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Nov 3, 2021 10 tweets 6 min read Read on X
The menu for #COP26 delegates has come under fire for serving meat and dairy in almost 60 per cent of its dishes.

A spokesperson for @RebelsAnimal called it "like serving cigarettes at a lung cancer conference"

bigissue.com/news/environme…
A statement on the catering website for #COP26 says: “According to the WWF, we need to get [the carbon footprint of food] down below 0.5 kg CO2e [per meal] to reach the goals defined in the Paris Agreement."

So what's on the menu?

bigissue.com/news/environme…
The worst offender, according to #COP26 ratings, was... haggis.

The "haggis, neeps and tatties" dish has a carbon footprint equivalent to 3.4kg of CO2, nearly 7 times the target for the Paris climate accords.

bigissue.com/news/environme…
The full listing is "Grant's of Speyside haggis, Scottish turnip and Benzies potatoes with an Arran mustard sauce".

Haggis traditionally contains lamb and beef (often in the form of heart, lungs and other offal) oats, onions and spices.

It looks like this:
Burgers came a close second in terms of carbon footprint on the #COP26 menu.

The "Grants of Speyside beef, root vegetable and oat burger topped with cabbage, crisp slaw, shoots and burger sauce" weighs in at 3.3 kg CO2, or 3.4 with cheese.

bigissue.com/news/environme…
The caterers' "standard" beef burger would have produced 5.1kg of CO2, they said, 10 times the target needed to reach the goals of the Paris climate accords.

bigissue.com/news/environme…
Next up was beef ramen, with "organic spelt noodles, pickled root vegetables, Mara seaweed, sakura cress and rock chive".

That's 3 kg of CO2.

bigissue.com/news/environme…
Fourth was a "braised scottish venison casserole with winter vegetables, Scottish mushrooms, Benzies potatoes and herb dumplings".

The main ingredient is deer and it costs 1.7kg of CO2 to produce, the same carbon footprint as the average meal in the UK.

bigissue.com/news/environme…
And rounding out the top 5 on the #COP26 menu is the British seaside classic: fish and chips.

The carbon footprint here is 1.1 kg, lower than the average for UK meals but still above the 0.5 kg target.

bigissue.com/news/environme…
So why do so many of these dishes have such a big carbon footprint?

Beef is the main culprit as raising cows takes up a large amount of space, so is one of the main drivers of deforestation around the world

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More from @BigIssue

Aug 5
📰 In the wake of tragic stabbings in Southport, the UK has seen an alarming rise in racist violence. Communities are coming together to combat this hate.

Want to help? Here are 5 ways you can make a difference. 👇
Thread: (1/7) 🧵 Image
🏠 1. Host a Refugee:

Once an asylum seeker is granted refugee status, they are given limited time to find somewhere to live. ⌛️

Organisations like @RefugeesAtHome and @_hopeathome_ connect refugees with hosts, preventing homelessness. Find out more. 👇
bigissue.com/uncategorised/…
✊ 2. Attend Anti-Racism Marches:

Stand Up to Racism (@AntiRacismDay) is running protests on 10 August to say refugees are welcome here. Find out when and where these will be via .

⚠️ If you think you may not be safe at these events, do not attend. standuptoracism.org.uk
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Read 7 tweets
Nov 13, 2023
It’s been a big day in Westminster.

From Suella Braverman's sacking to David Cameron's comeback - here's our recap.

🧵1/11
➡️🚪Suella Braverman was gone by 9am, sacked by Rishi Sunak as home secretary after inflammatory comments over pro-Palestine protesters.

2/11
It's just the latest in a series of scandals to engulf the former home secretary - from lying in a legal textbook to describing homelessness as a “lifestyle choice."

3/11
bigissue.com/news/politics/…
Read 11 tweets
Oct 19, 2022
A new anti-protest law is one step closer to becoming a reality

The Public Order Bill creates longer prison sentences for certain protesters, in a bid to reduce "serious disruption"

Here are 5 things you didn't know about it👇

bigissue.com/news/activism/…
1. It could cost the public up to £17.9m over 10 years 💵

Most of this will be from the court cases stemming from increased arrests

“The growing trend of seriously disruptive and dangerous protest tactics are resulting in increasing costs to the public,” the Home Office said
2. The government wants to put the burden of proof on defendants 👮

A number of new offences, including 'locking on', require the accused to prove a 'reasonable excuse'

MPs warned this could "be inconsistent with the presumption of innocence" and the right to a free trial
Read 7 tweets
Oct 10, 2022
Today is #WorldHomelessDay2022. It’s the perfect time to think about how to solve a problem that shouldn’t exist. We already know how to end homelessness. And it can be done. Here’s how:

bigissue.com/news/housing/w…
Housing First is a model that has already had a big impact on street homelessness in Finland 🇫🇮 It’s a simple solution: give people who are homeless a home and the support they need to keep it
Housing First is growing across the UK. But not quickly enough for some. @Crisis_uk chief executive Matt Downie said take up in England has been “far too slow” earlier this year
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Sep 17, 2022
Anti-homeless architecture can take many forms and be tough to spot but it is a hidden fixture of cities and towns across the world 🌍 bigissue.com/news/housing/a…
Also known as defensive architecture, hostile design or exclusionary design, it is used to tackle social problems “in ways that appear to be benign but has potentially more aggressive impacts,” says expert @qurbanist
The most common type is the humble bench.

They can be designed with uneven surfaces and bars across them that look like arm rests but could really be there to stop people lying down. This has become almost the standard design
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Apr 22, 2022
Two-time Portrait of Britain winner @MarcDavenant has spent six years travelling around Britain with his camera to capture the reality of homelessness from the people who live with it every day bigissue.com/news/housing/t…
@MarcDavenant On his travels, the photographer met Big Issue vendors like Will Herbert, long-time rough sleepers and people living in filthy, unsafe housing
@MarcDavenant Marc took portraits of people like John, who had spent 25 years on the street.

John told him: "I’ve been attacked in hostels too many times, and threatened with knives. It’s safer on the street in Newcastle"
Read 9 tweets

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