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Entries in Leith (47)

Monday
Jan232012

Zero Waste Podcast 10: Buy Less, Borrow Instead

DSCN6756

In thirty years we consumed over one third of the earth’s natural resource space. Do we need to keep buying?

The people of Leith are sharing books, toys, cars and even fish tanks. Visit Casselbank Kids Toy Library, meet founder member of Greener Leith Ally Tibbit to find out about the online Leith Lending Circle and pop into the pub, Sofi’s bar to swap books and DVD’s. All this and more on our latest podcast

Zero Waste Podcast 10: Buy Less, Borrow Instead (mp3)

If you have iTunes installed on your computer you can subscribe to our audio as a podcast by clicking here. 

DSCN6745
Casselbank Kids Toy Library
Here are some photos I took during my visit the toy library:
Casselbank Kids meet every Thursday morning from 9.30-11.30am at South Leith Baptist Church, 5a Casselbank Street (2nd right from the foot of Leith Walk). It cost £3 for family membership for the year and toys are 20p, 40p and 60p to borrow for a week. Call 07954 206908 for more information. 

The Leith Lending Circle
The Leith Lending Circle is a great way to share and borrow household items if you live in Leith. Read more about it on Greener Leith. This online lending circle includes insurance for valuable items and is provided by Ecomodo

Libraries and the City Car Club
You can visit your local library and borrow books for free, find out more on the Edinbrugh City Libraries Website or on the Tales of One City blog. The Edinburgh City Car Club was set up by Changeworks in 1999 with funding from the City of Edinburgh Council. This project has been so sucessful we now have car clubs throughout the UK.

The Bigger Picture
The next 'buy nothing day' is November 24, 2012. The challenge is to raise awareness of the issues behind our mass consumerism and think about how it's effecting the rest of the planet.
We've been tricked into thinking we need to keep consuming, manufacturers even design items to be obsolete after a couple of years. It started to boost our economy but it's not sustainable. Find out about all of this and more in the eye opening, engaging short film the Story of Stuff:
 
With resources decreasing and population increasing sharing may be the best way forward.   

The Zero Waste Podcast series is produced by Emily Dodd for Greener Leith and funded by City of Edinburgh Council Waste Action GrantsVegware and Changeworks

The theme tune for the podcast was brought to you by Waste Action Grant funded project, Trash Arts.

Sunday
Dec042011

Thank you for backing our Energyshare bid - we won!

thank you note for every language

Everyone at Greener Leith and PEDAL-Portobello would like to extend a huge thank you to everyone who voted and helped to promote our Energyshare bid. We won!

This funding does not guarantee that the wind turbine will be built, but it does mean that we now have all the funding in place to complete the planning application and associated feasiblity studies as well as gain all the other permissions we need. Most importantly, the fact that more that thousands of people have backed the project demonstrates that there is strong support for the project. 

Here's the text of a press release for anyone who wants it: 

Portobello and Leith Community Wind Turbine wins Energyshare funding Community.

Groups in Portobello and Leith were celebrating yesterday (Saturday) as their renewable energy project won the public vote in the Energyshare.com contest.

The project, a collaboration between neighbouring community groups Pedal – Portobello Transition Town and Greener Leith, aims to build a community-owned wind turbine on the Seafield Waste Water Treatment Site in Edinburgh.

The project won the online Energyshare.com vote, beating off competition from nearly 1,000 other community renewables projects from around the UK. They are awarded funding to complete feasibility work on the wind turbine, which is expected to go to planning permission during 2012.

The Energyshare.com contest is a collaboration between River Cottage and British Gas which awards a total of £500,000 to community renewables projects on the basis of online votes.

Eva Schonveld, Chair of PEDAL – Portobello Transition Town said, “We’re delighted to have won so much support for the project, and would like to thank everyone who took the time to vote for us. The funding is very welcome and will allow us to complete the final stage of feasibility work but just as valuable is the massive support from local people that this vote represents.”

Charlotte Encombe, Chair of Greener Leith said, “A big thank you to everyone who voted online, tweeted, facebooked, blogged and badgered their friends and colleagues to support the project. We’re delighted to be the most popular project in the Energyshare.com contest, but the turbine is not built yet. We still have a number of hurdles to overcome, but this vote gives a clear message that the project has widespread support, for which we are extremely grateful.”

