
Leadership Transition at Cambridge Carbon Footprint
Announcing Our New General Manager, Siobhan Mellon We’re thrilled to announce that Siobhan Mellon will be joining Cambridge Carbon Footprint as our new General Manager

Announcing Our New General Manager, Siobhan Mellon We’re thrilled to announce that Siobhan Mellon will be joining Cambridge Carbon Footprint as our new General Manager

Ofgem, the energy regulator, has announced that the energy price cap will rise by around 10% for a typical home from October 1 to December

Join Cambridge Carbon Footprint as our new Project Officer and empower individuals and communities to take climate action! About the role Cambridge Carbon Footprint (CCF)

UK homes are among the least energy efficient in Europe and Cambridge has a big share of old homes that are difficult and expensive to heat

Lead the movement towards thriving, zero-carbon communities as Cambridge Carbon Footprint General Manager! About the role As the General Manager of Cambridge Carbon Footprint, you

Are you concerned about climate change? Volunteering with Cambridge Carbon Footprint (CCF) you’ll work together with a great team of people who share a common purpose, using your unique skills and experiences to support local climate action. We’re currently looking for people of all ages and backgrounds to join our Trustee Board.

We need to expect more severe, more frequent heatwaves and Cambridgeshire is among the worst affected UK counties, with the highest temperatures being in

The Social Action Group at Parkside Community College started with a small group of students. The group is campaigning to reduce Parkside’s carbon footprint. For example, they work to reduce waste and the negative impact of food in the canteen, reduce electricity consumption, recycle papers and pens, and campaign for solar panels, better insulation, and alternative sources of heating for the school…

Growing up in a village miles from Cambridge, in the East of England, Harry learnt that there was so little land that we can actually access. Our countryside has been so cultivated – ploughed and misused over the years – that today there are few places we can go legally. Trespassing has become a way to access nature, and get out beyond the country lanes. Through this, Harry has developed a really close connection with nature, and in turn realised that there is something deeply wrong and unfair with how excluded people are from nature…