Gloucestershire has 32 council-run libraries and eight others run by local communities.
The CCC advice is not policy, but the government has historically accepted it. If it does, the target will become legally binding, but government will still decide how to achieve it.Meeting these long-term goals will mean significant changes in the years ahead. One-third of emissions cuts between now and 2040 need to come from households making low-carbon choices, the CCC says.
This will mainly be through switching from petrol and diesel cars to electric vehicles and from fossil fuel boilers to heat pumps, making use of growing supplies of clean electricity. Smaller contributions will come from other choices, such as eating less meat and dairy.As the graph below shows, these changes are ambitious. But they are deliverable, argues the CCC, without people having to scrap their existing boiler or car early.Other emerging technologies, like mobile phones and internet connections, have achieved similar rates of increases previously.
"For electric vehicles, the market is already pretty much at parity with internal combustion engine vehicles, so we think just naturally that will start to be a choice people make," Emma Pinchbeck, chief executive of the CCC, told the BBC's Today programme."For heat pumps, we're saying it's different, the costs are still higher than a fossil fuel boiler and the government will need to act to help people get those technologies.
"But the rollout rate that we've looked at is similar to what happened to our neighbours in Ireland but also to much colder countries in Europe."
Emissions cuts will be needed in other areas too, such as farming and flying, two of the hardest sectors to decarbonise."Those services are a real lifeline for people needing to get into Taunton for college, or medical appointments or to catch trains and the consequences of losing them would have been unimaginable.
"I am absolutely delighted at this outcome and I would only urge those many, many people who campaigned against the cuts to start taking the bus more often as the best possible method of showing their true support for the services."An American man is being held in Russia after airport security discovered cannabis-laced sweets in his luggage, according to Russian state media.
The 28-year-old man, who is not named in the reports, is facing drugs charges after he was arrested at Moscow's Vnukovo International Airport last week.According to Russian state news agency Tass, a drug-sniffing dog alerted security to one of his bags which was then found to contain two jars and a plastic bag of cannabis products.