You can find a full press release here.

Friday
Oct212011

Zero Waste Podcast 3: Charity Shops & Clothes Swaps

In a consumer culture, clothes generate cash. The UK fashion industry brings in over 20 billion pounds every year. Fashion changes and we keep buying. New clothes make us feel good, we need clothes to keep warm. There are many ways to justify our spending habits but what about the clothes that no longer cut it on the catwalk?

I visited Changeworks, Leith to find out how can we reduce, reuse and recycle clothes in Edinburgh. I put reuse in to practice at a clothes swap party at Sofi’s bar in the Shore. Can you really recycle your underwear? Were men spotted swapping kilts in Leith in the name of sustainability? All this and more in our latest Zero Waste Podcast:

Zero Waste Podcast 3: Charity Shops & Clothes Swaps (mp3) 

If you have iTunes installed on your computer you can subscribe to our audio as a podcast by clicking here. 

Here are some photos I took at Sofi’s Clothes Swap Party:

 

You can find your nearest charity show on The Edinburgh Charity Shop and Reuse Map. It's free to download or you can pick up a paper copy from Changeworks or at most local charity shops.

The Zero Waste Podcast series is produced by Emily Dodd for Greener Leith and funded by City of Edinburgh Council Waste Action GrantsVegware and Changeworks

The theme tune for the podcast was brought to you by Waste Action Grant funded project, Trash Arts.

Wednesday
Oct052011

Leith and Portobello community wind turbine project receives loan boost

A predicted view of how the turbine might look

Scotland’s first community-owned urban wind turbine took a step closer to reality today with the announcement of a £118,000 loan to Greener Leith to undertake preparatory works on the project.

Members of the community group expressed delight at the award from the Scottish Government under the Community and Renewable Energy Scotland loans fund, which covers 90% of the costs of pre-planning submission work for the proposed wind turbine on the Seafield Waste Water Treatment Works. The group are still fundraising for the remaining 10% of project costs, but are hopeful the remaining costs can be raised soon.

The project, which is a joint venture between Greener Leith and neighbouring community group PEDAL – Portobello Transition Town, proposes to build a single wind turbine on the Seafield Waste Water Treatment Site of between 500kw and 2,300kw. The electricity would be sold locally and the surplus from the turbine would allow a community fund to benefit the communities of Leith, Portobello and Craigentinny.

Commenting on the announcement, Charlotte Encombe, Chair of Greener Leith said:

"We’re delighted to receive this backing from the Scottish Government, which will help us take this exciting project forward.

"If the wind turbine goes ahead, its surplus will allow a community fund that will directly benefit people living in Portobello, Craigentinny and Leith. Not only will it will provide the resources for green projects that in the current economic climate may not receive funding, we hope it will become an inspiration for other communities to do the same for themselves. Of course there is still a lot of work to be done before the project gets the final green light, but we hope that the proposed wind turbine will become a landmark and a source of local pride; an example of what can be achieved when local communities work together towards a common purpose.”

Eva Schonveld, Chair of PEDAL – Portobello Transition Town said:

"PEDAL have worked hard with Greener Leith to secure this finance for Portobello & Leith Community Wind Energy Project. If it goes ahead it will bring material benefits to the local area as well as wider society and could also provide an inspiring visual focus for real sustainability on Edinburgh's seafront. Clearly there is much still to do, not least in consulting fully with those who will be affected, but this award means we now have the majority of funds in place to take this exciting project to planning submission.”

Tuesday
Sep202011

Number 10: Eco Bus

Have you not seen? Have you not heard? A beautiful, electric-diesel, retro-chic low carbon hybrid bus is here in Leith! Lothian Buses introduced 15 state-of-the-art hybrid number 10 buses to our streets on the 10th September 2011 with help of the Scottish Green Bus Fund. Read more on STV Local.

I've noticed the drivers have big smiles on their faces. Is it because these busses are more efficient, more environmentally friendly and quieter? Or could it be the joys of the little star lights going up the stairs, the plasma screen, stop announcements and free WI-FI? I'd be proud to drive a number 10 if I were a bus driver. It's captured my heart, no bus can be perfect but the number 10 comes close.

