Help the Aged argues that:
- It may be possible for Government to reduce pensioner poverty and cut carbon emissions at the same time. Many pensioners living below the breadline use very little carbon as they rarely take foreign holidays and tend to buy fewer electronic goods. Well designed personal carbon accounts could allow these older people to benefit from their low carbon use by selling their surpluses to business travellers.
- Real investment to update Britain's housing stock with better insulation, heating systems and renewable power sources could not only improve energy efficiency but would also help older people heat their homes, helping to take them out of fuel poverty. This could also help to reduce the shocking number of older people dying each year from avoidable cold related illnesses.
- A price on carbon could mean locally sourced food and local shops go from being a luxury to a cheaper form of shopping again. A Government drive to reduce food miles could reverse the decline in local services and thereby benefit older people.
Anna Pearson, policy manager for Help the Aged, says:
'Climate change and growing older are now two certainties facing all of us. For the Government, these twin agendas pose both a threat but also a very real opportunity.
'The economic cost of climate change coupled with the increased cost of providing pensions and long term care to an ageing population will cause serious fiscal challenges. But the very policies created to tackle climate change may also help to ensure our communities serve older people better. What's needed is an imaginative approach to deal with both in a positive way.
'Our challenge to Government is to ensure it sees the bigger picture and, going forward, considers both the 'green and the grey'
Older people barely merit a mention within the Government's Climate Change Strategy. Adair Turner, who previously led the review on pensions, has been appointed to lead the independent committee on climate change. Help the Aged hopes this is the start of joined up thinking on how environmental policies could actually improve the lives of older people.
For a full copy of 'Towards Common Ground: climate change and an ageing population' please visit http://press.helptheaged.org.uk/_press/default.htm