The climate and biodiversity crises have emerged as the challenges of our lifetime. However, the demographics of those most vocal in the current climate debate are largely white and middle class. The black and brown urban populations are not being enabled to engage in the same way, yet the impact of poor environment indicators affects urban populations disproportionately.
This is particularly visible in North Kensington, where long-standing inequalities, including significant differences in life expectancy within the borough, intersect with rising climate risks, pressures on local infrastructure, and limited access to green skills and opportunities.
Our Vision
The Centre for Urban Sustainability offers North Kensington a means to challenge these dynamics and inequalities whilst building economic and societal resilience to advocate for care and attention for our environment.
The proposed Centre will strengthen our local area by serving as a platform from which to access training and develop new skills, helping to improve residents’ employability within the emerging green economy in West London.
As a community-driven hub, the Centre will amplify local voices, allowing communities to convene effectively and address issues around social justice, environmental health and inclusion. The proposed Centre will also provide stimulating material to encourage the behaviour change required to meet London and UK planning Net Zero targets.

The UK’s sustainability transition will require tens of thousands of new roles across energy, construction, waste, biodiversity, water, and circular-economy sectors. The Centre will serve as a community pipeline for these emerging opportunities.

Sustainability knowledge, like physical infrastructure, underpins long-term social and economic progress. The Centre will provide this foundational capacity.

The Centre will be co-created with the community, ensuring relevance, dignity, and genuine empowerment rather than externally imposed solutions.

The Trust will provide governance, fiduciary oversight, and continuity, ensuring transparency, accountability and alignment with national and global sustainability objectives.
The definitions of sustainability are changing all the time. A broad understanding of sustainability means conserving the use of resources such as habitats, raw materials, energy or human labour. Humanity should use these resources in such a way that they can be maintained over a long period of time, rather than being depleted. In short, sustainability can be defined as: “to meet the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.”
The UK Net Zero Goals suggest that a transformation is underway that will lead to a structural shift in society and investment across the economy. We believe our communities should be enabled to engage in this and benefit from it. The gap between the Net Zero policy ambition and community readiness is profound.
National and international frameworks, from the UK’s Net Zero Strategy to the UN Sustainable Development Goals, emphasise the need for widespread public participation in the sustainability transition. Yet the gap between policy ambition and community readiness remains profound.
The implication of the above is a structural shift in infrastructure, skills, and investment across the UK economy.
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