Monthly Archives: June 2019

Energy bills ‘up £1.2 billion in six months’

Households across the country have seen a combined £1.2 billion added to energy bills thanks to 42 price rises in the six months since the government’s flagship price cap was supposed to end rip-off bills, new research has found.

During the same period last year there were just 15 price rises and, despite wholesale gas and electricity prices falling, the average increase is higher than 2018, according to auto-switching business Look After My Bills.

So far in 2019 the average price rise is £110 compared with £75 last year, with many suppliers trying to make up the shortfall since the price cap was introduced in January, new data suggests.

Switched

Lily Green, head of research at Look After My Bills, said: “The sheer number and scale of price rises this year raises serious questions about the unintended consequences of the price cap.

“It’s too early to tell but it’s possible that – in a perverse twist of fate – the price cap may have opened the door to price rises.

“Too many suppliers are seeing the cap as a target and taking the opportunity to push prices up. What is particularly baffling is that wholesale energy costs are in fact going down. You would expect energy bills to do the same.”

The news comes as Energy UK – the energy industry trade body – said 487,231 households switched suppliers in May, down 1.4 percent compared with the same month a year ago.

However, more than 2.5 million customers have moved to a new supplier so far in 2019, 14 percent up on the same time last year when a record 5.8 million – or one in five – customers switched supplier.

Prices

The record switching came as energy suppliers pushed through more price rises than at any other time since deregulation of the energy markets. However, 2019 could overtake it, Look After My Bills added.

The Big Six suppliers – British Gas, Eon, Scottish Power, SSE, EDF and Npower – all increased prices but the worst offenders were smaller providers Ebico and Tonik, with average rises to bills of £162 and £144 respectively.

In January, the government’s price cap was introduced which meant suppliers could only charge up to £1,137 for average usage in a typical home for customers on a standard variable tariff (SVT).

The cap was raised in April to £1,254 following increases in wholesale prices. The Big Six announced they would raise their SVTs accordingly to the highest possible limit.

This Author

Simon Neville is the Press Association city editor.

How to reduce waste in the fashion Industry

Everything we buy has to end up somewhere, right? We all know waste is a problem. And yet single-use consumerism has taken hold of society, rabid for the latest styles and trends.

Not just with clothing, but accessories, decor, electronics, vehicles and more. This demand has caused manufacturers to ramp up their production, mainly through unsustainable methods consuming limited resources.

When it comes to the decline of the environment, who is the ultimate culprit? The truth is it’s a combination of factors.

Reuse

The clothing and textile industry is no innocent bystander — after oil, it’s the second largest polluter in the world, responsible for the use of contaminants like pesticides in cotton farming and toxic dyes in manufacturing. Waste like water and damaged material is also a daily by-product.

The good news is this wasteful cycle can be broken. Responsible consumers can implore others to consider all the options and choose businesses with responsible practices.

And companies can use their resources to be leaders in their industries and take steps toward real progress. Read the stories below to learn how you and others can revolutionise the practice of sustainability in the clothing and textile industry.

The textile industry requires large quantities of water, about 100 to 200 liters per kilogram of textile product. And many countries have laws and regulations with how wastewater must be treated to meet standards.

The ultimate goal for sustainability is a reduction in the amount of water used and a water treatment plan that allows for reuse.

Consumerism

One way eco-conscious companies are treating water is through a biological treatment process called MBBR (Moving Bed Bioreactor). This method requires less time and effort than other dye removal processes.

This includes traditional methods like activated sludge, coagulation and absorption. With MBRR, efficiency is the ultimate goal, with engineers continually working to cut energy consumption while reducing the need for maintenance.

Another example of water conversation in the textile industry is Gap, who partnered with BSR’s Sustainable Water Group to make sure the water that leaves their factory is free of chemicals and dyes.

Clothing labels now include a message relaying the company’s goal, claiming the water used to wash and dye jeans is treated to ensure it’s safe and clean upon leaving the factory.

While Gap was the first company to publicly communicate their implementation of sustainable conversation practices, other practicing members of BSR’s Sustainable Water Group include Levi Strauss, Nike and Coldwater Creek. Through careful research and innovation, the companies hope to promote social responsibility in consumerism.

Repair

Total implementation isn’t an overnight event. While Gap had 71 laundries who complied with the jean cleaning program by the end of 2008, that still left 19 laundries who had failed the initiative.

Corrective action plans were put in place to resolve problems that arose and develop more efficient processes. Experts agree that total implementation will take a significant amount of training, communication and investment.

One of the most common ways businesses practice sustainability is through the preservation and reuse of old materials.

Patagonia’s Worn Wear Campaign is a leading example, encouraging buyers to send in old clothing to be repaired or replaced as needed. While consumers may have been skeptical at first — who wouldn’t be? — the company held up their end of the bargain.

The Worn Wear repair factory is located in Reno, Nevada, the biggest garment repair factory in the United States. Each week, 45-full time technicians work diligently to repair the clothing Patagonia customers send in. Just two months into 2017, one team of Worn Wear seamstresses were on track to hit their 50,000th item of the year.

