Treasury Minister commends energy innovations towards Net Zero
A green jobs hub in the Midlands supporting the UK’s efforts to
tackle climate change opened its doors to the minister responsible
for the Net Zero review in the treasury yesterday (August 3).
Treasury Minister Kemi Badenoch sees government and private
investment in the Green Recovery paying off during visit to the
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A green jobs hub in the Midlands supporting the UK’s efforts to tackle climate change opened its doors to the minister responsible for the Net Zero review in the treasury yesterday (August 3).
Kemi Badenoch toured Severn Trent’s new state-of-the-art thermal hydrolysis plant, just outside Coventry, which creates green energy from waste and supplies gas straight to the grid. The Minister heard how the company will also be investing £566million in a Green Recovery programme to help create up to 2,500 new jobs in the region. These proposals include producing enough zero carbon water to supply a city the size of Leicester, creating bathing rivers close to one million homes and reducing the risk of flooding for 90,000 properties using nature-based solutions. During her visit, she also met some of the new engineering graduates and summer interns and saw the Government’s Kickstart programme in action at Severn Trent’s brand-new technical training academy when she met some of the young people the water company has created job placements for through the scheme. Speaking after the visit, Treasury Net Zero Minister Kemi Badenoch said:
Severn Trent’s state of the art training facility is part of the company’s wider £10 million investment in skills and training for its people and communities. The company is aiming to create 500 placements this year, to provide useful training and experience to help young people with securing permanent jobs in the future. Liv Garfield, Severn Trent CEO, said:
So far, 50,000 Kickstart jobs have been started by young people across the country in a range of different sectors, including construction, creative and media, and health and social care. The landmark scheme, which gives 16-24-year olds at risk of long-term unemployment a future of opportunity and hope by creating high-quality, government-subsidised jobs across Great Britain, was launched last September as part of the Government’s Plan for Jobs. Magdalena Nenova, Junior Designer and Marketing assistant on the Kickstart programme said:
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