> Kerrier produced 651 kt of end user CO2 in 2008, the thirteenth lowest for a local authority in the South West (out of 45 total).Between 2005 and 2008, end user CO2 emissions decreased by 2%, from 666 kt to 651 kt.
> There are 41 river water bodies within Kerrier. Our latest assessment of these classified 2.4% as poor, 73.2% as moderate and 24.4% as good.
> Kerrier has the third largest district authority area in the South West, with almost 477,000 m2 within its realm, over 13% of the 3,606,000 m2 total area of Cornwall.
> Kerrier residents were responsible for a total of 6.6 tonnes of CO2 per capita in 2008, This was 15% lower than the average for Cornwall and the South West (both at 7.8 tonnes per capita) and the thirteenth lowest for a local authority in the South West. Between 2005 and 2008 per capita emissions reduced by 4% in Kerrier.
> The population of Kerrier was estimated to be 101,200 in June 2010, 1.9% of the South West’s total population of 5,273,700.
> A slightly higher percentage of Kerrier’s population is of retirement age (20.7%) than seen regionally (19.6%) or nationally (16.5%).
> The number of households in the former district of Kerrier is set to increase by around 33% (around 14,000 additional households), between 2008 and 2033. This is greater than the South West increase of 30%.
> Larger population centres within Kerrier where there is risk of flooding include: Camborne, Pool and Redruth
> There is a Catchment Abstraction Management Strategy (CAMS) for West Cornwall and the Fal and St Austell Streams.
> Kerrier citizens had an average eco-footprint of 4.63gha, which was the second lowest recorded in Cornwall in 2006.
> Cornwall Council had an allocation of 145,554 tonnes and only landfilled 134,913 tonnes (92.7%) of their Biodegradable Municipal Waste (BMW).