force for climate action
New plan aims to make public procurement a force for climate action

Today at COP30 in Belém, the Government of Brazil announced an ambitious plan to drive action on climate change using the power of public procurement. The Belém Declaration on Sustainable Public Procurement establishes concrete measures to move ... Read more

Oxford Net Zero launches new Serviced Emissions Hub to drive accountability in professional services
Oxford Net Zero launches new Serviced Emissions Hub to drive accountability in professional services

By Siddharth Shekhar Yadav, Alexis McGivern and Clarissa Salmon.    In mid-October, Oxford Net Zero officially launched the Serviced Emissions Hub – a new cross-sector platform bringing together leaders from law, consulting and ... Read more

See more news and events