Wednesday 8 November 2023

THE KING’S SPEECH LACKS A PUNCH ACCORDING TO PROTECT THE WILD

 King Charles III addressed Parliament this morning setting out the government’s policy priorities for the year ahead.

Well-trailed in advance, the speech was expected “to put criminal justice “at the heart” of its plans”. Speaking ahead of the speech Rishi Sunak said: “I want everyone across the country to have the pride and peace of mind that comes with knowing your community, where you are raising your family and taking your children to school, is safe. That is my vision of what a better Britain looks like.”

There may be another King’s Speech before this Parliament is dissolved (the next General Election must be held by January 2025), but if the Conservatives want another five years in power then surely a ‘better Britain’ should also include serious actions on biodiversity, ecosystems, and the environment?

Following years of doing nothing about the managed decline of the UK’s waterways (almost all of the UK’s waterways are polluted), plummeting biodiversity (a very recent world-leading study, State of Nature, found that one in six species are at risk of being lost from Great Britain), and a rapidly heating climate (‘the single biggest health threat facing humanity’, according to the WHO), would the Tory government finally take these issues seriously?


In a word, no.

Read in what appeared to be a deliberately flat monotone (imagine an extremely posh person holding their nose and clearly looking to avoid press debate about the meanings of inflections or pauses), the short vague speech barely mentioned the real crises facing us now and into the future. Of course we are all concerned about anti-social behaviour (sabs and monitors possibly see more of it than many of us), legislation ensuring victims are at the heart of justice considerations should be enacted, any and all racism is to be abhorred, and smoking should have been banned decades ago. These shouldn’t be touted as new policies though. Protecting its citizens should be ‘what a government does’.

Licencing pedicabs (surely a council issue) and restructuring football clubs (it may well be too hot to play football except in winter in a decade or so) might be important to some, but the environment and collapsing ecosystems will impact every single one of us – and soon. Non-detailed one-line ‘promises’ to do something about biodiversity loss and something about climate change is simply not enough. When even a supine Natural England, the government adviser for the natural environment, acknowledges that the ‘nature crisis… is right here, on our doorstep‘ the government (whoever is in power) really should listen.

While no one seriously expected announcements on banning so-called ‘trail hunting’ or outlawing snares in a ten-minute shout-out to the Tory right, given how serious the situation is, we surely have a right to expect our elected government to take its responsibilities about biodiversity and the climate more seriously. This government came to power in 2010. Since then the UK has failed to meet 17 of its 20 UN biodiversity targets, half the UK’s badgers have been destroyed to protect the dairy industry, the shooting industry has been allowed to release so many pheasants and partridges that they account for HALF of all the UK’s bird biomass, and more than 384,000 discharges of raw sewage (or more than 2.5 million hours of dumping sewage into rivers) were reported by water companies across England and Wales in 2022 alone.

No comments:

Post a Comment