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Carbon Conversations

  • Published on February 14, 2022

Carbon Conversations is a tool that help addresses the everyday carbon reduction in group settings while taking account of the complex emotions and social pressures that make this difficult.

Reducing each and everyone's carbon footprints and moving toward more sustainable forms of consumption are indispensable parts of global climate actions. Yet these tasks are often charged with complex emotions and entangled in webs of social relations.  Having honest conversations is the first step toward climate action.

Carbon Conversations was started by Rosemary Randall, a psychotherapist, and Andy Brown an engineer. Drawing on Rosemary’s therapeutic experience with groups and Andy’s technical expertise they created a unique psycho-social project that addresses the practicalities of carbon reduction while taking account of the complex emotions and social pressures that make this difficult.

Between 2006 and 2010 the project was hosted by the charity Cambridge Carbon Footprint. From 2011 to 2012 it found a home with the Oxford charity, Climate Outreach and from 2013 to March 2017 it was managed by the Surefoot Effect Community Interest Company. We think that over two thousand people may have participated in facilitated Carbon Conversations groups in the UK.

 A number of projects around the world have also used Carbon Conversations, including groups in Australia, the Netherlands, Canada, Switzerland, France, Finland and Spain.

Over the years the project produced detailed, professionally designed materials on carbon reduction, culminating in the publication of the book In Time for Tomorrow? in 2015. The project also developed considerable expertise and materials on the psychology of climate change and the use of small groups to help people overcome their fears and defensiveness in dealing with it. These materials can all be downloaded from the website of Carbon Conversations.

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