On that note, if I were to change it, I'd want it to speak with a male voice (get rid of the posh female Edinburgh accent) and it would talk less and I'd like it to play music and occasionally tell me a fascinating fact but apart from that, it's wonderful. Here's my poetic tribute to the new number 10:

 

Number 10

Number 10

New Number 10

Electric-diesel

Hybrid

 

Bus Unique

So smooth and sleek

With stars of shining

Stair-light

 

Dream machine

So cream and clean

My double decker

Cake Tin 

 

Retro-chic

You even speak!

Free WI-FI I can

Check-In

 

Bus, I’m keen

I like it green

Your plasma takes me

North-bound

 

(an hour later)


Number 10

I have to ask

Please can you speak less

Often?

 

If you speak

Then be a man

And I will ride you

Home-ward

 

Heralding the arrival of the new number 10, Lothian buses said:


Hybrid Buses are more efficient than ordinary buses because their engines run only to generate electricity which drives the wheels. We are committed to reducing pollution from our buses and providing the greatest possible environmental benefit for each new passenger who makes the switch from the car to the bus.
In addition, fuel is not an unlimited resource, and its cost is constantly rising, so the less fuel we need to run the buses the more services we can keep running cheaply and efficiently.

The number 10 goes from Western Harbour to Torphin and Bonaly, via Leith Walk, Princes St, Lothian Road, Polwarth and Colinton. Click here for timetable.

Read more from Emily on Sustainable StoriesTwitter or Facebook

Image credit: Emily Dodd

Monday
Aug152011

Zero Waste Podcast 2: The Joy of Poo & Real Nappies

 

Real nappies are funky, fun and come in a variety of shapes, sizes and materials. With eight million disposable nappies going to landfill every day in the UK it's worth finding out a bit more about an alternative that's covered in zoo animals and is not going to splatter you with runny poo when your babies bottom explodes.

I visited a Changeworks Nappuccino (that's a Real Nappy coffee morning) in Leith to find out more about using real nappies. I also had the chance to get some real questions answered like is it really better for the environment to use real nappies when you're using a washing machine and is it just too much of a faff to try and wash them? Listen to our latest podcast to find out more:

Zero Waste Podcast 2: The Joy of Poo & Real Nappies (mp3)

I took some photos of the nappies and the demonstration doll, Rory. Here's a flickr slideshow of them:

Research shows you save around £500 by using real nappies.  It's also better for the environment and you can wash them in a washing machine at 60 degrees. To find out more visit the Changeworks Real Nappy Project or the Zero Waste Scotland website.

For the latest research on real nappies compared to disposable nappies download a PDF of Life Cycle Assessment of Disposable and Reusable Nappies in the UK (Environment Agency for England and Wales, DEFRA and WRAP report).

The Zero Waste Podcast series is produced by Emily Dodd for Greener Leith and funded by City of Edinburgh Council Waste Action GrantsVegware and Changeworks

If you have iTunes installed on your computer you can subscribe to our audio as a podcast by clicking here. 

The theme tune for the podcast was brought to you by Waste Action Grant funded project, Trash Arts.

Monday
Jul112011

How many times must Leithers pay for failed regeneration projects?

 Once upon a time a waterfront promenade would have run over here.

In early May, Ray Perman, posted an excellent blog post calling for a new vision for Leith Walk. It elicited comments from a number of local councillors, local business people and community councillors and it’s well worth a read.

That single blog post has helped to start a debate which can’t happen soon enough, as there is very little public debate over the long term vision that the council has for Leith Walk. Does it still include trams long-term? If not, then what should happen instead?

Councillor Angela Blacklock says on in her comment on that blog post that Leith Walk is one of the top five streets in Edinburgh, and most of the subsequent comments to that blog post seem to focus on fairly cheap and straight forwards cosmetic measures on the street. It would seem most people simply want the street to put back to how it was, and to forget about the whole idea of trams.

But without trams, and the collapse in property values on the waterfront, could it take more than a few new bins and a lick of paint on some shop fronts to stop the neighbourhood going into decline? Isn’t what we need a vision, not just for Leith Walk, but a vision for the whole area?

