Ad
Sunday, January 18, 2026

NASC’s Spring Regional Meetings Go Green

ADVERTISEMENT

The National Access & Scaffolding Confederation (NASC) has taken a big step towards becoming a greener organisation by virtually running its Spring Regional Meetings. 

The five meetings, held over Zoom webinars, allowed 300 people to avoid journeys that would have increased carbon emissions, including the NASC staff travelling to locations across the UK. The move aligns with one of the new President, David Brown’s presidential objectives, sustainability.

The virtual meetings also provided the opportunity for NASC’s President David Brown and Acting Managing Director Dave Mosley to attend all five meetings and engage with regional issues through live webinar Q&A sessions. 

In addition, the meetings included presentations on mental health awareness and support and the Chrysalis Programme, which aims to help prisoners change attitudes and consider a career in scaffolding.

The meetings also included updates from the NASC Standing Committees, which cover areas including ASITO training, membership and compliance, health and safety, technical, marketing and current affairs, contracts, hire, sales and manufacturing and the ePortal. The standing committee reports also included the launch of the NASC SE1:22 ‘Becoming Net Zero Carbon’ guidance note on the ePortal, with more guidance set to follow in 2023.

Member polls were also conducted during the meetings, and arrangements for the 2023 NASC Awards and Ball were discussed, along with plans for the next round of face-to-face regional meetings.

Acting NASC Managing Director, Dave Mosley, said: “These virtual meetings have been a great success, saving our busy team and the members lots of time, as well as radically reducing the organisation’s carbon footprint. To strike a good balance, the NASC Autumn Regional meetings will remain on location and in person, but this is a good step in the right direction towards greater sustainability.”

NASC President, David Brown, added: “The decision to hold the Spring regionals virtually is one of those small steps towards improving the organisation and membership’s sustainability. The carbon emissions saving has also contributed to a significant cost and time saving, for NASC staff and members alike. These are little wins in the big picture, but wins nonetheless. And it all helps in our mission towards net zero.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Popular Categories

Latest news

David Brown returns as President and Chair of NASC and CISRS

Redaction notice An earlier version of this article referred to “interim” leadership arrangements at NASC and CISRS. This was incorrect. David Brown has formally resumed the...

The story behind Scaffolder’s Day, and how it became an industry fixture

Each year on 14 January, the scaffolding industry marks Scaffolder’s Day. There is no formal programme, no governing body and no official endorsement. Yet...

Safety & Access adds CITB Site Safety Plus courses

Safety & Access has added CITB Site Safety Plus (SSP) courses to its training portfolio, extending its offer to include site safety and management...

Embrace Building Wraps marks climate milestone with 20,500 trees planted

Embrace Building Wraps has begun 2026 by confirming that it has helped plant more than 20,500 trees as part of a long-running climate commitment...

Scaffolding project manager convicted after temporary bridge collapse

A Finnish court has handed a suspended prison sentence to a scaffolding firm project manager over the collapse of a temporary pedestrian bridge in...

Funeral details confirmed as NASC publishes tribute to Wayne Connolly

The National Access & Scaffolding Confederation has published a detailed obituary for its President and Chair, Wayne Connolly, alongside confirmation of funeral arrangements following...

The real value of competition in scaffolding

Anyone who’s ever worked in a management or sales position in scaffolding will tell you that competitors are always on your mind. Perhaps you...

Engineering excellence in the Alps: Pilosio’s Olympic challenge

When the iconic Zuel ski jump in Cortina d'Ampezzo needed renovation ahead of the 2026 Winter Olympics, the project demanded more than standard scaffolding...

Layher Allround supports complex heritage restoration at Royal Victoria Country Park

Layher UK has worked in close partnership with Skill Scaffolding on a demanding heritage restoration project at the Abbey in Royal Victoria Country Park,...

GEDA transport system supports renovation of Augsburg landmark

Renovation work is continuing at the Perlachturm in Augsburg, a historic city in the German state of Bavaria, close to the Austrian border. The tower,...

Latest news

ADVERTISEMENT

Magazine

Winter Issue #28 | Past issues >>

Popular

Scaffolding project manager convicted after temporary bridge collapse

A Finnish court has handed a suspended prison sentence...

The story behind Scaffolder’s Day, and how it became an industry fixture

Each year on 14 January, the scaffolding industry marks...

Embrace Building Wraps marks climate milestone with 20,500 trees planted

Embrace Building Wraps has begun 2026 by confirming that...

Funeral details confirmed as NASC publishes tribute to Wayne Connolly

The National Access & Scaffolding Confederation has published a...

The real value of competition in scaffolding

Anyone who’s ever worked in a management or sales...

Related articles

ADVERTISEMENTS

Latest topics

POP UP Products marks 20 years in business

Access equipment manufacturer POP UP Products is marking its...

David Brown returns as President and Chair of NASC and CISRS

Redaction notice An earlier version of this article referred to...

The story behind Scaffolder’s Day, and how it became an industry fixture

Each year on 14 January, the scaffolding industry marks...

Safety & Access adds CITB Site Safety Plus courses

Safety & Access has added CITB Site Safety Plus...
ADVERTISEMENTS