Why is it important? 

Action to tackle climate change can provide a wide range of benefits that extend well beyond just reducing greenhouse gas emissions. These benefits include improvements to public health, enhanced energy security, greater economic productivity and job creation and are important as they provide short-term, local benefits from actions that tackle the longer-term, global threat posed by climate change. 

What are we doing?  

Our work is focused on collating and communicating evidence of the co-benefits that climate action can bring. Building on a 2019 briefing and a co-benefits toolkit developed by the charity Ashden (with support from the Grantham Institute), we have engaged with councils around the country to highlight the opportunities that climate action provides for addressing other key challenges faced at the local level (eg, to health, housing, inequality). As part of this, we have run engagement activities with a variety of audiences from Cabinet Office civil servants, Council Leaders, chief executives and officers to members of the public via climate assemblies and engagement events run by local authorities. We have also developed a range of materials that set out the evidence for how climate action can help to contribute to improved health and economic outcomes. 

Our recent work has focused on understanding public perceptions of co-benefits so that those communicating climate action can tailor their messages to different audiences. Our 2023 Report, drawing on survey and focus group data, provides a detailed breakdown of public perceptions of a range of co-benefits. You can find out more about that work in the launch event webinar. This public perception work is ongoing, with regular surveys (March 2024 survey here) that aim to track how opinions are changing over time. 

Within Imperial, we convene a network of researchers with expertise in the co-benefits of climate action and are engaging with decision-makers to understand how evidence from the scientific community can best inform real-world decisions.

 

Related events

In this webinar, researchers present their findings from a new nationwide survey that looked at the perceived importance of different co-benefits and how perceptions varied by demographic factors such as age, gender and ethnicity.

Find out more

Contact:
Dr Neil Jennings
Partnership Development Manager
neil.jennings@imperial.ac.uk