Transition Together - now being rolled out to other transition communities around the UK
The Transition Together project forms small, social groups of friends, neighbours and colleagues and then supports them in taking a number of effective, practical, money-saving and carbon-reducing steps.
A workbook helps each person to build their own Practical Action Plan that improves household energy efficiency, minimises water use, reduces waste (and consumption), explores local transport options and promotes the great value, healthy food available locally. It also helps everyone to understand what’s behind the rising energy prices and climate change, and what this means for them, their family and their local community.
This project was developed by Transition Town Totnes (TTT) using funding from the -Gulbenkian Foundation. Two pilot groups successfully completed the programme and now we are rolling out the programme across all of Totnes & District.
We hope that our project may be of interest to other transition initiatives around the UK (and beyond), and we'd like to offer all of our materials and learnings so far to those who are interested in starting their own Transition Together project.
For 10 transition initiatives, we have also been able to offer some financial support. Based on the success of our pilot project, TTT was awarded more funding by the Big Green Challenge Plus (BGC+) £10,000 of which we are using to help seed this roll-out to the wider Transition Network. In addition to providing the ‘Transition Together Starter Pack’ which includes all the required materials and resources, we have been able to give £1,000 per TI to help get the project underway. The 10 TIs that have been awarded a share of the funding are listed below.
Please read on if you’d like to find out more about joining us in this experimental project and getting access to the full project Starter Pack (excluding funding)...
The participating transition initiatives (so far)
- Transition Leicester, England, Andrew Reeves, reevesie@gmail.com
- Sustaining Dunbar, Scotland, Philip Revel, philip@sustainingdunbar.org
- Transition Town Louth, England, Biff Vernon, biff@biffvernon.freeserve.co.uk
- Transition Town Maidenhead, England, Vinnie McCann, vinnie@walthamplace.com
- Transition Southwell, England, Mark, swat.mail@btinternet.com
- Transition Bro Ddyfi Trawsnewid, Wales, Ann Lamot, saithderwen@btinternet.com
- Transition Omagh, N. Ireland, Valerie & Marella, transitiontownomagh@googlemail.com
- Transition Hereford, England, Nick Sherwood, enova@onetel.com
- Transition Farnham, England, Nicci Hewett & nicci.hewett@btinternet.com
- Transition BH Hub, England, Julie Smith, dmsmith26@tiscali.co.uk
- Originator: Transition Town Totnes, England, Fiona Ward, fiona.ward@ttandc.org.uk
Non-UK
- Transition Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA. Jeanne Mackey, transitiona2@transitionannarbor.org
If you would like to start a Transition Together project in your own transition community
To register your interest please read all of the information on this page, then send an email to fiona.ward@ttandc.org.uk explaining briefly why you’d like to start your own Transition Together project, and confirming that you meet the criteria as explained below. Then we will give you access to all the materials and resources, as well as to the group web space where all Transition Together projects are actively sharing learnings, outcomes and generally supporting each other with this large scale experiment!
About the project in Totnes
Our aim is to inspire and motivate people in Totnes & District to work together, and support each other, in taking effective action to reduce their reliance on fossil fuels, while also strengthening the community’s resilience.
Objectives![]()
- To initiate and support a number of Transition Groups which involve 200+ local residents (in groups of about 5-8 households) within the next 12 months, and which reflect a representative cross-section of our community.
- To build strong, mutually beneficial relationships with local partners, groups and organisations as we work together to recruit and support Transition Groups.
- To explore new models of effective community engagement and project delivery.
- To create a process and materials that can be used by Transition Together groups with minimal level of input from TTT project resource, i.e. the groups are mostly self-supporting and self-managing. This programme is therefore easily replicable elsewhere.
- To provide a means to measure the actual project outcomes.
- To share accumulated knowledge and learnings with all other Transition Initiatives through the Transition Network.
See the project website at www.transitiontogether.org.uk for more information, how it works, who's been doing it so far and so on.
