> East Devon produced 939 kt of end user CO2 in 2008, the second highest for a local authority in Devon. Between 2005 and 2008, end user CO2 emissions reduced by 3%.
> East Devon produced the highest amount of domestic CO2 and second highest road transport emissions for a local authority in Devon.
> East Devon residents were responsible for a total of 7.1 tonnes of CO2 per capita in 2008, lower than the per capita average for Devon and the South West. This was the second lowest recorded by a local authority in Devon and the seventeenth lowest in the South West. Between 2005 and 2008 per capita emissions reduced by 4%.
> There are 41 river water bodies within East Devon. Our latest assessment of these classified 4.8% as bad, 21.9% as poor, 53.7% as moderate and 19.5% as good.
> East Devon is the sixth largest local authority area in Devon, with almost 823,732 m2 within its realm, 3% of the 24,477,128 m2 total area of the South West. The largest proportion of land in East Devon is classified as green space, accounting for 748,938 m2 or 91% of its total area.
> East Devon District Council had the eighth lowest amount of residual waste in the South West with 422.15 kg/household. This was the third lowest to be produced in Devon.
> East Devon District Council in 2009/10 against the other South West Councils, was in the bottom half of the recycling league table with 34.17%.
> The population of East Devon was estimated to be 132,900, 2.5% of the South West’s total population of 5,273,700.
> The number of households in East Devon in 2033 is predicted to be 34% (20,000) higher than in 2008, slightly higher than the 30% increase predicted for the region as a whole.
> Larger population centres within East Devon where there is risk of flooding include: Seaton and Sidmouth.
> There is a Catchment Abstraction Management Strategy (CAMS) for the Exe. It sets out how the Environment Agency will manage water abstraction until 2014 for the Exe catchment.
> East Devon citizens had an average eco-footprint of 4.84 gha in 2006. This was the third highest in Devon
> Devon County Council had an allocation of 156,679 tonnes and only landfilled 133,376 tonnes (85.1%) of their Biodegradable Municipal Waste.