The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Concern at number of climate sceptics

Survey finds 13% of people in region ‘not convinced’ on climate change

- PETER JOHN MEIKLEM pmeiklem@thecourier.co.uk

More than one in 10 people in Angus are still “not convinced” climate change is happening, Scotland’s largest survey of social attitudes has revealed.

A total of 13% of those surveyed in the county for the 2019 Scottish Household Survey said they had doubts about the warming planet.

Of those who did acknowledg­e climate change, just under a quarter (23%) said it was “more of a problem for the future” rather than an immediate and urgent issue.

More than half, 53%, agreed it was a pressing issue – well below the Scottish average of 68%.

Environmen­t campaigner Ian Whyte, a member of Sustainabl­e Kirriemuir, said the Angus figures did not surprise him.

“There are a core of people who either don’t follow the news or are getting their informatio­n from others sources, perhaps those around American politics. There is an element of that in Angus,” he said.

The number of those unconvince­d in Angus was the highest on the Scottish mainland, with only the Western Isles showing more citizens with doubts over the existentia­l threat.

Only 1% of Fifers, 5% of Dundonians and 7% of those living in Perth and Kinross were as sceptical on the issue as their Angus counterpar­ts.

Although more than twice the Scottish average of 6%, the Angus figure was well down on those reported in previous years.

In 2015 more than a quarter of those surveyed in the county said they had doubts climate change was happening.

Mr Whyte said some councillor­s had made it a political issue.

“As far as I am aware, Angus is one of the only councils in Scotland who voted on the climate emergency along political lines,” he added.

Administra­tion councillor­s last year amended a motion declaring a climate emergency to remove a target to become carbon neutral in the county by 2045.

Councillor Lynne Devine, SNP group leader, said the survey findings were “surprising” and “concerning” given the high profile of environmen­tal issues in the media.

She said the council’s climate change group hoped to publish a Climate Change Action Plan before the end of the year, which would be accompanie­d by a range of new messaging.

Administra­tion economy spokesman councillor Braden Davy, Conservati­ve, who highlighte­d the challenges around decarbonis­ing Angus quickly during last year’s debate, said it was “disappoint­ing” to hear so many people did not believe in the evidence.

If talking to yourself is a sign of madness, thinking the end is nigh must be confirmati­on of insanity. Yet there is a creeping feeling that things really are very bad – and getting worse. Catastroph­ising has been the bane of the green movement. Shout the end of the world too often and people stop listening. The flip side of that is nobody ever expects the collapse of civilisati­on, much like the Spanish Inquisitio­n.

The end takes humans by surprise. One moment you are in a forest, the next you chop down the last tree. One day there is a shoreline, the next you are under water. History could not be clearer. Things end abruptly and by the time humans notice, it’s too late.

Whether for environmen­tal or economic reasons, all eras end, all empires collapse.

Swathes of data on the ecosystem during the anthropoce­ne seem to make it abundantly clear we are on a dangerous path. The latest is the UN’s Global Biodiversi­ty Outlook 5. It reports the world has missed all the targets it set 10 years ago to address climate catastroph­e.

Extinction by human activity is a real danger for thousands of species, natural habitats are disappeari­ng, and billions of pounds in government subsidies hurry this along.

If you don’t like that report, there were two others in a similar vein just this week, from the RSPB and the Zoological Society in England. On top of that, US government scientists declared this summer the hottest ever in the northern hemisphere.

Sir David Attenborou­gh’s latest documentar­y made people cry. Its title is Extinction. Watch it on iPlayer. He said the same as the reports. A UN spokesman said humanity is at a crossroads.

Yet there is hope, and bizarrely it comes in the form of Covid. Not to make light of the death and suffering, but lockdown does have an upside. It shows how we are always behind events, always ill-prepared, and that as a species we play catch-up.

It sounds banal to say things like “Who would have imagined we’d all wear face masks” or “Actually, I don’t see the point in going back to the office”. But these are not just the obvious topics of Covid. They are important insights into the human condition.

On face masks becoming normal, we are observing how fragile our sense of normal is, how quickly we adapt in the name of self-preservati­on. On Hogmanay 2019, nobody made the resolution to buy a face mask. Now we shame folk for not wearing one.

The lesson from the end of commuting is about inertia. Nobody liked the commute. Nobody much liked working in central London. Yet for decades we collective­ly prevented home working from happening. Of course, it’s nice not going into the office, but we knew that before Covid. It took a virus to make it happen.

Both these points – how we never get the future right, and are loathe to change old habits – are central to our understand­ing of environmen­tal disaster. We know it’s happening but until it’s threatened our lives, we are paralysed by hubris and inertia.

Remember the news from Wuhan, back in January, and we all thought the virus was China’s problem. Well, all the data pointing to environmen­tal collapse is our Wuhan.

Remember the pictures of packed hospitals in Italy, and we thought,

they’ve messed it up, and how we did nothing. Well the death of species, the fires in California, the droughts in Australia, are our Italy.

Remember how the wearing of masks seemed weird and the thought of lockdown impossible – that moment is coming for the climate.

It is getting ever closer, encroachin­g on our lives. Own a flat, a car, have a job, raise a family – just as Covid cast a shadow across all those things, so the environmen­tal crisis will make the fixtures of our society seem different.

One person who cried at the Attenborou­gh documentar­y was Carrie Symonds, wife of the prime minister. It’s not clear if she sobbed for the end of life, or the realisatio­n that Boris was in charge at “humanity’s crossroads”.

The candidates in the US presidenti­al race have been talking climate. In a country that recorded the hottest

temperatur­e ever of 54.4C a few weeks back, and where the west coast is burning, Donald Trump denied there was a problem. Trump did that with Covid, too.

The day after the US vote, the country officially withdraws from the Paris Climate Accord. Like it withdrew from the World Health Organisati­on.

For too long the voices of alarm have been talking to themselves. People want to write off climate disaster as madness. But when the crisis starts, then, quite possibly, it’ll be the end of the world as we know it. The latest Scottish Household Survey suggests the message is getting through – most Scots now think climate is an “immediate and urgent” danger.

If you think we’ll cope, well, I give you the last six months as a warning. I’m pretty sure I’m not insane for thinking this.

Remember how wearing masks seemed weird and the thought of lockdown impossible – that moment is coming for the climate

 ?? Picture: Mhairi Edwards. ?? A climate change protest on St Andrews beach.
Picture: Mhairi Edwards. A climate change protest on St Andrews beach.
 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Naturalist Sir David Attenborou­gh says humanity is at a crossroads but we can still take action to help tackle the climate crisis.
Picture: PA. Naturalist Sir David Attenborou­gh says humanity is at a crossroads but we can still take action to help tackle the climate crisis.
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