Background
This project evolved from several discussions at TTT about how we could (1) reach out to those in Totnes who aren’t already engaged with TTT or some sort of carbon-reducing or sustainability-enhancing activity (2) bring people together to make more community connections and strengthen social support systems (3) start to show some tangible results in terms of carbon-savings, resilience-building and so on – to show that TTT is moving towards achieving its goals and making a real difference – that it’s not just all hype or meetings!
We defined the project and submitted a successful bid to Calouste-Gulbenkian, which has funded development of the workbook, printing costs, website, marketing materials and so on. Just recently the Big Green Challenge Plus has awarded us more funding, half of which will be used to support the project here in Totnes & District, and half to support the roll-out of the project across the TN. This intent to share is embedded in all our project activity here in TTT, and we are delighted that we have also secured some funding to help seed the project in other transition communities that think it may be of benefit to them. In return, we will together learn much more about how best to set-up and run a project like this - and how it could/should take different forms to suit different places and communities.
The project is aimed at our general public who have not done much to reduce their carbon footprint so far, so it focuses on simple, practical free or low cost actions. We are looking to reach those in the contemplation or preparation stage. Each topic has reference material for those who want to explore further. We don’t aim to duplicate resources and materials that are already out there, but to bring together relevant, current, local info in a workbook. Individual households are not encouraged to do the programme due to the lack of social support and interaction.
Results so far
2 pilot groups in Totnes have completed the programme and 4 more are now underway - results show (for pilots i.e. a total of 15 households, 23 participants in total) that:
- About 90% met all or most of their objectives, the remainder met some.
- General resilience-related measures e.g. ‘I feel well-informed about peak-oil and climate change’,’I know what practical actions I can take to reduce impacts of PO/CC...’, ‘I feel connected to, and part of, my local community’, ‘I feel more positive about the future’ and so on showed improvement for all but 1 of the participants to some degree (further stats analysis will be done once more results are in).
- Practical actions: on average each household undertook 14 practical, carbon and money saving actions during the programme, with 2-3 imminent or planned. This relates to 2-3 actions per workbook section which is as we had hoped – reflecting a reasonable, achievable action plan for each household. Both groups are now going back around the workbook for the 2nd time.
- Self-initiated activities: one group launched a Solar PV Campaign lobbying central government for more funding and raising local awareness, they also held a ‘Big Lunch’ for their whole street and invited all their other neighbours, the other group have arranged a visit to a local recycling/waste processing plant in order to understand more about where our local waste goes – and invited everyone from the other group to join... plus lots of other things like 1 neighbour collects all tetra-packs on behalf of others for recycling.
- Ongoing participation: both pilot groups have decided to continue to meet beyond the end of the ‘official’ programme and to take on more actions, revisit sections of the workbook, and add in other actions and activities as appropriate for their homes and their lifestyles.
Obviously this is a very small sample group and we need many more participants to have completed the programme in order to assess its success. However we are delighted with these very positive results so far and we already have 4 new teams underway, with more forming.
Rollout plans and process
Joining criteria
- You need to be an official UK transition initiative per the definition at transitiontowns.org/TransitionNetwork/Criteria or agreement with the TN to be recognised in some other way
- Your managing body or core group is fully supportive of your application to join this project
- You are confident that you have the skills to be self-sufficient in the planning, delivery and monitoring of this project. This includes the powerpoint skills required to revise the workbook to meet your local needs as this is the only format in which it is currently available
- An agreement to stay within the project aims and objectives as outlined above (we can discuss deviations of course). However we would love to see, and hope to see, the project applied in different ways to broaden our learnings but this needs to be within the terms of our original funding awards
- A commitment to share your project outcomes and learnings back to us in Totnes (we will collate and share all learnings across the whole network of transitioners).
What do you get as a Transition Together partner (the Starter Pack)?
- 140 page colour workbook template (created in ppt) - see sample section for the session on home energy
- Evaluation Form template and excel tool (spreadsheet) for recording and analysing outcomes
- Project plan used in Totnes to help you create your own
- Marketing materials used in Totnes (bookmark, flyer, poster, images, logo etc)
- Info about our budget and spend so far to help you plan your own
- Website template for you to copy and adapt for your own T-Tog project, providing you have the right Drupal web development skills and hosting platform available to you. Sorry - we cannot provide you with any website support due to our own website resource constraints.
