'Come with us' - Brentford's call for fans' help with sustainabilitypublished at 17:33 22 April
Nicola Pearson
BBC Sport journalist

As a club that prides itself on its relationship with fans and the community, knowing sustainability is "important" to ers has been a real driver for Brentford to take action.
The impact of climate change is being felt in many different ways and football is not immune to these.
Previous research, external has suggested one in four professional football pitches will be at risk from flooding in 25 years.
While so much of fans' focus is what is happening on the pitch, there is an increasing expectation from ers that clubs should be doing more to reduce their impact off it.
In the second part of our Earth Day chat with James Beale, Brentford's sustainability manager highlighted how engaging fans in the journey is such a key element of their sustainability programme.
"We have a sustainability working group with the fans. Our official ers' groups sit on that, but we also have an independent group of fans with knowledge and concern for the environmental crisis called the Sustaina-Bees, who are great and sit on the group too," Beale explained to BBC Sport.
"We meet regularly. We talk about things that the club are up to on sustainability. We talk about their concerns.
"Last year, we did a survey on our fans. We published the outcomes of that in our sustainability report and they rated sustainability 8.1 out of 10 in of importance, so we know it's important to them."
Alongside their discounted rail travel for fans travelling to away games, the Bees have also recently announced their Bike To Brentford scheme.
ers who cycle to the team's Premier League fixture against Manchester United on 4 May will receive a free food and drink voucher to use at the ground.
With fan travel being one of Brentford's biggest sources of greenhouse gas emissions, alongside helping ers both physically and financially, schemes like these can help in reducing the environmental impact of matchdays.
"We're making it easier and safer for fans to cycle to games this spring," Beale said.
"We're putting up temporary bike parks around the stadium. We're rewarding fans for cycling to games. It is a trial right now but we're going to use that to build on for next season, take some learnings and work out how we can continue the project."
With fans clearly an integral part of Brentford's sustainability ambitions, what message does Beale have for ers?
"Come with us. We're really keen to collaborate as much as possible on both helping the club become more sustainable, but also helping the local community become more sustainable.
"We can't do that alone. The fans' views, opinions and influence are really important, and we want to work with them on this."
