A conference will take place in Harrogate on September 24 based around the themes of peace and demilitarisation.
It will happen from 10am to 6pm at Friends Meeting House on Queen Parade and has been organised by Harrogate Quakers and HUFUD (Humanity United for Universal Demilitarisation).
The wars in Ukraine and Yemen are expected to be touched upon and speakers will also discuss the environmental impact of war.
Speakers include Columbian human rights activist Angelo Cardona, Shan Oakes & Victoria Wild from Extinction Rebellion Harrogate, Martin Schweiger from Menwith Hill Accountability Campaign and artist and peace campaigner Shahina Jaffer.
It’s free to attend and for a full list of speakers click here.
The day will end at 6pm with a 30-minute peace concert by musicians from the Harrogate Philharmonic Orchestra and guests.
Paul Whitmore from Harrogate Quakers said:
“This will be a good conference to learn more about how the world and individuals are affected by militarism and what you can do to counteract it.”
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County council set to reject climate change action appeal
North Yorkshire County Council looks poised to dismiss moves by Green and Liberal Democrat councillors to accelerate the response to thr climate change and biodiversity crises, claiming they could be counter-productive.
The council’s Conservative-run executive will consider two environmental notices of motion that councillors were prevented from debating at a full council meeting in July, with the authority’s chairman instead opting to refer the proposals to its cabinet members.
Both motions propose the establishment of a new committee specifically to scrutinise the council’s progress and leadership in tackling climate change and establishing biodiversity plans to ensure oversight of the collective ambition of the council.
Since losing its overwhelming majority at the May elections, the Tory-led council has been facing mounting pressure, particularly from the Liberal Democrat and Green groups, to redouble its climate change and biodiversity efforts and allow opposition councillors to play a greater role in shaping such policies.
An officers’ report to the executive states the creation of a new scrutiny committee would take the number of such forums at the council to seven.
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It adds the council’s scrutiny function is under review as part of the establishment of a new unitary authority and recommendations would be brought before all elected members later this year.
One of the motions also calls for the creation of a new executive member to reflect the scale of the job, but the officers’ report highlights the executive already has the maximum number of members allowed under the county council’s constitution.
Liberal Democrat group leader Cllr Bryn Griffiths, who represents Stokesley, said the officers’ report failed to fully address the high priority and action needed to effectively deal with climate change and the ecological emergency in North Yorkshire.
He said:
“I think the points we put forward to deal with that are still valid and worthwhile objectives that the council should be taking on board and should be fully debated by the full council.”
The council’s Conservative leader, Cllr Carl Les said the executive’s debate and recommendations to the next full meeting of the authority in November would focus on how the authority could best manage the impacts of climate change.
He said:
“It is a hugely important issue to us. It seems to me that the Greens and Lib Dems are suggesting we have to have a special executive member and a special scrutiny committee, but we believe the climate change and biodiversity issues cut across everything that we do.
“The approach that we are taking by embedding it into everything we are doing, so every report we produce now examines the climate change impact, is better.”
When asked if the decision to reject specialist climate change roles and groups at the council was politically-fuelled, Cllr Les said:
Harrogate Spring Water ‘finalising’ latest expansion plans“Not at all. All our scrutiny committees have the ability to look at climate change implications.
“If anything they have more influence and control over what we are doing than what is being proposed.”
Harrogate Spring Water has said it is finalising the latest expansion plans for its bottled water plant – more than a year and half after previous proposals were rejected following widespread opposition in the town.
The firm held a consultation on plans for its Rotary Wood site this summer and said it would now provide a further update “in the coming weeks”.
That same phrase was used by the Danone-owned company in January 2021 when it said new designs would be revealed “in the coming weeks” after its larger expansion plans were refused by Harrogate Borough Council.
Twenty months on, there is no new application from the firm.
Harrogate Spring Water was first granted outline permission to expand in 2017, however it failed to get approval for final designs which were 40% larger than original plans and would have seen more trees chopped down at Rotary Wood which was planted by children 16 years ago.
The company later announced it would revert back to its original plans and has now released a new statement this week.
