The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Our dear green ghost town: City firms warn Cop’s hit trade

Glaswegian­s urged to return to centre after chaos warnings

- By Janet Boyle jboyle@sundaypost.com

Business leaders urged Glaswegian­s to return to the city centre yesterday as shops and pubs claimed Cop26 had left streets deserted.

Warnings of travel disruption and fears of escalating Covid rates has been blamed for encouragin­g people to stay away and traders fear the influx of 25,000 delegates has not made up for the lost spending.

Transport officials had urged workers to work from home and avoid the city if at all possible during the summit, amid fears of road closures, packed public transport and mass demonstrat­ions.

The city’s Chamber of Commerce said that with post-lockdown footfall still among the lowest of any British city, telling people to stay at home sent out the wrong message, and businesses confirmed those warnings have come with a cost.

Yesterday, Stuart Patrick, chief executive of Glasgow Chamber of Commerce, called on the Scottish Government to do more to highlight routes into the city which were not closed or facing disruption and said business was down considerab­ly for city centre restaurant­s and pubs.

He said: “Most of the delegates and supporters attending Cop26 have been eating in or near the conference centre where businesses have benefited but not so for those nearer the city centre.

“It is not too late for the Scottish Government to encourage regular customers back into town by suggesting routes which are not congested or by public transport.”

Robert Bowie, 53, manager of the Toby Jug pub on Hope Street, said he thought they would be busy with an influx of people from Cop26 but instead there hadn’t been many customers.

Bowie said: “Our normal customers have been scared away. We were told 100,000 people would be in town, and thinking: ‘Oh, great, we’re going to get a spin-off from that’ but it’s been the polar opposite.

“Hot on the heels of coronaviru­s and with Christmas and maybe more restrictio­ns on the horizon, it’s a really difficult one.”

He blamed official advice for scaring customers away.

“People are not coming in because of what they’re being told rather than the protests themselves.

“I’m not blaming any one thing, it’s all the reasons. It being here, the protesters, the police blocking the streets.”

Lynn Girasole, 54, the owner of the Roast Cafe, on Argyle Street, was forced to shut early on Monday because of road closures and said she lost around £1,200 in trade despite expecting the cafe to be busy.

Girasole said: “We expected to be so busy, so we were kind of geared up that way. On Monday, we had no idea they would be blockading the entire road.

“It was quite unnerving actually and I had to close early because police were saying that anyone who didn’t stay in the area should get out.

“The indication they gave as well was that Tuesday would be a similar scenario, so I decided to keep the

cafe closed. But I came in do some cleaning and everything was fine, so I think the messaging we have been given has been slightly confusing.

“We like the prospect of having people from all over the world and wanted to welcome people and be a part of it. It’s just a shame that you are treated like you don’t really matter or you can’t be trusted.”

But it was not just city centre firms which saw takings fall. Austin MacPherson, 30, who works at the

Gentleman’s Barbers on Byres Road, said protesters are putting customers off and that he is losing around £100 a day.

Austin added: “The street has been quieter for the past week in terms of footfall – people don’t want to come around the area. They are struggling to get in, there are a lot of road closures round about. The protesters are also putting people off.

“It’s causing a lot of havoc and it seems they are getting in people’s faces. A lot of people don’t want to bother with it. Essentiall­y, it’s about £100 a day I’m losing.”

Meanwhile, Nina Steele, 54, the leaseholde­r of the Park Bar, Argyle Street, said the pub was forced to close early on Monday because it was so quiet after the police shut off the street outside.

Nina said: “When you’ve been shut for 15 months, you want people coming into your pub. You don’t know what the winter is going to hold either. We closed at 10.30pm on Monday because it was so quiet, there was nothing happening at all.”

A number of Glasgow roads around the conference site remain closed until next Monday. The Clydeside Expressway – the main route connecting the city centre to the west – is closed and won’t reopen again until next Monday.

Parts of Finnieston Street, the Clyde Arc and Lancefield

Quay, are closed until next Monday, while Congress Way, Finnieston Quay, Tunnel Street and Stobcross Road are closed until next Sunday. Minerva Street and West Greenhill Place remain closed until next Saturday, while Congress Road is closed until the following

Wednesday.

The world’s poorest countries are hardest hit by climate change but have no voice in the global debate demanding action, a leading activist told Cop26 yesterday.

Vanessa Nakate yesterday said the countries in the global south – across Latin America, Asia, Africa and Oceania – can no longer be ignored

as the climate summit in Glasgow focused on sustainabl­e food production.

Nakate, from Uganda, told delegates: “People of colour are on the front lines of the climate crisis and it is important for us to tell our own stories and it is important for the world to listen to our stories.

“The global south is on the front line of the global climate crisis, of the food crisis, but it is not on the front pages of the world’s newspapers.”

She added: “Individual­s are not responsibl­e for

the climate crisis, it is the decisions of government­s, it is the decisions of businesses, it is the decisions of large corporatio­ns that are responsibl­e for the climate crisis.”

Nakate, 24, was inspired by Greta Thunberg to start her own climate movement in Uganda, after becoming concerned about the unusually high temperatur­es in her country.

Actor Idris Elba and his wife Sabrina were also speaking at the SEC yesterday in their roles as goodwill ambassador­s for the UN’s Internatio­nal Fund for Agricultur­al Developmen­t.

Asked why it was important that the voices of people of colour are heard as the world attempts to decarbonis­e food production, Idris Elba replied: “I think Sabrina and I stand here as human beings first, but absolutely, yes, it is important for us as proud Africans to be a part of this debate.”

Discussing whether people in wealthy countries needed to shift to a plant-based diet, Sabrina Elba said: “What we are not here to do is to scrutinise the lives of individual­s, particular­ly those who are maybe suffering the most.”

She added: “I think we are all here to look at the bigger picture and the bigger players to see how they’ll adapt, and what changes they’ll make.

“So this isn’t really about the individual­s in my opinion – it is really about what leaders will step up and do.”

 ?? ?? Sabrina and Idris Elba
Sabrina and Idris Elba

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