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Case study: Southampton
Mike Smith, Executive director of Southampton Geothermal Heating Company, in the engine room at the CHP plant.
Southampton is a true pioneer of sustainable energy. Having committed to implementing decentralised energy years before many other local authorities (some of whom are only just picking up the ball), the city now has several pioneering energy schemes:
The convenient solution - case studies
While the government dithers over its energy policy, companies, councils and organisations are taking matters into their own hands. By generating their own clean and efficient energy, they're not only reducing their carbon emmissions but also improving their own security of supply. If your organisation is thinking of doing the same, these case studies may help show you the way. Contact details are provided at the end of each case study to find out more - and, of course, make sure you watch our films on the subject: The Convenient Solution and What Are We Waiting For?
Greenpeace backs decision to stop Southampton Football Club selling off toxic seats
Greenpeace today backed the decision to stop Southampton Football Club selling off seats from The Dell when the ground is demolished this summer. The PVC seats contain high levels of the toxic metal cadmium.
Commenting on the decision, Mark Strutt, a toxics campaigner at Greenpeace, said:
"This is the right decision for both football fans and the environment. The seats should be sent to a special waste landfill as the best of several bad options. If the seats were sold and taken home by fans the plastic could erode over time releasing highly toxic cadmium dust into the home environment."
The Head of Marketing for Southampton Football Club, Paul Blanchard, was quoted as saying,
"There is an awful lot of evidence to suggest there is absolutely nothing wrong with cadmium - we don't understand how it is okay for people to sit on them, but not to own them."
In fact there is a complete scientific consensus that cadmium is a highly dangerous toxic metal and the United Kingdom is a signatory to an international treaty (called the OSPAR Convention) to eliminate cadmium pollution.
The Health and Safety Executive have stated that: "Exposure to cadmium can result in serious long term health effects, principally on the lungs and kidneys. Cadmium oxide is classified as a category 2 carcinogen (ie it may be able to cause cancer in humans)"[1].
Paul Blanchard is right in seeing a lower health risk in sitting on the seats in the open air but if taken indoors by souvenir-hunting fans the seats would slowly generate cadmium dust which could pose a toxic threat. Selling off the seats would also be a bad environmental option since cadmium should be collected for proper disposal rather than distributed over a wide area.
Notes for Editors:
[1] HSE Press Release, 22 April 1999
Further information:
Contact:
Greenpeace UK press office 020 7865 8255