A company spokesperson said:
“We started our public consultation process in June because it was important for us to ensure that, as we look to grow, create further job opportunities and continue to support the local and regional economy, we listen to the local community.
“This process has included individual meetings with community stakeholder groups as well as an open public consultation event, allowing people to have their say on the design and landscaping of the proposed extension and surrounding land.
“We have taken these views on board as we work towards finalising our plans for the reserved matters application.
“We anticipate providing a further update on this matter in the coming weeks.”
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More than 400 objections were lodged against the larger expansion plans which councillors claimed put “profit and plastic before impact on the environment” as they voted for refusal in January 2021.
Harrogate Spring Water previously made a commitment to replace felled trees at a rate of two to one and has since said it is looking at ways to “achieve net biodiversity gain” at its site.

Harrogate Spring Water’s headquarters.
It also said the expansion would create 30 jobs and that there is “potential” to make Rotary Wood more accessible to the public.
Speaking earlier this year, the company’s managing director Richard Hall said:
Bilton garages set to be demolished for housing“We feel it is vital for us as a business to take our environmental responsibilities seriously.
“We also want to work in partnership with the local community on this.
“We want them to help shape the woodland into the resource which they would like to see and ensure our extension blends in as well as it can into the surrounding area.”
Harrogate Borough Council‘s plan to demolish 10 garages at Woodfield Close in Bilton and build two social homes has been recommended for approval.
The council owns and rents out garages across the district and has increasingly looked at the pockets of land as a way to build social housing.
Harrogate is one of the most unaffordable places to live in England, with average house prices around 11 times the median annual income of people who work in the district.
There are currently 1,867 households on the social housing waiting list.
In planning documents, the council said the development would help to provide “much needed affordable homes”.
The council earmarked the site for housing in August 2021. In total, it has 26 garages.
In November last year, the council was awarded £50,000 of government cash to bring forward housing on the garage site at Woodfield as well as at Park Row in Knaresborough.
The council’s planning committee will meet on Tuesday to decide whether or not to approve the Woodfield proposal.
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The report to councillors says:
Fears up to 3 million litres of water wasted during lengthy Ripon leak“The provision of two affordable dwellings is a modest addition to the district’s housing land supply.
“The design of the dwellings would respect local distinctiveness and there would be no significant harm to local residential amenity, or highway safety.
“The housing development would provide off-street parking and be a more efficient use of the site.
“The proposal would comply with the provisions of the development plan and national planning policies and guidance, and should be supported.”
There are fears up to three million litres of water went to waste in Ripon yesterday, after a Yorkshire Water mains pipe burst on North Street.
The pipe burst at around 5am and meant around 4,000 homes in Ripon and the surrounding area woke up to no water.
It wasn’t fully restored until 7pm later in the day, with the company setting up two emergency bottled water stations at Ripon fire station and Ripon Racecourse for residents.

Emergency bottled water stations were set up in the city.
The Bishop of Ripon was among those criticising Yorkshire Water’s response to customers, saying its lack of communication was “unacceptable”.
https://twitter.com/HartleyHAM/status/1560284278331678720
A source at the scene told the Stray Ferret that engineers working on the leak said 70 litres of water were lost every second before it was fixed.
In a 12-hour period, this would have meant over three million litres could have been lost in total.
We put this figure to Yorkshire Water. A spokesperson said the figure was “inaccurate” but was unable to say how much water had been lost.
They said as soon as the leak was located engineers managed to stem the flow.
However, according to the company’s Twitter account, the leak wasn’t identified until 12pm, seven hours after it was first reported.
This suggests between 1.5 million and 2 million litres of water could have been lost.

Engineers on the scene Pic: Paul Smith
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The burst main has come at a bad time for Yorkshire Water. The Harrogate district is now officially in drought and a hosepipe ban will come into force from August 26.
We asked Yorkshire Water what caused the leak and a spokesperson sent the following statement:
Water returns to some properties in Ripon“Our pipework has been under a lot of pressure recently – with high peaks of water usage and the dry ground causing soil to contract, which causes pipes to fracture more easily. We’ve increased resource in our field teams over the last few weeks, so that we can catch more small leaks before they turn into bursts and fix the big bursts as soon as possible.
