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NEW RESEARCH: FOUR IN TEN BRITS PREDICT UK WILL HAVE CARBON POLICE BY 2050
--- And a quarter think worst environmental offenders will be forced to go to "energy rehab" and take "energy addiction classes"---
New research unveiled today (Wednesday 25 June) paints a bleak picture of the UK in 2050 if action is not taken now to cut carbon dioxide emissions.
The research, commissioned by the Energy Saving Trust, the UK's leading organisation set up to help people fight climate change, finds that more than four in ten Brits (41%) think the UK will need its own Carbon Police Force.
A quarter of Brits also believes the worst environmental offenders will be forced to go to energy rehab and take energy addiction classes while 62 per cent think that by 2050 the Government will enforce tough laws to make Brits reach environmental targets.
The survey of 2159 people across the UK was commissioned as part of the Energy Saving Trust's report Emission Impossible? A vision for a low carbon lifestyle by 2050, launched today.
In it, the independent environmental organisation outlines the major steps that need to be taken for the UK to reduce its carbon emissions by up to 80 per cent by 2050. The report shows that if we take simple actions now we can meet long term carbon reduction targets without damaging our quality of life.
These include carbon-cutting measures which address: the way our homes are built; the source of energy we use; the product choices we make; how we travel; our day-to-day behaviour; our use of water; how we use resources and deal with waste.
Chief executive Philip Sellwood said: "The UK's perception is that by 2050 we could have the sort of draconian infringements on our civil liberties that have been highlighted in our research. This need not be the case.
"The carbon emissions we all produce from our homes and travel amount to over 40 per cent (43%) of the UK's total emissions so we all have a part to play."
"Our report outlines the Energy Saving Trust's vision for achieving a low-carbon lifestyle by 2050 where we meet our 80 per cent reduction targets without adopting austere lifestyles or making unpleasant personal sacrifices."
Emission Impossible? suggests a range of measures that must be taken by 2020 if the UK is to meet its 2050 targets. These include:
Sellwood added: "A low-carbon lifestyle will improve the quality of all of our lives. We could have warm, affordable, comfortable homes and better travel choices at the same time as protecting our environment."
"Although it often seems that only expensive or far-off technological breakthroughs can make a difference, a low-carbon future can be achieved with a combination of existing technology, bold policy decisions and the right personal choices."
"It is clear not only from our research but also from the tens of thousands of calls that come in to our advice centres every year, that there is growing concern about the long-term effects of our energy use on the environment. More and more people are looking to the future and realising that they need to act now to prevent unwelcome climate change.
"This year we expect the UK government to announce new and ambitious targets for carbon reduction, which will rely on all of us doing our bit. The Energy Saving Trust will be using this new report to decide how best it can continue to help people live a low carbon lifestyle. If, like us, you want to start taking action now, then the Energy Saving Trust is here to help."
The Energy Saving Trust's study of 2159 people across the UK also found:
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