Before we look at these questions though, lest we forget, let’s have a look at the long list of things which various credible people suggested might have been built in the Leith Walk/ Leith area. Despite the fact that much of this actually has planning permission, it now looks almost like regeneration parody:

•    A 28 storey high “landmark” hotel building.
•    Numerous other hotel proposals on every brownfield site on Leith Walk
•    A big wheel
•    A modern tram system
•    A ferry to fife
•    A cruise liner terminal
•    A marina and finger piers
•    A waterfront promenade
•    An entertainment venue big enough for 6000 people.
•    An extension of Leith Links to the sea
•    At least two other significant public green spaces
•    A “third new town” involving 15,000 new homes.
•    25,000 jobs for Edinburgh and Scotland as a whole

Oh yes, and a museaum. None of this is now ever likely to happen in Leith in our lifetimes, and in some cases folk will be glad. But what we are left with is clearly an embarrassment to all involved. Just last week, Planning Convenor, Jim Lowrie said of the new flats in Granton:

“We’re all embarrassed by that development”
 
“It was a mistake and nothing like that will be sanctioned again.  The advice was that lots of small units were what people wanted in that area.  Clearly it isn’t – there are many unsold dwellings and it has become very obvious that the build is quite unsuitable for mixed use and family living.”


Meanwhile, Forth Ports new owners have decided to throw in the regeneration towel and sell off their main property asset on the docks, Ocean Terminal. Simon Gray, of ARCUS said:

"We acquired Forth Ports because we identified significant potential to develop the ports business both in Scotland and in England and we see exciting opportunities to do so, particularly in supporting the renewables sector.”

"Real estate and retail are specialised areas and we believe that the further development of Ocean Terminal and Waterfront Plaza is best carried out by someone who has real expertise in this area."

Today, Ocean Terminal can be yours for £100million, and as a bonus you get £62million worth of debt.

So what has gone wrong? Well the recession happened. And all those debt laden property companies who were building shiny rabbit hutches in the sky at Western Harbour to sell to debt laden buy-to-let landlords all went broke at the same time.

And the tram wreck happened, with a £1billion price tag, the latest cost mooted to take the tram to its planned terminus in Newhaven. As the Scottish Government is refusing to put any more cash into the project, the council has decided to limit its attempt at tram building to St Andrew Square, and it’s not clear yet they will even make it there. They need to find at least £200million and fast.

So, What happens next?

For months, if not years, Forth Ports, have been working on what you might call a ‘plan b’ with another huge company, Scottish and Southern Energy. They’ve cooked up two multimillion pound projects focussed on the docks. Both of them aim to take advantage of massive public subsidies on offer from the government.

The companies have a joint venture vehicle called Forth Energy, which aims to build a giant power station on the docks. Despite the fact that the Leith power plant is the most unpopular planning application ever made in Edinburgh, the proposal is very much still on the table, and Forth Ports continue to do their best to insist that this project is inexorably linked to it’s lesser known other project with SSE.

Fewer people know that the two companies also aim to benefit from about £35million from the Scottish Government National Renewable Infrastructure Fund, towards the construction of an ‘integrated manufacturing plant’ for off-shore wind turbines on the docks.

Leith is top of the list for funding, as outlined in a renewable infrastructure plan (or N-RIP), which Forth Ports have helped to write. Interestingly, it has a whole section which is dedicated to explaining how the planning system can be massaged to suit ‘industry needs.’ It says:

“The N-RIP supports an ongoing strategic dialogue between the site owners and the public sector at national and local level to progress planning and consenting processes for sites.”

“This will ensure that decisions about the suitability of development of the sites for offshore manufacturing and associated uses can be made in a timescale that meets industry needs.”


Local people opposed to the biomass plant have been trying to find out for some time, exactly why the City of Edinburgh Council agreed to postpone their debate over the proposed power plant until December. Planners had no need to acquiesce to Forth Energy’s request for a delay, but puzzlingly, they did. When questioned, local councillors have not been forthcoming.

So, perhaps that quote from the N-RIP is the closest Leithers will get to an explanation. Could it be that council officials have uncritically swallowed the bizarre notion that a giant, oversized power plant, with extremely questionable green credentials, is an essential component of a bid to persuade a wind turbine manufacturer to build on the docks? Of course, we are not part of the 'strategic dialogue' so we will never know for sure.

