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Developing a toolkit to help smaller local authorities establish strong net zero governance in the UK

Developing a toolkit to help smaller local authorities establish strong net zero governance in the UK
Developing a toolkit to help smaller local authorities establish strong net zero governance in the UK
Introduction: the Skidmore Review of UK Government's net zero approach highlights a lack of a national framework which establishes local government role, responsibilities and area-based governance arrangements. Although unified political leadership agreed as part of devolution deals has helped some areas to marshal resources and support, the national delivery landscape for net zero remains patchy. This study develops a toolkit to help local areas improve local arrangements.

Methods: a mixed methods research approach has been used to develop the toolkit. It incorporates a set of governance models, a method for assessing the values of good governance, a governance improvement process and an illustration of how the toolkit can be employed using three cases where the two-tier public administrative structure applies.

Results: results from the research process suggest that although change is happening it lacks the coherence and scale needed, with non-urban multiple-tier public administrations getting left behind by their metropolitan, single-tier counterparts creating a credibility and performance gap between political rhetoric and local net zero delivery. This observed inertia highlights the need to change governance processes and practices if public administration is going to deliver its part of net zero effectively outside the UK Metropolitan areas.

Discussion: the gap in support for local government to develop net zero governance arrangements is well recognized in both this research and publicly funded research programmes. This study provides UK local authorities with a simple, effective toolkit, that could potentially help them build strong wider societal relationships that will assist them in playing their full part in the UK reaching net zero.
2813-4982
Gudde, Peter
4cd604e5-7d10-41ee-8ce7-8f43cfd2376c
Bury, Nicolas
696daba0-5cc9-444c-be9a-c678808712c6
Cochrane, Peter
cbaf60a5-fd12-4f21-ad8a-b853f1cc22bd
Caldwell, Nicholas
84c639c2-8986-48eb-94d2-f87f96d6b8ae
Gudde, Peter
4cd604e5-7d10-41ee-8ce7-8f43cfd2376c
Bury, Nicolas
696daba0-5cc9-444c-be9a-c678808712c6
Cochrane, Peter
cbaf60a5-fd12-4f21-ad8a-b853f1cc22bd
Caldwell, Nicholas
84c639c2-8986-48eb-94d2-f87f96d6b8ae

Gudde, Peter, Bury, Nicolas, Cochrane, Peter and Caldwell, Nicholas (2024) Developing a toolkit to help smaller local authorities establish strong net zero governance in the UK. Frontiers in Sustainable Energy Policy, 3, [1390570]. (doi:10.3389/fsuep.2024.1390570).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Introduction: the Skidmore Review of UK Government's net zero approach highlights a lack of a national framework which establishes local government role, responsibilities and area-based governance arrangements. Although unified political leadership agreed as part of devolution deals has helped some areas to marshal resources and support, the national delivery landscape for net zero remains patchy. This study develops a toolkit to help local areas improve local arrangements.

Methods: a mixed methods research approach has been used to develop the toolkit. It incorporates a set of governance models, a method for assessing the values of good governance, a governance improvement process and an illustration of how the toolkit can be employed using three cases where the two-tier public administrative structure applies.

Results: results from the research process suggest that although change is happening it lacks the coherence and scale needed, with non-urban multiple-tier public administrations getting left behind by their metropolitan, single-tier counterparts creating a credibility and performance gap between political rhetoric and local net zero delivery. This observed inertia highlights the need to change governance processes and practices if public administration is going to deliver its part of net zero effectively outside the UK Metropolitan areas.

Discussion: the gap in support for local government to develop net zero governance arrangements is well recognized in both this research and publicly funded research programmes. This study provides UK local authorities with a simple, effective toolkit, that could potentially help them build strong wider societal relationships that will assist them in playing their full part in the UK reaching net zero.

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Accepted/In Press date: 7 May 2024
Published date: 23 May 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 495793
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495793
ISSN: 2813-4982
PURE UUID: 5b95a0f0-1716-495f-b586-c3b0fe0418bc
ORCID for Nicolas Bury: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6048-6338

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Date deposited: 22 Nov 2024 17:45
Last modified: 23 Nov 2024 03:06

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Contributors

Author: Peter Gudde
Author: Nicolas Bury ORCID iD
Author: Peter Cochrane
Author: Nicholas Caldwell

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