BBC Countryfile Magazine

BEHIND THE HEADLINES

As growing traffic threatens to spoil parts of our national parks with noise, fumes and delays, will we have to leave our cars at the park boundary? Andrew Griffiths asks whether technology can provide an answer

- Andrew Griffiths writes about conservati­on and the environmen­t and covers topics ranging from policy to the practical restoratio­n of natural processes. He lives in the Peak District.

Should we ban cars from national parks to enhance the landscapes, wildlife and our own experience­s?

The 442 bus runs from Buxton to Ashbourne in the Peak District. It must be one of the most beautiful bus journeys in England, winding its way along country lanes as it criss-crosses the River Dove, which marks the Derbyshire and Staffordsh­ire border.

The bus visits some of the Peak District National Park’s prettiest and most visited settlement­s, such as Tissington, with its 17th-century hall. The village’s famous well-dressings alone welcome 50,000 visitors a year. This bus should be packed to the gunnels with tourists, but instead the service has been cut to the bone. The Sunday service, which you would think the heaviest used by visitors, was cancelled altogether in 2018.

As you sit on that half-empty bus in the summer months, there is plenty of time to contemplat­e the spectacula­r White Peak scenery, because the chances are you will be snarled up in a traffic queue. As you watch yet another farmer waste half a day sitting in traffic trying to reach his fields, it’s tempting to think that in order to prise us out of our cars it is going to take a force at least as seismic as that which produced the landscape we have all come to enjoy.

Yet the congestion is now such – and the imperative to reduce carbon emissions so great – that national park leaders all over the country are starting to mutter the unthinkabl­e: is it time to ban private cars from our national parks?

EMERGENCY POWERS

We all saw the pictures over the Covid-19 summer, as lockdown restrictio­ns eased and people suddenly descended on the nation’s honeypots. The people queueing to walk up Snowdon, police towing away cars that had been carelessly abandoned rather than parked. In the Lake District, the situation became so bad that parked cars blocked a narrow lane on the eastern shore of Coniston, preventing an ambulance from responding to a call-out. Cumbria County Council was forced to use emergency powers to close the lane.

“It was a free-for-all,” one observer told me. “People knew parking enforcemen­t officers weren’t working, so they were leaving their cars anywhere.” The road remained closed to tourist traffic for the remainder of the summer. The great fear in the national parks is that with coronaviru­s restrictio­ns showing no signs of abating, next summer threatens to bring more of the same. This is unsustaina­ble, both in terms of its effect on local communitie­s and on the environmen­t.

National park leaders are guided by the Sandford Principle, which came out of a review headed by Lord Sandford in 1974. It states that: “Where irreconcil­able conflicts exist between conservati­on and public enjoyment, then conservati­on interest should take priority.”

“It is a difficult conversati­on because people have different views,” says Emma Moody, lead sustainabl­e transport strategy advisor with the Lake District National Park, of the Coniston road closure. “Some people think they have a right to drive along there – it’s a road. Others think that it should be made available for sustainabl­e transport, so people can walk and cycle along there and residents can get to their houses.”

The congestion that led to the Coniston road closure is repeated at ‘honeypot’ locations all over England and Wales. Currently, 93% of visitors travel to the national parks by car. The Lake District’s community of around 40,000 has to cope with 20 million visitors a year. These numbers demonstrat­e that something has to give. “It’s not about reducing the number of visitors, we need to get that clear,” says Moody. “We don’t want fewer visitors, but we want fewer of them to use their cars.”

CUTS TO FUNDING

The national parks have long understood the need to get people out of their cars and on to public transport, but as the urgency has increased, the public transport network has got worse. According to the Campaign for Better Transport, overall funding for bus services has been cut by 33% during the years of austerity. In some rural areas, such as

“It’s not about reducing the number of visitors, we need to get that clear. We don’t want fewer visitors, but we want fewer of them to use their cars”

Emma Moody, lead strategy advisor, Lake District National Park

Derbyshire, funding has been cut up to 55%, and Cumbria County Council no longer subsidises commercial services at all.