“It took a little bit longer than usual to locate the burst pipe and complete the fix yesterday, as it was underground and tricky to locate. We delivered bottled water to customers on our priority services register and updated our customers via the website, social media and text, as to where they could collect bottled water.
“We’re grateful to our customers for their patience whilst we fixed the issue – those eligible for compensation in relation to the water supply interruption will receive it automatically.”
Water has returned to some homes in Ripon following a burst pipe on North Road this morning.
Many properties in the city have had no water or low water pressure all morning.
Some companies in Ripon were forced to close, including the coffee shop at Larkhill Nurseries and the Water Rat pub. The latter has now reopened.
The problem has also affected people in nearby villages Sharow and Littlethorpe, as well as further afield in Thirsk.
Residents on Lead Lane in Ripon told the Stray Ferret at about midday that water had come back on, as have residents living in Deep Ghyll Croft and Saint Marygate. However, one person living in Sharow says water is still off as of midday.
Yorkshire Water has been slow to tell the public when normal water supply will resume.
North Road will soon be closed to traffic whilst repairs take place.
A spokesperson issued the following statement.
“Our teams are dealing with a burst 12-inch water main on North Road, Ripon. We are currently working to rezone our network and return water supply to those affected.
“To allow our teams to complete the repair safely, traffic management will be required. We’re working closely with North Yorkshire County Council highways teams to minimise disruption.”
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Councillors delay North Yorkshire climate change proposals
North Yorkshire councillors have postponed moves aiming to ensure robust and immediate actions are taken to tackle the climate change and biodiversity crises for about four months.
A meeting of North Yorkshire County Council saw a majority of elected members agree motions for further environmental measures should be referred to the council’s executive and constitutional working group for consideration.
Liberal Democrat, Independent, Green and Liberal councillors had proposed the authority establish a dedicated scrutiny committee, an executive member to oversee climate change and the development of a biodiversity action plan.
The calls came just days after the council’s executive declared a climate emergency, several years after numerous neighbouring councils, following mounting pressure from councillors.
Coordinator of the council’s Green Party group, Cllr Andy Brown, said while the executive’s recent decision to declare a climate emergency was welcome, “we all know good intent needs a clear, costed, timed action plan” to be approved by the same councillors.
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He added a scrutiny committee was needed as it was the role of councillors to examine plans to tackle climate change and that residents suffering record high temperatures would struggle to understand why the authority was not taking more immediate action.
Cllr Brown said:
“Let’s be honest, how does it look if we say we declared an emergency, but say we’re only going to discuss the scrutiny arrangements in about four months’ time and we may not discuss them at all or we may not set up any scrutiny yet because we think our organisation is more important.
“How are we going to explain that to the people of Tadcaster who lost their bridge for so long, how are we going to explain that to people in Richmondshire who suffered those appalling floods that damaged their livelihoods?”
The authority’s chairman, Cllr Margaret Atkinson, who is tasked with controlling debates at full meetings of the authority, told the chamber the temperatures of the past few days had underlined the need to tackle climate change.
However, she said it was important the authority gave the motions “appropriate consideration”.
She added the council’s staff were already under a lot of pressure due to local government reorganisation.
The council’s deputy leader, Cllr Gareth Dadd, said the proposals had implications, such as financial ones, that needed to be fully understood, with a report by officers, before the motions could be properly considered.
He said it was possible creating an extra scrutiny committee could dilute the efforts of the authority’s existing scrutiny committees for matters ranging from health to transport.
Cllr Dadd said:
Harrogate climate change scientist warns of more extreme heatwaves“Policy and organisational issues are often worse for being delivered on the hoof. Good policy may well take a little bit longer to deliver.”
Harrogate climate scientist Professor Piers Forster has warned extreme heatwaves could be common in just 10 years due to climate change.
Prof Forster, who has lived in the town since 2005, was one of the main authors of last year’s “code red for humanity” climate change report published by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change on behalf of the United Nations.
The report was discussed around the globe and warned of climate catastrophe unless action is taken now.
Prof Forster has spent his career analysing the effects of climate change and is a director of the Priestley International Centre for Climate and professor of physical climate change at the University of Leeds.
