Bryony Worthington, Baroness Worthington Explained

Honorific Prefix:The Right Honourable
The Baroness Worthington
Office:Member of the House of Lords
Lord Temporal
Term Start:31 January 2011
Life Peerage
Birth Date:19 September 1971
Party:Independent (since 2017)
Otherparty:Labour (before 2017)
Alma Mater:Queens' College, Cambridge

Bryony Katherine Worthington, Baroness Worthington, (born 19 September 1971),[1] [2] is a British environmental campaigner and life peer in the House of Lords. She has promoted change in attitudes to the environment, and action to tackle climate change. In 2008 she founded Sandbag, a non-profit campaign group designed to increase public awareness of emissions trading.[3]

Biography

Worthington was born and grew up in Wales.[4] She attended Queens' College, Cambridge,[5] where she read English literature. Upon graduation she joined Operation Raleigh as a fundraiser. In the mid 1990s, she worked for an environmental charity, and by 2000 had moved to work for Friends of the Earth as a climate change campaigner. She then worked for the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, implementing public awareness campaigns and helping draft the Climate Change Bill, before becoming head of government relations for the energy company, Scottish and Southern Energy. She left to form Sandbag in 2008.[6]

She was created a life peer on 31 January 2011 with the title Baroness Worthington, of Cambridge in the County of Cambridgeshire, and sat on the Labour benches, until redesignating as a non-affiliated member in April 2017.[7]

Climate Change Act

Worthington was the lead author in the team which drafted the UK's 2008 Climate Change Act.[8] This landmark piece of legislation requires the UK to reduce its carbon emissions to a level 80% lower than its emissions in 1990. At the time Worthington was working with Friends of the Earth working on their Big Ask campaign, but was seconded to government to help design the legislation.

Sandbag

Worthington launched Sandbag in 2008[9] to raise public awareness of and improve the European Union's Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS). Initially Sandbag provided members of the public with a way of tackling climate change, enabling them to buy ETS permits and cancel them, meaning that European companies covered by the ETS would have to emit fewer greenhouse gasses. Since that time, Sandbag has changed and grown. With a general remit to "defend against climate risk",[10] Sandbag now focuses on researching and suggesting improvements to the ETS, how to phase out coal-fired power stations in Europe, and how governments and the EU can work to support carbon capture and storage. Worthington has been Sandbag's director since its foundation.[11]

In March 2020, Sandbag was renamed Ember, reflecting its expansion into a global organisation.[12]

Other campaigning

Nuclear power

Worthington was once "passionately opposed to nuclear power",[13] but came to advocate the adoption of thorium as a nuclear fuel[14] [15] following the 2009 Manchester Report, where she met Kirk Sorensen who presented arguments for using thorium.[16] She has said: "The world desperately needs sustainable, low carbon energy to address climate change while lifting people out of poverty. Thorium based reactors, such as those designed by the late Alvin Weinberg, could radically change perceptions of nuclear power leading to widespread deployment."[17]

Worthington was patron and trustee of The Alvin Weinberg Foundation, a British non-profit, non-governmental organization dedicated to the promotion and development of molten salt reactor (MSR) technology.[18] [19] [20]

In response to an open letter published in The Ecologist in 2015 acknowledging her position on nuclear power, Worthington wrote:

It is clear that as is the case with every technology, there are more appropriate and less appropriate ways of using it and I am no apologist for the mistakes that have been made in the nuclear industry. As a proven source of reliable low carbon energy it would, however, be reckless to rule it out in the fight against climate change just as it would be reckless to rule out large scale hydro, solar, biomass, wind and carbon capture and storage. [...] Nuclear power is the most concentrated source of power available today with the smallest footprint. It is not without its challenges but these are not insurmountable.[21]

UNICEF

Since 2015 Worthington has been a Trustee at UNICEF.[22]

Environmental Defense Fund

Worthington was the executive director for Europe of the Environmental Defense Fund[23] [24] between 2016 and early 2020.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Fur will fly as green peer takes ermine . https://web.archive.org/web/20101130110727/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/earthcomment/geoffrey-lean/8163780/Fur-will-fly-as-green-peer-takes-ermine.html . dead . 30 November 2010 . Geoffrey Lean . The Daily Telegraph . 26 November 2010.
  2. Web site: Democracy Live – Your representatives – Bryony Worthington. BBC Online. Dods (Group) PLC. Dods (Group) PLC. 27 December 2013. 28 December 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20131228104708/http://news.bbc.co.uk/democracylive/hi/representatives/profiles/90433.stm. dead.
  3. Web site: Sandbag: Who We Are. 29 July 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20150326040618/http://www.sandbag.org.uk/whoweare/. 26 March 2015. dead.
  4. Web site: Bryony Worthington. Ancestry.com UK. 29 July 2019.
  5. http://www.ftconferences.com/sustainablebanking2009/speakerdetails/631/?PHPSESSID=2dc2551354dbc80af580cedd9433d211 Financial Times Sustainable Banking Conference, 2009: speaker details
  6. Web site: Sandbagged: Dealing a blow to carbon trading interview with Bryony Worthington . Leo Hickman . The Guardian . 12 September 2008.
  7. Web site: www.parliament.uk: Baroness Worthington. https://web.archive.org/web/20110629212911/http://www.parliament.uk/biographies/bryony-worthington/90433. dead. 29 June 2011. 29 July 2019.
  8. Web site: The Climate Change Act (2008). 2021-05-02. Institute for Government.
  9. Web site: Worthington. Bryony. 2008-02-15. We exist! sort of.. 2021-05-02. Ember. en-GB.
  10. Web site: Coal to clean energy policy. 2021-05-02. Ember. en-GB.
  11. Web site: About Ember. 2021-05-02. Ember. en-GB.
  12. Web site: Our History . Ember . 30 July 2022.
  13. https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/p00k2825/Business_Daily_The_nuclear_renaissance/ Business Daily – The nuclear renaissance?
  14. News: Why thorium nuclear power shouldn't be written off . Bryony Worthington . . 4 July 2011 . 4 May 2012.
  15. News: Post-Fukushima world must embrace thorium, not ditch nuclear . Bryony Worthington . . 9 March 2012 . 4 May 2012.
  16. News: Manchester Report: Thorium nuclear power . Duncan Clark . . 13 July 2009 . 4 May 2012.
  17. Web site: Everyone can have Cheap and Clean Power... Wherever, Whenever and Forever. Thorium Energy World. 29 July 2019.
  18. Web site: Weinberg Foundation . 9 October 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20151231203905/http://www.the-weinberg-foundation.org/ . 31 December 2015 . dead .
  19. Web site: Thorium: the element that could power our future (Wired UK). 29 July 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20160305010003/http://www.wired.co.uk/news/archive/2011-09/16/a-nuclear-future. 5 March 2016. dead.
  20. Web site: New Life for Forgotten Fuel. Financial Times. 29 July 2019.
  21. Why we really do need nuclear power . Bryony Worthington . . 9 June 2015.
  22. http://www.unicef.org.uk/About-us/Our-board/Baroness-Bryony-Worthington/ Retrieved 29 July 2015
  23. News: Krukowska. Ewa. EU Climate Laws Helped Lead to Brexit, Environment Lobbyist Says. Bloomberg. 10 October 2016.
  24. Web site: Baroness Bryony Worthington. Environmental Defense Fund. 29 July 2019.