And at this point we should be clear. Greener Leith is wholly supportive of wind turbine manufacturing jobs on Leith Docks. They will be skilled jobs, and sustainable jobs. They will be jobs that will help to tackle climate change.  But one, currently hypothetical, wind turbine manufacturing plant, does not justify, or require the early construction of a giant biomass plant.

In our objection to the plant, we showed that the climate pollution associated with grid electricity is likely to be lower than the climate pollution associated with the biomass power plant in the future. So, the argument that the power plant will somehow support the green credentials of the wind turbine plant is most probably nonsense.

So, the wind turbine plant would benefit the area, but the biomass plant, on the scale proposed by Forth Energy will not. When you look at the relative amounts of public subsidy on the table, you can see why Forth Ports are so keen to include the biomass plant as an ‘essential, associated uses’ component in their ‘re-industrialisation’ plan for the docks.

Afterall, there may be £35million on the table to support the development of the wind turbine manufacturing plant – but the real prize for Forth Ports is the £1billion plus of renewable energy subsidy their proposed biomass plant will bring them, if they can push it through in the face of huge opposition. That’s £1billion in the bank before they’ve even sold the electricity it generates.

Despite the attempts to spin the ‘re-industrialisation’ of the docks as a positive thing, the fact remains that Forth Energy’s giant power plant is not scaled to any specific heat demand. In this sense, the only justification for it’s size and appetite for foreign timber of unspecidied foreign provenance is speculation based on the scale of public subsidy available to support it.

And, if only the accountants in Economic Development could understand this – lots of people, like Visit Scotland, for example, regard the power plant proposal as potentially very detrimental to the local economy too.

But the interests of all the small independent businesses who depend on visitors to the area,  don't seem to register in the City Chambers. Perhaps because they don't have PR's, planning consultants, and 'strategic dialogue' with the government.

Double Disinvestment

And let us not forget a third source of public cash that was to be spent on the docks to promote mixed use regeneration of the area around Ocean Terminal. The Tax Incremental Finance (TIF) deal was originally to have seen the council invest £84million on four projects:

•    A new link road between Seafield Road and Salamander Street. This will help to remove through traffic from Commercial Street and Bernard Street.
•    A Public esplanade and 'events hub' at Ocean Terminal
•    A new finger pier for the Royal Yacht Britania and visiting cruise liners.
•    New lock gates for Leith Harbour.

Recently, it has also emerged that the council is reconsidering the Tax Incremental Finance (TIF) deal that they did with the Scottish Government to help fill the £200million funding hole in the plan to get the tram to St Andrew Square. No doubt, by scrapping all the components of the project that Forth Ports doesn’t need any more. That would be everything on the list above, except the link road, which will make it easier to truck in timber and waste for burning in the power plant. 

So, it would appear that the council could take tens of millions of pounds out of Leith, to support regeneration projects elsewhere in the city, with no guarantee the tram will ever reach Leith.

If this is the case, Leith will be hit twice by the failure of the tram project. First by the economic disruption caused by the infrastructure works and second, by the removal of tens of millions of pounds of regeneration subsidy for mixed use development of the docks.

With the notable exception of Keith Anderson, the Chief Executive of Port of Leith Housing Association,  who points out in a recent letter to the Herald that "the aim of creating new mixed-use communities in Western Harbour and in Granton remains," there seems to be little public debate on the implications of this potential withdrawal of funding.

Forth Ports decision to sell off Ocean Terminal only helps to justify the council decision to withdraw from TIF funded projects. But shouldn’t the council wait to see who will buy Ocean Terminal? Shouldn’t any new private company that might buy the centre, and the land around about it, be entitled to access public funding to regenerate the area too?

You might think so.

Actually bad luck for Leith comes in threes

But if that double whammy in the offing for Leith is not bad enough, last week it also emerged that the failure of the tram project has so skewed council finances that planning officers are directing private sector investors who want to build visitor attractions in Leith, to build elsewhere - on out-of-town locations in the West.

Were this development to go ahead on a green field site far out of town, everyone would have to catch the tram to get there. So, it would appear that the council is actively seeking to take millions of pounds out of Leith, and on top of that, it is also actively seeking to move private sector investment (that isn't related to renewable energy) out of the area to bolster the ailing business case for the tram project.