The weather in Harrogate is set to peak at 38 degrees tomorrow, breaking all-time records. Prof Forster told the Stray Ferret why we are currently experiencing this extreme weather:
“The heatwave comes from a combination of a blast of hot air from Europe blowing over very dry soil. Global warming plays a big part in both these factors. Wild fires are raging across southern Europe with temperatures approaching 50 degrees centigrade in parts of Portugal.
“Climate change is warming the land and ocean, and has brought extended drought conditions to much of Europe. This means that heatwaves are over two degree more intense than they would otherwise be and are occurring much more often. We have some of the longest records in the UK, we can use these to estimate how likely such as heatwave is.”
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Many climate change skeptics have pointed to the UK heatwave of 1976, when temperatures peaked at 35.9 degrees during one day in Cheltenham. But this was five degrees lower than what is forecast for parts of England tomorrow.
Prof Forster said the weather this week is particularly unusual but will become more common unless countries around the world take action to reach net zero.
He added:
“One hundred years ago a heatwave such as this would have occurred once every 300 years, now it’s every 15 years. In a decade or so this will be a typical summer. The science is clear that these heatwaves will worsen until the UK and every other country In the world has reached net zero emissions: all sectors of every economy will need to decarbonise.
“Given the current crises in the world this seems like a tall ask but there is no other way. Wheat dies if it experiences temperatures of 34C or more at the time of flowering – this is not a world we want our children growing up in.”
Grim future ‘not a given’
Today, trains from Harrogate to London have been cancelled, Knaresborough Town FC has called off a match and schools, care homes and businesses are putting measures in place to protect vulnerable people from the extreme heat.
Prof Forster said we will have to learn to adapt to more heatwaves but a “grim future” is not guaranteed if policymakers work to urgently cut emissions.
He added:
Residents unconvinced about Harrogate Spring Water’s expansion“I don’t think people realise how much the UK’s climate will change over the next two decades: we are going to have to adapt our behaviour, homes, work places, hospitals, schools, roads and trains to such hot days. Expect wild fires and spending days in doors to avoid bad air quality.
“Our research at the University of Leeds shows that this grim future is not a given: cutting emissions urgently and strongly now can slow the rate of warming, giving societies time to adapt. We need to take this heatwave seriously: adjust your day accordingly, stay safe and hydrated.”
Harrogate residents remain unconvinced about Harrogate Spring Water‘s plans to fell trees in Rotary Wood to expand its bottling plant.
The company, which is now owned by the French firm Danone, held a three-hour consultation event yesterday at Harrogate’s Crown Hotel.
It was a chance for people to make suggestions on the design and landscaping of the proposed extension. The company said the responses would influence its final design.
Since 2017, it has had outline planning permission to expand its production facilities on its site on Harlow Moor Road that would involve felling trees.
It is now putting together a ‘reserved matters’ application which will detail how the new building will look, how the surrounding area will be landscaped and crucially, where new trees will be be replanted.
The Stray Ferret went along to speak to attendees and representatives of Danone, including Harrogate Spring Water’s managing director Richard Hall.
Passionate views
Throughout the evening there was a slow trickle of curious people looking at display boards that offered background on the plans and reasons why the company feels it needs to expand. The boards are available to view online here.
Some saw the event as a chance to passionately tell Mr Hall what they feel are the wrongs of the company, including the merits of plastic bottles.

Sarah Gibbs has been a long-term campaigner against the expansion and often dons her trademark tree costume. She said:
“My stance is we are in a climate emergency. We need to start acting like it. Why do we need bottled water?”.
Rotary Wood
Rebecca Maunder campaigns for the environment in the Harlow Hill area.
She believes it’s not a certainty that the trees will be lost if a case can be made that any replacement tree planting proposals are insufficient.
She suggested the company should instead look to expand its premises in different ways.
“They should build it on their car park.”
Ms Maunder said Rotary Wood “belongs to all of us” and is worried the business will look to further encroach into the woodland in the future.
She added:
“In three years they might want more space.”

How the site currently looks from above.
