When Emissions Targets Close Factories
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Scene and Context
The UK presents itself as a climate leader. Territorial emissions are falling. Targets are being met. Progress appears measurable and controlled.
Sarah does not dispute the reductions. What she questions is what those numbers omit.
Current UK climate targets focus on emissions produced within national borders. They do not account for emissions embedded in imported goods. As manufacturing moves overseas, emissions fall at home while consumption remains constant.
“It’s not just an impact to our emissions,” Sarah says. “It’s an impact to our jobs.”
Behind the national figures sit factory closures, shrinking workforces, and growing reliance on imports produced under weaker environmental standards.
Formation and Origins
Sarah trained as an architect at the Architectural Association in London. She grew up in a farming family, where land, work, and income were tightly connected.
At thirteen, she lost her father to suicide after a farming contract collapsed.
“That understanding that life is fragile,” she says, “also that the work we do really should matter.”
In her early twenties, Sarah and her husband left London for the Sierra Nevada mountains in Spain. They lived off grid, homeschooled their children, and worked with natural materials including clay and lime.
“It was unconventional,” she says. “But it taught me resilience, creativity and the importance of thinking outside of the box.”
The experience reshaped how she understood systems, limits, and responsibility.
A Turning Point
Returning to the UK, Sarah moved into roles that connected architecture, manufacturing, and industry advocacy. She worked at the Brick Development Association, representing clay manufacturers across the UK and Ireland, before joining Michelmersh Brick Holdings.
Today, Sarah is Group Innovation and Sustainability Director, with responsibility extending across innovation, sustainability, marketing, technical strategy, product development, and procurement.
“I’m very busy,” she says.
Michelmersh is the fourth largest brickmaker in the UK, producing clay bricks, pavers, architectural terracotta, and prefabricated masonry products. Its work appears on Battersea Power Station, the British Library, the V&A, and Harrods.
But size does not protect an industry from structural pressure.
The Work Being Done Now
Since 2016, Michelmersh has reduced its emissions intensity by just over ten percent per tonne of product. Across the UK ceramics sector, absolute scope 1 and 2 emissions have fallen by more than fifty percent since the early 2000s.
Sarah is precise about what that reduction represents.
“Twenty-four percent reduction is the intensity reduction per tonne of product,” she says. “The remainder is totally attributable to closures of factories.”
Decarbonisation has occurred. But so has de-industrialisation.
The sector now employs around 17,500 people. Around forty percent of manufacturing sites have closed since the turn of the century. Imports from non-EU countries continue to rise.
During the energy crisis following the war in Ukraine, some manufacturers experienced energy price increases of “seven to eight hundred percent”.
“That is just going to break most businesses,” Sarah says.
The Tension Inside Climate Policy
Sarah’s concern is not climate ambition. It is how progress is measured.
The UK reports territorial emissions under the Paris Agreement. Consumption-based emissions remain largely invisible in public reporting.
“We are effectively offshoring manufacturing products to other countries,” she says. “But we’re still consuming those products.”
The result, in her view, is misleading.
“We’re kind of greenwashing all of the people of the UK into believing that we’ve reduced our emissions,” Sarah says. “Which is not the case.”
The effects reach beyond carbon.
“We’re losing skills in this country,” she says. “And we’re also beholden to other countries.”
Closing Reflection
Sarah does not argue for retreat. She argues for clarity and pace.
“We are decarbonising all of these industries,” she says. “But we’re not doing it at a pace that can keep these industries alive.”
Her focus remains practical. Reduce energy use first. Improve data. Optimise processes. Build circularity incrementally.
Asked what she would change if she could alter one thing, her answer is not technical.
“I would change the culture of greed,” Sarah says.
It is not framed as ideology. It is an observation formed inside factories, supply chains, and balance sheets.
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