- A copy of the successful funding bid(s) that we submitted – to help you find more funding if you so choose
- Access to the project support group with all participating TIs
What you'll then need to do
- Revise the workbook and other materials for local relevance, your own ideas re approach, your own preferences with design, content etc. You cannot use it all as-is - it's very Totnes specific in places!
- Get it printed
- Recruit and support your groups
- Manage the project
- Figure out your financing
- Share your learnings and evaluation results with the rest of us
Our expectations about control (or lack thereof!)
We give you the Starter Pack, then off you go! We trust your commitment to honour the project aims and objectives and share the outcomes and learnings with us all. We really welcome this opportunity to share our project with you, and hope/expect that you will all change it, experiment with it, improve it and at the end of the period, together we’ll have achieved much greater success as a result.
What about EcoTeams, CRAGs, Carbon Conversations and so on?
Other projects exist that are similar to Transition Together in that they get small groups of people together to work through a carbon-reduction programme. We are not promoting Transition Together over and above these programmes - please take the time to research them and make up your own mind about what you think works best for your own community, which may be a combination. Either of these projects may already be available locally. There will certainly be valuable learnings across all these projects as we all experiment with community engagement, encouraging practical carbon-saving actions and strengthening resilience.
EcoTeams - back when we started the project there were no EcoTeams running in our area and although we investigated setting one up, the costs involved at that time (for EcoTeam leader training) were prohibitive for us. We also wanted to ensure that our programme addressed not only basic carbon-saving actions, but also addressed peak oil, community-building and overall resilience-strengthening activity. To this end we decided to develop our own programme that fully aligned with transition thinking and removed cost barriers. Since then, we have been informed that Global Action Plan, who run the EcoTeams project, have received funding from DEFRA to enable them to deliver the programme, including the EcoTeam leader training at no cost to individuals. They have a target of reaching 20,000 households over the next 2 years and are running leader training sessions across the UK. See their website for further information on these dates and locations. Anyone can sign up to join, or run, an EcoTeam, and the website allows groups to run on-line while also offering a range of down loadable resources.
CRAGs or Carbon Reduction Action Groups set themselves a carbon budget target and then work together to monitor and reduce their individual carbon footprints. Some transition initiatives already have active CRAGs underway. CRAGs are also a BGC+ finalist and we are already in contact and planning to share our findings and learnings (as we hope to do with Eco-Teams too). Some people may prefer the more scientific/measurements oriented approach of CRAGs compared to a more general behaviour change assessment of Transition Together.
Carbon Conversations is a scheme developed in Cambridge that helps people halve their personal carbon footprints. Led by trained volunteer facilitators, groups of 6-8 members meet in homes, community centres, workplaces or other venues. The project workbook and other materials are now available nationally, alongside facilitator training to make sure groups work effectively. The 6 meetings engage people both emotionally and practically, helping them overcome the barriers often associated with making large carbon reductions. Members explore the basic climate change problem, their responses to it, their ideas for a low-carbon future and the four key areas of the footprint – home energy, travel, food and other consumption. Group discussion, paired exercises, factual input, teaching games and other activities, combine with detailed monitoring of key areas of the carbon footprint. The approach factors in time to explore people’s values, emotional reactions and difficulties in making changes. Carbon reductions of 1 tonne CO2 are typically made by each member during the course, with plans developed to halve individual footprints over a 4-5 year period. See their website for more information and costs.
We wish all these projects the best of luck and look forward to a collaborative relationship. Please let us know of other similar projects that could be listed here.
And finally, what about non-UK transition communities - can they still get the project starter-pack?
Yes - this will be made available to any official transition community wherever they may be in the world. We just ask for a commitment to share outcomes and learnings with us all. To register your interest contact fiona.ward@ttandc.org.uk.
Please share this information with all transition communities that you are in contact with - word of mouth is the best way to get the news out, so please help if you can.
Thanks, Fiona Ward & Lou Brown (the Transition Together team).