Let's be clear, there is nothing sustainable about this move to focus major development on greenfield sites on the edge of town.

So, we can count the ways that Leith will suffer as a consequence of the failed tram project. First, it has suffered because of the business impact of the all infrastructure work. Then it will suffer due to the withdrawal of mixed use regeneration funding to support the tram line to St Andrew Sq, and lastly, it will suffer because private sector investment for other mixed use projects is to be directed away from Leith to ensure that the tram line that is built will be profitable.

And then of course, there is Waterworld – a popular visitor attraction in the heart of Leith that will be closed soon, again to fund investment elsewhere in the city.

So whilst Leith has been left reeling by the collapse of the private property market, council decisions that mirror the commercial disinvestment in the area as a consequence of the tram project will only exacerbate the economic problems facing the area.  

Net effect of all this – tens of millions of public and private pounds will not be invested in Leith.

So, is it not reasonable to ask, where is the vision for Leith and the Waterfront now? Is one fictional wind-turbine factory, and an unwanted, oversized power plant, the extent of the long term plan for the biggest brown field site in the UK after the Olympics site in London?

Is the economic future of Leith to be sacrificed to prop up a business case for a mismanaged tram project and the benefit of the handful of private investors who now own Forth Ports?

Or could there be a different way forwards?

Let us know what you think in the comments below, on our Facebook page or in the Greener Leith Social

Thursday
Jul072011

John Muir: Art Eco Lab Leith 

Last weekend, environmental artists and environmental scientists united to explore the legacy of John Muir in an 'Art Eco Lab' at the Edinburgh Sculpture Workshop

John Muir was born in Dunbar. He wrote wonderful diaries of his wilderness explorations. He was a farmer, inventor, botanist, geologist, explorer, mountaineer, writer and pioneer of nature conservation. He founded the national parks in the USA. Did I mention I like him? I quoted John thoughout my Greeneleith wilderness exploration scholarship.

On Saturday, we went for a wilderness exploration right here in Leith. We journeyed along the bike tracks from the Edinburgh Sculpture Workshop all the way to the John Muir Grove at the Botanic Gardens

As we walked and talked we shared John Muir facts starting with the phrase "My mate John Muir" (I like facts too). Something suprizing awaited us at five ways junction, there was a man with a guitar and he sung about our John. It was brilliant.

On the way back we had a new task, it was to make a punk John Muir song. We each took a photo of something 'wild' with the digital camera and we all recorded a sound with the dictaphone. Over lunch our walk facilitator Rocca Gutteridge stitched the sounds and sites together in a soundscape (the word song doesn't quite do it justice).

 

Tribute to John Muir  on Youtube

My photo is the purple flowers taking over the old red telephone box, it reminded me of exploring nature taking over in Warriston Cemetery. My sound is someone walking past (I did try to get birds but they shut up whenever I help the dicterphone towards them). 

After lunch we had an introducation to the Steep Trail project, our Art Eco Lab is part of a physical and metaphorical journey up the East coast of Scotland through Art Eco Labs. The project is a colloboration between PolarcapEdinburgh Sculpture Workshop and Fife Contemporary Art and Crafts. Chris Fremantle has writen more about the project on eco/art/scotland.  

Lastly we watched short informal presentations from the lab attendees including local artist Natalie Taylor who cast a pregnat woman in soil and grew potatoes from her belly and Emma Herman Smith who grafitied golden bees around Austrialia and sailed seed boats down the Water of Leith with artist Andrea Geile. It was fascinating to explore their creative concepts and see how environmental themes inspired their work. I did a short presentation on GreenerLeith and my interests in art, science, writing, the environment (and John Muir). 

Here's what Polarcap Director Liz Adamson said about the Leith Lab:

"I thought today was terrific, time flew past, bringing people together who had never met each other, scientists, artist, under the umbrella that we believe John Muir is a cultural leader and that we should examine his legacy and see what we can learn from it."  

I had a great time at the Art Eco Lab and was sorry to miss the Sunday where others presented thier work including geoscientist and polar explorer Stephan Matthiesen and digital artist Mike Windle.

The Steep Trail Eco Lab project culminates in a conference, exhibition and publication next year. Our Leith Eco lab was just one stop on what's set to be an exciting Scottish journey. 

Image Credit Emily Dodd