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Complex issues
When Harrogate Borough Council’s planning committee considered the company’s last bid to expand in January 2021, it was for some, a simple battle between the profits of a private business and the environment.
Richard Hall said to frame the debate in these terms is unfair and is “more complex” than what is sometimes presented.
When asked if he is personally concerned about the effects of climate change. He said:
“I think that everyone is thinking about the climate. I’d like to behave in a way that takes into account the future”.

Mr Hall confirmed the company still wants to plant trees in a private field behind RHS Harlow Carr, as it proposed last time, but this is “not enough” and it wants to plant more.
Mr Hall said they have been in talks with some landowners but are yet to come to any agreements.
Last time many objectors, including local climate scientist Professor Piers Forster, were unhappy that the felled trees would be replaced elsewhere with saplings, which are much less effective at soaking up CO2 emissions.
Mr Hall said the company is looking into how the new trees can ensure a “biodiversity net gain”.
On Rebecca Maunder’s car park suggestion, Mr Hall said it was not possible due to a sustainable drainage system underneath.
Sadness
Terry Knowles is a member of Rotary Club of Harrogate and chaired the group’s environmental committee from 2000 until 2015.
Mr Knowles is a key reason the trees were planted there in the first place, which began in 2005 and took around four years.

Terry Knowles inspecting the boards
Speaking in a personal capacity, he said he felt sadness that some trees that he planted with local schoolchildren, who are now adults, could be lost.
He said:
North Yorkshire County Council finally declares climate emergency“Bottled water is not an environmental product. The last permission was in 2017 and a lot has changed since then.”
A council which has repeatedly been challenged over the speed and scale of its carbon-cutting actions has made a U-turn to declare a climate change emergency.
North Yorkshire County Council’s executive agreed the authority would immediately adopt a climate emergency, following in the footsteps of several hundred British councils.
Senior councillors said the significant change in position by the Conservative administration had followed it listening to the requests of elected members from a number of political groups.
They added that not declaring a climate emergency could prove a distraction from its significant green efforts.
Commitments made by the council include support for the York and North Yorkshire Local Enterprise Partnership’s ambition to be the UK’s first carbon negative region – carbon neutral by 2034 and carbon negative by 2040.
These ambitions have been endorsed by the leaders of the Councils of York and North Yorkshire in the devolution deal requests submitted to government in December 2020.
An independent commission set up to examine levelling up for rural communities in the county last year found tackling climate change should be a priority, backing other ambitions for North Yorkshire to become a ‘green lung’ and to lead on employment in the green economy and a revolutionary energy transition.
In addition, the authority, which is the region’s largest employer, has sought to change staff work bases to cut commuting emissions and has made a £1m pump-priming fund available to support new carbon cutting projects, with just under half of the fund already allocated.
Harrogate acted in 2019
Nevertheless, neighbouring councils in Leeds, Darlington and York, as well as district and borough councils in North Yorkshire declared a climate emergency in 2019.
At the time North Yorkshire County Council stopped short of doing so, instead committing to producing a carbon reduction plan.
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Since then, and particularly following May’s elections, North Yorkshire council’s leadership has faced increasing numbers of requests from campaigners and councillors to formally declare a climate emergency.
A meeting of the council’s executive heard the authority’s leadership was “absolutely committed” to getting its own carbon emissions in order.
Councillor Greg White, climate change executive member, told the meeting the authority was “keen to affirm how serious we are about tackling climate change” by declaring a climate emergency and pledging to play its full part in cutting carbon emissions.
He said the authority was doing everything possible to reduce its emissions and meet a challenging net zero emissions target it had set for 2030 while protecting key services.
‘Proud that we acted’
The council’s deputy leader, Councillor Gareth Dadd, told the meeting significant carbon cutting progress had been made across the council’s many properties and workforce.
He said:
“It’s often said that actions speak louder than words. Well I think as an authority we can be very proud that we have acted in a very positive way after recognising the climate emergency two or three years ago.”
Following the meeting, Cllr White said the authority had previously been reluctant to declare a climate emergency as it could be viewed as putting words above actions.
He said the council was already undertaking most measures people associated with tackling the climate change emergency.