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Can The Music Industry Afford To Go Green?

Date:
Mar 30, 2009 from 18:30 to 21:00
Venue:
The Basement, PRS for Music, Copyright House, 29-33 Berners Street, London, W1T 3AB
Location:
Nearest Tube - Goodge St (Northern Line). PRS for Music is at Mortimer St end of Berners St.

FREE CASH! 

Launching at this debate on sustainability which will see the likes of Tony Wadsworth asking whether the music business can afford to make real sacrifices in the name of the environment,  Julie's Bicycle will unveil a unique initiative providing grants to help music companies with carbon audits, training and tools for sustainable energy management.

Environmental coalition Julie’s Bicycle have partnered with the Knowledge Connect programme on the initiative, which will provide support worth £3,000 or £10,000 to London-wide music businesses with between 4 and 50 employees.  The aim is to enable them to access the knowledge, skills and expertise required to develop greener businesses and develop innovative ideas for a low carbon creative economy.

The grants will be of particular interest to businesses operating in the live sector, which is believed to account for the vast majority of music industry CO2 emissions.

SPEAKERS:

Presentation: Catherine Bottrill Energy Researcher, Oxford University’s Environmental Change Institute



Panel: Tony Wadsworth Chairman, BPI

Jon Webster CEO, Music Managers Forum

Alison Tickell Director, Julie's Bicycle

Andy Haworth
Environmental Manager, Live Nation

Nick Ladd 
Promoter & Co-founder, Glade Festival



Chairman: Keith Harris  Keith Harris Music Ltd / MusicTank Chairman / PPL Director


Tickets for this event have been subsidised by Knowledge Connect.


TOPIC:

This session takes as its jump-off the established fact of climate change, with the only remaining question being one of scale.  Are we facing a 2 degree temperature rise or, as latest science would have it, 7 degrees?  One thing appears certain - in a 7 degree scenario, all bets are off.

Accepting this broad premise, the session will consider the industry's ability and preparedness to adopt the S-Factor: Sustainability.

The question however, in a period of chronic contraction for the record business and where the live industry is bracing itself for an inevitable decline, not to mention the universal lack of financing is: "Can the music industry afford to go green?”

Sure, we have our part to play.  The UK music industry currently produces half a million tonnes of CO2 emissions per year, with 43 per cent coming from audience travel to live events - a real cause for concern that led Festival Republic founder, Melvin Benn, to recently comment "The most environmentally sustainable festival is one that doesn't happen".

Then there's physical product - recent research reveals that the recording industry could reduce its packaging emissions by a whopping 95% by switching from plastic jewel case to card wallets.*

And at some point business will have to engage with the UK’s own domestic, legally-binding emission reduction targets of at least 80% by 2050, or 60% by 2025 for London-based businesses.

But amidst an unprecedented global economic meltdown (no pun intended), is this not a topic for later?  The costs of green investment being reason enough to wait for the upturn, for government to lead, or to simply applaud all things green from the sidelines but politely bow out when it comes to action.

Others, meanwhile, argue that not only does the environmental imperative require us to act now, but that greening-up businesses, can and does produce a positive economic pay-back to industry.  Reduced future costs, greater efficiencies, brand leadership and technological advancement are just some of the benefits directly attributable to sustainable business activity.

There is a cost and resources issue however, which, for many, remains an obstacle to engagement in sustainability.  Whilst some in the music industry are able to commit sizeable resources into real, practical change (e.g. Live Nation has recruited an environmental manager to develop and implement a sustainability strategy and introduced an environmental scoring system across venues to identify and implement improvements) and indeed artists themselves often lead by example (Radiohead’s venue choices take public transport access into consideration and Jack Johnson requires venues to recycle their waste), there is legitimate concern at the costs of adopting meaningful sustainable practice that businesses will have to bear.

How sensible and practical are the recommendations of a typical environmental audit anyway?  And to what extend could businesses wishing to go green just be suckered into spending on technologies, like solar panels, which unless you live in the Southern Hemisphere, could take several years of use before even saving the energy that’s gone into manufacturing them?

We’re in an influential industry, might our efforts not be better spent getting the message out to consumers?



* Julie’s Bicycle commission: ‘Impacts and Opportunities: Reducing the Carbon Emissions of CD Packaging’, publ. 2009


Julie's BicycleAbout Julie's Bicycle
Julie’s Bicycle is committed to developing a low carbon music industry and in partnership with Knowledge Connect, is able to offer Music Industry SME's a unique, funded initiative for companies with between 4 and 50 employees, to help with carbon audits, training and tools for sustainable energy management.  Knowledge Connect provides support worth £3,000 or £10,000 for an SME to purchase the knowledge, skills and expertise which will enable companies to develop green businesses and develop innovative ideas for a low carbon creative economy.

http://www.juliesbicycle.com/

About Knowledge Connect
KCKnowledge Connect is a dynamic and practical programme that's helping London's businesses to grow and prosper by connecting them to the knowledge and expertise of the City's universities, colleges and research organisations.

This funded programme provides an unprecedented opportunity for businesses to develop new products, services and markets and for knowledgebase organisations to put their expertise to practical and commercial use.

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Contents: Event Transcript

Transcript

CATHERINE BOTTRILL:

"I think that political leadership is required"

"The really, really important thing is that we must keep our eye on the ball for Copenhagen in December."

ALISON TICKELL:

"At the end of the day, climate change is much more important than copyright extensions."

"Legislation is currently letting us down, it is slow and clunky and it actually doesn’t represent this quite awkward and fragmented industry that is full of small creative companies."

"We need to speed up change. 80% by 2050 doesn’t sound much but it will require massive change to everything we do. The scale of the challenge is enormous, we need to start now. We’re bigger than the sum of our parts, if the music industry works together we can be more efficient, not just in terms of carbon emissions but also in terms of cost."

NICK LADD:

"The marketplace is a potent tool, but right now it is failing us. Legislation has to be clearly looked at. People need to be told that they have to do something. We need the carrot and the stick here."