Keep Scotland Beautiful

From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Keep Scotland Beautiful is an environmental charity based in Scotland, which aims “to make Scotland a cleaner, greener and more sustainable place to live, work and visit.”[1] The organisation campaigns and educates on a range of environmental issues including climate change and litter reduction.

History[edit]

Keep Scotland Beautiful was founded as an independent Scottish charity in 2000, bringing together several environmental initiatives, including Waste Aware Scotland, Eco-Schools Scotland, People and Places Programme, Beach Awards and Beautiful Scotland.[citation needed]

The organisation’s origins lie in the 1960s, with the "Beautiful Scotland in Bloom" campaign run by the Scottish Tourist Board and the Scottish Women's Rural Institute. After this, under the auspices of Keep Britain Tidy, its focus in Scotland included educating young people about the environment through the Eco-Schools programme.[citation needed] Since becoming an independent Scottish charity, it has continued to campaign on environmental issues, including local environment quality and climate change.[citation needed]

Timeline[edit]

2000s[edit]

  • 2000: Keep Scotland Beautiful is founded, bringing together a number of environmental campaigns, initiatives and awards.
  • 2002: The charity launches "Have Some Pride", a campaign aimed at reducing litter by encouraging people to take pride in their local area.
  • 2003: The charity's Local Environmental Audit and Management System (LEAMS) becomes a national benchmarking tool for local authorities to audit the quality and cleanliness of their local environments.[citation needed]
  • 2004: Along with the Scottish government and SEPA, Keep Scotland Beautiful launches the national fly-tipping campaign Dumb Dumpers, voiced by Richard Wilson.
  • 2005: Former chief executive John Summers is awarded an OBE for services to the environment.[citation needed]
  • 2008: Keep Scotland Beautiful takes on management of the Scottish government's Climate Challenge Fund, providing funding for community projects taking action on climate change.[2]
  • 2008: Scotland's first "Litter Summit" is hosted by the charity, attended by MSPs and members of the Scottish government. One of the outcomes was to investigate a deposit return system for Scotland.[citation needed]
  • 2008: In partnership with the Royal Horticultural Society, the charity launches "It's Your Neighbourhood",[3] a community initiative aimed at helping gardening groups make improvements to their local environments.

2010s[edit]

  •  2010: Keep Scotland Beautiful presents the 1000th first-time Green Flag for Eco-Schools Scotland, celebrating the work of young people to protect the environment.[citation needed]
  •  2012: The charity's flagship Clean Up Scotland campaign is launched at the Scottish parliament.
  •  2013: Keep Scotland Beautiful awards its first Green Flags for parks, intended to recognise well-kept green spaces.[citation needed]
  •  2014: The organisation creates Scotland's first National Award for Environmental Excellence,[4] allowing organisations to benchmark their environmental performance.
  •  2015: Following the launch of the One Planet Picnic initiative the previous year, the charity launches their national Pocket Garden[5] design competition for schools in Scotland.
  •  2016: The charity publishes a report[6] revealing growing levels of litter, dog fouling and other antisocial environmental behaviours across Scotland. An update report[7] was published in October 2017, detailing how these trends had developed over the preceding year.
  •  2016: The charity launches its "Give Your Litter a Lift" campaign to tackle litter along Scotland's roadsides.[8]
  •  2018: Keep Scotland Beautiful becomes the first Climate Literate organisation in Scotland, as recognised by The Carbon Literacy Project.[citation needed]
  •  2018: The charity launches several behaviour change campaigns aimed at tackling unsustainable consumption and its effects: Upstream Battle,[9] My Beach Your Beach and Cup Movement.[10]
  • 2019: The charity launches, with funding from the Scottish government, Climate Ready Classrooms,[11] a programme aimed at secondary school pupils and teachers to help them understand climate change and the actions they can take to combat the climate crisis.[citation needed]

Programmes[edit]

Keep Scotland Beautiful manages several environment-related campaigns and programmes in Scotland.[citation needed] These include Eco-Schools Scotland, Climate Ready Classrooms, Clean Up Scotland, the Green Flag Award, the Beach Awards, Beautiful Scotland, the Climate Challenge Fund, the National Award for Environmental Excellence, Carbon Literacy Training and Heritage projects and Canal College.[citation needed]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "About Us". keepscotlandbeautiful.org. Keep Scotland Beautiful. Retrieved 2020-02-26.
  2. ^ "Climate Challenge Fund". Scottish Government News. Retrieved 2020-02-26.
  3. ^ "It's Your Neighbourhood". keepscotlandbeautiful.org. Keep Scotland Beautiful. Retrieved 2020-02-26.
  4. ^ "National Award for Environmental Excellence". keepscotlandbeautiful.org. Keep Scotland Beautiful. Retrieved 2020-02-26.
  5. ^ "Pocket Garden | Food and the Environment". keepscotlandbeautiful.org. Keep Scotland Beautiful. Retrieved 2020-02-27.
  6. ^ "Scotland's local environmental quality in decline" (PDF). keepscotlandbeautiful.org. Keep Scotland Beautiful. March 2016. Retrieved 2020-02-26.
  7. ^ "Local Environment Quality in Decline: Further analysis by Keep Scotland Beautiful" (PDF). keepscotlandbeautiful.org. Keep Scotland Beautiful. October 2017. Retrieved 2020-02-26.
  8. ^ Qureshi, Waqas (2016-11-25). "Big names support new roadside anti-littering campaign". Packaging News. Retrieved 2020-02-26.
  9. ^ "Clean seas battle goes upstream on the Clyde". BBC News. 2018-10-25. Retrieved 2020-02-27.
  10. ^ "Scotland's first coffee cup recycling scheme launched in Glasgow". edie.net. Retrieved 2020-02-27.
  11. ^ "Blogs - Help us get our young people climate ready". thirdforcenews.org.uk.[better source needed]

External links[edit]