
Green
Party members
Natalie Bennett (left) and
Ben Samuel (right) visited the
Bread Factory this week to show their support for this important
project providing healthy food to local people while investing in a
fleet with zero carbon pollution. The Green Party passed new policy at
its recent National Conference offering more support to local food
initiatives. The Greens recognised the vital role they can play in
providing fresher, more healthy food, addressing growing food poverty
and greening local communities. Of course the new fleet is also more
environmentally friendly, relying less on dirty diesel (£110 a tank) and making our
food distribution systems less reliant on fuel. Ben Samuel, 25, who
lives in the Brent Cross community said ‘We would like to see more of
these fleets and see them getting better infrastructure from Barnet
Council. The Council should be supporting local food by ensuring their
procurement process makes use of local produce. The Brent Cross Cricklewood regeneration should also be used to encourage the inclusion
of food growing spaces that can be used by the community and unused land
should be made available for people to grow their own food, whether
you're into rocket or coleslaw sandwich fillings’.
The director
of the Bread Factory said, "This initiative came out of thinking about
how we take care of the environment. We have here two electric vans.
We hope to get two more. The other thing is the electricity it is fed
by is now fed by solar or wind, so as I was saying to the Green Party it
is zero emissions. We hope to do our small change from our small
perspective here in Hendon"
Alon from Oreo V representing the new
vans said... I think this is an historic movement. We believe the
revolution of electric cars starts here. Electric vehicles are more
efficient. All trains are now electric. It is very brave to be taking
that first step.
Natalie Bennett, said
"John Lewis had electric delivery vans. Back then there was hundreds
and hundreds of different sorts of vehicles on our roads, especially
adapted by their manufacturers to be suited to the job. We got away
from that with mass production and so what you have now is vehicles that
are probably designed for running around motorways at high speed and
high energy capacities and I was hearing earlier today lots of them do
60-80 km a day around London and the average speed in London is 7 mph
(12 kph). So what you are doing is going back to the future! Back to
the right vehicle for the right job which means that we are also
producing on a small scale with the right thing for the right job. Now
this is the sort of industry that we in the Green Party believe we need
and that of course mirrors what you are doing with bread too because you
are employing lots of (300) people and you said earlier that you value
your people too. And what we need is we need jobs, we need energy
efficiency and we need quality products and you are delivering all of
those, congratulations."
The manufacturer told me informally the
battery now weighs only 150 kg, and I asked him if there was evidence
that it goes 100 miles; of course the answer was yes. I also asked them
if the Bread Factory had any plans for green roofs.
Stop press: The Greens are now the third party in London ahead of the Lib-Dems, according to the last Assembly Poll which uses a proportional system. The Green constituency candidate for the Assembly got nearly 11% of votes cast, behind
local Tory Brian Coleman, but ahead of the Lib-Dem.