For us, the
inhabitants of the British Isles, a heatwave used to be considered a bit of a
treat. Knowing it would disappear within a few days, we would soak up the sun with
neither restraint nor modesty, so that it was common to see people proudly
displaying the damage – skin peeling off their noses and shoulders, revealing
tender red patches beneath – as if it were a trophy. Then the Australians
discovered a connection between sunburn and skin cancer, invented greasy
sunblock and exported it to Britain.
Well, that’s
the way it seemed to me at the time: the beginning of a sensible approach to ‘catching
some rays’. Mind you, it didn’t appeal to everybody, as is apparent from our
balcony. Presently, we are living next to a small, scruffy, inner-city beach
and, whenever there’s a heatwave – as there is right now – it turns into a
pop-up holiday destination for the locals, some of whom appear to be doing
their utmost to toast themselves.
Do they not
know about the connection with cancer? Do they know but don’t care? Do they
think they are immune? Have they not heard the news about heatwaves lasting
longer and becoming more intense because of climate change? Do they not know
that the urgency to binge has diminished?
Maybe it’s
about joining the dots. Chris Packham has made a short film, National Emergency Briefing, that
does just that. In it, scientists explain how climate change is affecting every
aspect of life as we are used to living it: food security, healthcare, national
defence and economic systems are all threatened. The effects are already
measurable – though some of us may not recognise the connections – and tipping
points are inevitable unless there is immediate remedial action. I don’t want
to sound alarmist, but how else is the danger to be expressed other than
bluntly?
But a world in
which rational decisions are made about important issues exists only on the
fictional planet Vulcan. On Earth, a rational person is necessarily one who factors
emotional behaviour in to their thought processes: that’s entirely logical, given
human nature.
We are
reminded, by Chris Packham, that Britain is one of the most nature-depleted
countries in the world – though you may be forgiven for thinking otherwise. Our
countryside has a reputation for being beautiful, magnificent, lush (in places)
and fertile, all of which qualities are still to be found but to a diminishing
extent.
We spent a
couple of days last week in a rural corner of Suffolk, where the towns are quaint
and weighted with history, the higgledy-piggledy villages populated with cute,
well-kept cottages whose gardens spill over with iconic hollyhocks in every
pastel colour imaginable. In between, the farmland appeared fecund and prosperity
was in the air, not least around the attractions that draw in visitors. Walking
through the wooded heath, where deer roam free and butterflies flutter, to the
beach at Dunwich, the depletion of nature was not the first thing that came to
mind.
Discovering
the ‘best bits’ of Britain is like going to a theme park: all your expectations
are met or surpassed (vagaries of weather duly factored in). But coming to
generalised conclusions, i.e. ‘Suffolk is nice’, is a trap into which we humans
too readily fall. There must be parts of Suffolk that are grotty and, if so,
they should be taken into account when measuring up.
What with all this sunny weather causing folk to flock to the beaches, countryside havens, beer gardens and barbecues, the question of what lies behind it can be easy to overlook. It may feel like an endless summer, but there’s an ominous ending in sight. Join the dots.