Looking After the National Park

Climate change

Building fences in the Lake District National Park

Low-carbon Lake District

Low Carbon Lake District

The Lake District of 2050 could feel very different to today. As climate change takes hold, weather patterns will alter, and extreme events will become more common. There will be changes to the coastline, water cycles and conditions for wildlife. And as society tries to head down a lower-carbon path, the way that we build, travel, work and manage land will change dramatically.

There are real benefits to early action on climate change. As the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Review makes clear, it is more cost-effective to tackle climate change now than to cope with its consequences.

Project and Report

The Low-Carbon Lake District project will help our response to climate change, make us a leader on climate change management and chart the way ahead for a low-carbon Lake District. Rebecca Willis (opens in new window), an independent researcher and Vice Chair of the Sustainable Development Commission is leading this project for us and has written the Low Carbon Lake District report (opens Document Library).

Small island in Windermere

Working with organisations, both local and national, who have a stake in the Park, Rebecca’s study looks at what is already being done to cut carbon and anticipate the effects of climate change, and help chart the way ahead to a low-carbon Lake District.

Conference

The report was launched at the Low Carbon Conference on 16 June 2008 at the Castle Green Hotel, Kendal. Read the details of the conference in the Low Carbon Lake District Conference Report (opens Document Library)

Useful links