OPENING UP THE COUNTRYSID­E

Rural bus services are funded by local authoritie­s for their residents, not visitors, and 88% of households in national parks own cars: this is not a recipe for a good rural public transport network, or a low-carbon economy. In 2019, Julian Glover published the

Landscapes Review, a Government­commission­ed independen­t review of national parks and Areas of Outstandin­g Natural Beauty (AONBs). Glover called for radical change in the way our national parks are run, including widening access to those sectors of society that do not currently visit the countrysid­e, and the parks taking a strategic lead on the planning of sustainabl­e public transport to get them there. He pointed to pilot projects in the Lake District ,which now form a part of its ‘Transport 2040 Vision’, to show what was possible.

“The programme itself was set up to tackle visitor travel, not because we don’t care about local people by any means, but because that has the biggest impact on carbon and on traffic,” says Moody. “But while it was focused on the visitor, we did find that local people made a lot of use of [transport] measures that we put in.”

The solutions are out there, it is just a case of people’s willingnes­s to use them. Common elements for all the parks include a transport hub on the edges where people can arrive by train or car (electric cars, of course – charging points would have to be provided) and then swap to either electric buses, cycles or ebikes, walking routes, or some combinatio­n of all three. The common theme is sustainabl­e integrated transport – and no cars.

For Alison Kohler, director of conservati­on and communitie­s at Dartmoor National Park, getting people to switch to public transport is not “just something that is nice to do” but “a need” to do.

“Over the next 25 years we are looking at a 12% increase in our visitors just through new developmen­t on the edge of the national park,” says Kohler. “How do we cope with that? Do we start building lots more car parks?”

The plan is to move people on to sustainabl­e transport with a mix of carrot and stick. These might include car-free days and road charging, with exemptions for local people. One idea of

“Over the next 25 years we are looking at a 12% increase in our visitors... How do we cope with that?”

Alison Kohler, director of conservati­on and communitie­s, Dartmoor National Park

Kohler’s is to have a car-free day with the aim of re-experienci­ng the peace of that first spring lockdown, when so many people were moved to connect with nature for the first time.

It may be that there is a generation­al aspect and the boomers – those in their 70s and 80s – will be the most difficult to separate from their cars. Research shows that younger people are less likely to drive now than they were 25 years ago, and more likely to use public transport.

Ruth Bradshaw, policy and research manager for the Campaign for National Parks, sees public transport provision as a matter of social equity, in addition to the environmen­tal concerns. Better public transport is essential if the Landscapes Review’s recommenda­tion that access is widened to include different socio-economic groups is to be realised.

“There is a lot of evidence that young people are less likely to have driving licenses,” says Bradshaw. “So there is a whole group of people who are only going to be able to get [to the national parks] by public transport.”

While Covid-19 has devastated public transport services in the short term, Bradshaw thinks that long term it may have created the kind of disruption to the business model that provokes real change.

“It would require a whole reorganisa­tion of the way public transport and bus services are run in this country,” says Bradshaw. “I think this current situation is an opportunit­y to do that, in the way that all sorts of things are being relooked at now.”

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 ??  ?? OPPOSITE The No. 77 plies a route between Buttermere and Keswick but is suspended in winter ABOVE Cars throng the A5 beside Llyn Ogwen in the heart of Snowdonia
OPPOSITE The No. 77 plies a route between Buttermere and Keswick but is suspended in winter ABOVE Cars throng the A5 beside Llyn Ogwen in the heart of Snowdonia
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 ??  ?? LEFT Congestion erodes the peace and beauty of Ambleside, former home of William Wordsworth ABOVE Last summer, congestion and dangerous parking prompted parking restrictio­ns around Loch Achray in Loch Lomond and the Trossachs National Park RIGHT Bus services in rural areas have seen funding cuts over the past 10 years
LEFT Congestion erodes the peace and beauty of Ambleside, former home of William Wordsworth ABOVE Last summer, congestion and dangerous parking prompted parking restrictio­ns around Loch Achray in Loch Lomond and the Trossachs National Park RIGHT Bus services in rural areas have seen funding cuts over the past 10 years
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