Winner ā Paul king
There are many reasons why Paul King is this yearās winner: his tenacious driving of the WWFās āmillion sustainable homesā campaign, his sustained pressure on the government to improve upon its āpoor draft Code for Sustainable Homesā and his tireless championing of the sustainability cause in front of MPs in the Houses of Parliament and on numerous committees such as the BREās sustainability board. However the best reason is summed up by a readerās review of Kingās latest book, One Planet Living, on ā yes youāve guessed it ā sustainability. āFor me the best thing about this book is that it inspires you to actually get up and do all of the things that you probably know you should.ā What more could you ask from a leader?
Runners up
John Callcutt
On his appointment as the new chief executive of English Partnerships, Callcutt cited raising āenvironmental standardsā as one of the key challenges he faced in his new role. He is well placed to do just that from his 31 years at Crest Nicholson. When he left, Crest was on top of the WWF housebuilder sustainability league.
Allan Jones
Most Londoners would scoff if you told them that they had a thing or two to learn from sleepy old Woking in Surrey. However, that is precisely what is happening after the appointment last March of this sustainable energy pioneer as chief of the London Climate Change Agency. From 1992 to 2004 Jones cut Woking councilās carbon emissions by 77% through promotion of renewable energy sources. It seems old habits die hard as one of his first acts as was to insist all LCCAās power came from solar panels and wind turbines.
Ken Livingstone
He has been labelled Red Ken owing to his political leanings, but perhaps the moniker should be changed to another colour: green. It doesnāt have quite the same ring but over the past year Livingstone has certainly earned it. He has overseen the rise of the London Sustainable Development Commission to ensure the greenest Olympics ever, he has launched the London Climate Change Agency, he has set out a blueprint for a sustainable London and he plans to build Britainās biggest ever zero-carbon development in the Thames Gateway.
Sir Neville Simms
Simms has already been recognised at Buckingham Palace for his services to the construction industry, but he may be owed a debt by the whole country if the recommendations in this Juneās sustainable procurement report are taken up. The taskforce that Simms chaired concluded that, as government spending accounts for 13% of the UKās GDP, it was ideally placed to make a real difference to the market for sustainable goods. The government wants to be the EUās leader in sustainable procurement by 2009 ā with Simmsā help it might just make it.
Topics
The Sustainability Awards 2006
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Currently reading
Sustainability Leadership Award
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