Harnessing the Power of Arts, Screen and Creative Industries to Act on the Climate Emergency

By Climate Emergency and Sustainability Lead Karen Ridgewell

Karen Ridgewell

As the climate emergency continues to unfold, Scotland finds itself grappling with the profound impacts of this global crisis. From altering seasonal patterns to intensifying weather events, the signs of change are undeniable. In response, Creative Scotland continues to build on its commitment to environmental sustainability.


In Our Strategy

Creative Scotland’s Climate Emergency and Sustainability Plan was published in 2022 with over 60 actions, each co-designed with our staff, that represent our dedication to lead, partner, and facilitate meaningful change. We have made progress in a number of key areas, spearheaded by the appointment of Karen Ridgewell as Creative Scotland’s Climate Emergency and Sustainability Lead.

In understanding the changing world around us, Creative Scotland has been considering how we use our work and resources to help address the climate emergency. We’ve made our ambitions for environmental sustainability clear to applicants through specific fund criteria and questions.

Environmental Sustainability will be a key criteria for awarding funding through the Multi-Year Funding programme and is already a requirement of our Open Funding and Extended Programme Funding routes. We’ve also integrated the Strategic priority for Environmental Sustainability into our Annual Planning processes, Operational Planning and the staff performance management through individual Performance Development Reviews.

In Consultation with the Creative Sector

Our work does not exist in isolation, and in distributing cultural funding and supporting participation in the arts, screen and creative industries, we recognise that our commitment to addressing the causes and impacts of climate change must extend to how we work with cultural individuals, projects and organisations.

Through Regular Funding from Creative Scotland, Creative Carbon Scotland work directly with individuals, organisations and strategic bodies engaged across cultural and sustainability sectors to harness the role of culture in achieving this change. Working with Creative Carbon Scotland and others, we have supported sustainable practice across the culture and creative sector for many years, not least in terms of carbon reporting and reduction.

We recently commissioned Creative Carbon Scotland to undertake a study exploring the challenges and opportunities for the sector in developing an approach to a net-zero future, based on high-level surveys of a small but varied selection of buildings. These included Centre for Contemporary Arts in Glasgow; Dundee RepDundee Contemporary ArtsEdinburgh Sculpture WorkshopGlasgow Film TheatreCollective Gallery and Tron Theatre in Edinburgh and Eden Court in Inverness.

Creative Carbon Scotland’s Springboard event took place in February and March 2023, bringing 200 individuals from across the creative sectors together to discuss and develop commitments to enable transformational change. Cohorts looking at specific challenges will be meeting quarterly throughout 2023/24 to report on progress.

In Screen

Looking to the screen industry, Screen Scotland in partnership with Scottish Enterprise, South of Scotland Enterprise, Highlands and Islands Enterprise, Glasgow City Council and BECTU has created a Sustainability Manager role which sits within BECTU VISION and is supporting the development of tools, skills and resources for embedding sustainability across the screen sector in Scotland.

In Advocacy

With climate change serving as the defining challenge of our era, Creative Scotland remains determined in its dedication to leveraging art, screen and creativity as potent instruments of transformation.

We are currently developing our 2030 pathway to net-zero and work in the year ahead includes the amendment of our greenhouse gas emissions boundary, identification of mechanisms to collect more in-depth data and a focus on our largest organisational emitter of emissions: transport.

We are also working as part of the Scottish Government’s Climate Policy Engagement Network to champion the role of the arts, screen, and creative industries in the development of the Just Transition Plans (Built Environment and Construction, Agriculture and Land Use and Transport), the updated Climate Change Plan and Scottish Climate Change Adaptation Programme. Through these actions, we envision a Scotland that not only thrives culturally but also stands as a beacon of environmental stewardship.

In this critical moment, where the future of our planet hangs in the balance, art emerges as a catalyst for change. Creative thinking and ideas have the power to positively influence and shape public debate and perspective around the causes and effects of climate change and provoke action.

Art and creativity have a key role to play in helping to address the climate emergency and contributing to a more environmentally sustainable Scotland.