Background
Bryony Worthington was born and grew up in Wales, and graduated in English literature at Queens" College, Cambridge, before joining Operation Raleigh as a fundraiser.
Bryony Worthington was born and grew up in Wales, and graduated in English literature at Queens" College, Cambridge, before joining Operation Raleigh as a fundraiser.
She has promoted change in attitudes to the environment, and action to tackle climate change, and founded, a non-profit campaign group designed to increase public awareness of emissions trading, in 2008. In the mid 1990s, she worked for an environmental charity, and by 2000 had moved to work for Friends of the Earth as a climate change campaigner. She then worked for the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, implementing public awareness campaigns and helping draft the Climate Change Bill, before becoming head of government relations for the energy company, Scottish and Southern Energy.
She left to form in 2008.
She was created a life peer on 31 January 2011 with the title Baroness Worthington, of Cambridge in the County of Cambridgeshire, and sits on the Labour benches. Lady Worthington was the lead author in the team which drafted the United Kingdom"s 2008 This landmark piece of legislation, which requires the United Kingdom to reduce its carbon emissions to a level 80% lower than its emissions in 1990.
Lady Worthington launched in 2008 to raise public awareness of and improve the European Union"s Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS). Since that time, has changed and grown.
Lady Worthington has been "s Director since its foundation.
Thorium
The Baroness was once "passionately opposed to nuclear power," but came to advocate the adoption of Thorium as a nuclear fuel following the 2009 Manchester Report, where she met Kirk Sorensen who presented arguments for using Thorium. She has said: "the world desperately needs sustainable, low carbon energy to address climate change while lifting people out of poverty. Thorium based reactors, such as those designed by the late Alvin Weinberg, could radically change perceptions of nuclear power leading to widespread deployment."
Worthington is patron and trustee of The Alvin Weinberg Foundation, a British non-profit, non-governmental organization dedicated to the promotion and development of molten salt reactor (MSR) technology.
United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund
Since 2015 Worthington has been a Trustee at United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund.
With a general remit to "defend against climate risk", now focuses on researching and suggesting improvements to the ETS, how to phase out coal-fired power stations in Europe, and how governments and the European Union can work to support Carbon Capture and Storage.
Initially provided members of the public with a way of tackling climate change, enabling them to buy ETS permits and cancel them, meaning that European companies covered by the ETS would have to emit fewer greenhouse gasses.