Environment minister Eamon Ryan has announced funding of €24 million for Local Authorities to support and build low carbon communities across the country. A further €3 million is being provided to support cross-border and all-island community climate action initiatives.
This funding is part of the Community Climate Action Programme, which supports projects and initiatives that facilitate community climate action through education, capacity building and learning by doing.
Minister Ryan launched strand 1/1a of the programme, which is designed to resource Local Authorities to work in partnership with communities. Specifically, the programme supports direct engagement with communities to promote and assist in the scale up of community climate action.
The 2023 Climate Action Plan highlights how communities can benefit from the low carbon transition. This means warmer, more efficient homes; better travel options; more liveable towns and cities; more sustainable consumer choices; and a better environment for future generations. This next strand of the Community Climate Action Programme empowers communities to realise these benefits.
There are two strands in this phase that address direct climate action, and climate education and capacity building.
Strand 1 requires the appointment of dedicated Community Climate Action Officers (CCAO) in Local Authorities to guide and support communities from the very start. Community projects eligible for this guidance and potential funding will address the following five themes:
- home/energy
- travel
- food and waste
- shopping and recycling
- local climate and environmental action
Strand 1a — ‘Shared Island Community Climate Action’ — funded by the Shared Island Fund, will address the same five themes as strand 1 and have a clear North/South basis, with a cross-border partnership approach and impact. This will enable communities and Local Authorities to propose a cross-border project in partnership with organisations in Northern Ireland. At least 50% of awarded funding will be for project delivery in Northern Ireland.
Speaking about the launch, Minister Ryan said: “I am delighted to be able to announce these latest strands of the Community Climate Action Plan. Delivering on our climate ambition will only work if we all come together in a strengthened social contract for climate action, working towards real solutions that work for people, that work for communities, and that are meaningful, inclusive, fair and accessible.
“These strands require the appointment of dedicated Community Climate Action Officers in our Local Authorities, which means that there will be a go-to resource to guide, to support, and to advise groups and organisations on how they can become lower carbon communities, step by step. It is climate partnership in action between local government and people.
“Importantly we are also enabling community climate action on a collaborative cross-border basis, as part of the government’s Shared Island initiative. With €3 million from the Shared Island Fund, we will support cross-border projects by communities and Local Authorities to help reach our common climate and energy targets, North and South.
“I hope to see project proposals from partnerships from right across the island, including on nature recovery networks, sustainable farming, Just Transition and peatland restoration.
“This is part of how the government is working in practical ways with all communities on the island for a sustainable, shared future,” Ryan said.