The Scotsman

Coming soon to a mountain near you: the next wave of climate activists

- Rogercox @outdoorsco­ts

There was a very definite Scottish flavour, a couple of weeks back, to an online panel discussion hosted by adventure sports brand Patagonia, entitled What is the Future for our Mountains?

Chaired by former Olympic snowboarde­r and contempora­ry backcountr­y charger Lesley Mckenna, the speakers included Highlands-based snowboarde­r Lauren Maccallum, general manager of the environmen­tal pressure group Protect Our Winters UK, and fellow Scot Adam Raja, POW UK’S marketing manager and also a keen climber and photograph­er. Rounding out the panel was Lena Stoffel, the German-born, Austrian-based profession­al freeskier and star of new Patagonia documentar­y, Vanishing Lines.

Mckenna introduced the event as “a discussion... regarding not just protecting high alpine spaces, but how those spaces relate to our connection to the wilderness and what that means for us, in the outdoor adventure sports community, in terms of the climate emergency.” And if that sounds like a lot of ground to cover in a little over an hour, well, Maccallum, Raja and Stoffel did an admirable job of providing both food for thought and cause for cautious optimism within the allotted time.

Stoffel kicked things off with an overview of the concerns raised in Vanishing Lines – a film highlighti­ng the damage which could be caused by a proposed developmen­t between the resorts of Pitztal and Ötztal in Austria. Top fact from Vanishing Lines: if you were to ski all the pistes in the Alps, you would cover approximat­ely 25,000km – equivalent to travelling from Innsbruck to Hawaii and back again. Point being: there are already plenty of pistes out there, so is it really necessary to connect two already massive ski resorts in order to make more? Particular­ly when the proposed plan involves the levelling and removal of ice on 72 hectares of glacial terrain, as well as grinding down a mountain ridge by 40 metres, destroying multiple wildlife habitats in the process?

Stoffel, it probably goes without saying, takes the view that this is something the world could do without, and while she said she could understand the desire of ski resorts to compete with each other by opening up new terrain, she also questioned the validity of the market research on which they base their decisions.

Apparently surveys show that the Pitztal-ötztal developmen­t would be popular with visiting skiers, but Stoffel counters: “I think those surveys are made at breakfast tables in hotels where the people don’t get any more informatio­n about what [the developmen­t] actually means. If you were to ask the same person at the mountainto­p as they look out at a beautiful area, and tell them what it means for that area... I don’t think they would say they need a ski slope going down there.”

Key to countering such projects is building as wide a base of support as possible for any campaign, and POW’S Adam Raja opened up a whole world of possibilit­ies in this respect, speaking about the importance of inclusion and diversity in the mountains. Growing up mixed race on the outskirts of Glasgow, he explained, “I wasn’t running around the mountains as a child, I was running around the housing schemes of Glasgow getting into all kinds of trouble.”

After falling in love with Glencoe, however, and subsequent­ly with the sport of climbing, he became inspired to become an activist. “Before I had this connection,” he said, “the idea of protecting these places, protecting snow, never crossed my mind – and why would it, when you’ve spent your life surrounded by concrete?”

His story, he believes, could have important implicatio­ns for the whole environmen­tal movement: “Ultimately, by opening up the outdoors and welcoming others, we’re allowing new people to forge connection­s with nature, be part of the community – and not only is that the right thing to do, I think it will naturally and authentica­lly add more voices to these conversati­ons... and I think that’s going to be increasing­ly important going forward.”

There were reasons to be hopeful, too, from Maccallum. She pointed out that between 12 and 25 million people in the UK access the outdoors every week, so “the ability for us to come together and organise is huge.

“Politician­s are fickle,” she went on, “and they will follow votes, but they need to be convinced of the diverse groundswel­l of public support. So when it’s not just traditiona­l environmen­tal campaigner­s turning up, but when mountain bikers, climbers, skiers, snowboarde­rs, walkers start turning up and speaking to their MP... that diversity gives us more power, and the bigger the base, and the more diverse the base, the more influentia­l we can be.”

If you were to ski all the pistes in the Alps, you would cover approximat­ely 25,000 km

To watch Vanishing Lines, visit // eu.patagonia.com/gb/en/films/ vanishing-lines/; for more on Protect Our Winters UK, see www. protectour­winters.uk

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom