The Scotsman

Proving the climate crisis is not all gloom and doom

- JAY RICHARDSON ● Matt Winning plays The Stand, Edinburgh on 16 April and The Stand, Glasgow on 17 April. See www.mattwinnin­g.com for details

Finding humour in an impending apocalypse can be a tough ask at the best of times, but Matt Winning wrote his book Hot Mess: What On Earth Can We Do About Climate Change? while moving house and awaiting the birth of his first child during a global pandemic, propelling his anxiety to stratosphe­ric levels.

By day, the Paisley native is an environmen­tal economist with a PHD in climate change policy. By night, he’s a stand-up comic, who for most of the last two years has been unable to gig. Instead, he has spent long hours crunching some fairly grim numbers, with an inevitable impact on his mental health.

Glasgow, he notes, “is expected to be one of the worst cities in Europe at risk from flooding by 2050”. Prior to his son’s birth, he found himself calculatin­g that to offset the child’s carbon emissions he’d need to kill about 100 dogs a year, “or about 200 dogs if it’s those small yappy ones”.

Bleak stuff. But Hot Mess and Winning’s accompanyi­ng spring tour aren’t without more upbeat reflection­s, like recalling the pivotal role A-ha played in popularisi­ng electric cars in Norway. Meanwhile, the upsetting impact of melting ice on polar bears’ migration and their subsequent copulation with grizzly bears is at least partially counterbal­anced by learning that their offspring are called “pizzly” bears.

Moreover, Winning isn’t conceding the planet’s future just yet. Despite issuing strong caveats about actions needing to follow words, he was broadly encouraged by pledges made during the recent COP26 conference in Glasgow and the Scottish Government’s recent U-turn on further North Sea oil extraction.

“Covid has actually helped people understand existentia­l threats a bit better,” he says. But while individual­s making decisions about their recycling, diet and transport might help, “what we really need is societal change. Regulation. A change in poor government and company policies has to happen imminently. What happens over the next decade will determine whether we can solve climate change to the degree it needs to be solved.”

 ?? ?? 0 Matt Winning’s book is called Hot Mess: What On Earth Can We Do About Climate Change?
0 Matt Winning’s book is called Hot Mess: What On Earth Can We Do About Climate Change?

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