Shorts

The mountain-wear brand isn’t the only one focused on reuse. Looptworks, a clothing and accessory shop based in Portland, takes old clothing and materials bound for the landfill and turns it into something entirely new.

Not only can consumers purchase an item that’s one-of-a-kind, but an upcycled product translates to less waste clogging landfills.

The average American throws out 70 pounds of clothing and other textiles each year, which takes up an estimated five percent of all landfill space.

Other waste can come from the disposal of damaged, excess or unwanted clothing from manufacturers, which ends up being tossed in landfills or incinerated, releasing harmful toxins into the air. Looptworks takes this unwanted material and uses it to create a product consumers will love.

Revolutionised

Upcycling clothing doesn’t mean taking a plain white tee and adding some embellishments. Or taking a pair of pants and chopping them into shorts.

Looptworks gets creative with the process, turning unwanted leather wallets into a stylish motorcycle jacket. Discarded wetsuits can be scrapped for fabric and turned into laptop sleeves. Or belts can be cut and sewn to create stylish, unique clutches.

The evidence is clear — it’s more important than ever for businesses and consumers to spur innovative change.

Many companies have already joined the movement to reduce waste and incorporate sustainable practices. But more can be done to increase progress and create a revolutionised industry.

This Author

Emily Folk is a conservation and sustainability writer and the editor of Conservation Folks.

Emissions cuts ‘could save a million lives’

The summit of all 28 national EU leaders taking place in Brussels was the last chance for the bloc to increase its ambition before a United Nations climate summit in New York in September.

The proposal by the European Commission to set a net-zero emissions target by 2050 was backed by 24 of the EU’s member states, but was vetoed by Poland, along with Hungary, Estonia and the Czech Republic.

“Today we have defended the right of our citizens,” claimed Polish prime minister Mateusz Morawiecki, who is facing Polsih national elections later in the year. “There is a need to further analyse the financial impacts to member states of the [long term EU climate] strategy.”

Lives

Raised targets with 2030 and 2050 timelines would make economic sense and would save more than one million European lives, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).

When putting a price tag on climate action, the health benefits alone outweigh the costs of mitigation two to one, according to a cost-benefit analysis by the United Nations’ health agency

Climate breakdown damages people’s health through heatwaves, storms, floods and droughts, increased spread of infectious disease and the destruction of health facilities, as well as through air pollution.

The same fossil fuel combustion that drives the climate crisis is also the main source of air pollution. Within the EU, air pollution kills over 400.000 people every year, according to WHO.

Worldwide, it causes seven million yearly deaths and costs an estimated 4.5 trillion in welfare losses. For the largest emitters, such as Germany and the UK, the health impacts of air pollution are estimated to cost more than four percent of the country’s GDP. Phasing out fossil fuels can reverse these losses.

Heart disease

If the EU were to reach its current climate target under the Paris Agreement of reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 40 percent by the year 2030, the World Health Organization has estimated this would avoid at least 45,000 premature deaths every year, in large part due to reduced levels of air pollution.

Additionally, the 40 percent reduction target would save the block up to 160 million a year in direct health costs, from 2030 onwards.

Raising its 2030 climate goal to 55 percent – as has been proposed by UN Secretary General Antonio Gutierrez – would save the EU 55,000 lives every year by 2030 (an extra 10.000 extra lives a year compared to the block’s current target).

By 2050, this would have added up to one million lives saved and 3.7 billion in health savings, from air pollution reductions alone.

Setting an end-date to carbon-intensive energy production by mid-century, which is now supported by the majority of EU states, has the potential to prevent the current 400,000 lives lost in the EU due to air pollution related diseases, such as heart disease, stroke, and lung cancer.

Accountable

Every additional year it takes the bloc to reach that goal, 400,000 more people will die preventable deaths. Looking beyond air pollution, raised climate goals will also have positive health effects for the EU’s global neighbors.

Looking at just four causes of death strongly influenced by climate, WHO estimated a quarter million additional people a year will die by 2030 from heat stress, diarrhea, malaria and malnutrition if the level of climate ambition is not raised.

The increase in extreme weather events, such as the heatwave that hit the Northern Hemisphere in 2018 and killed thousands of people, is also tightly linked to the burning of fossil fuels.

Although it is often difficult to attribute a specific extreme weather event to human-induced climate breakdown, an increasing body of scientific research is able to attribute a human fingerprint to extreme weather.

Raising the bar on the EU’s climate ambition directly translates into tens of thousands of lives saved. Conversely, failing to raise that bar makes the EU an accomplice in the premature deaths of thousands of its constituents and global neighbours. Its citizens can, and will, hold EU leaders accountable.

This Author

Arthur Wyns is a climate scientist at the World Health Organization. He writes in a personal capacity, his views do not necessarily represent WHO or any of its member states.

Labour appoints shadow minister for climate justice

Danielle Rowley MP, the newly appointed Shadow Minister for Climate Justice and Green Jobs, has called on the government to ban fracking, allow onshore wind and create free bus travel for under 25s.

Under the new role Danielle Rowley will liaise with popular movements on climate change, including the climate school strikers, to hear their concerns and discuss Labour policies.

Danielle is spending her first day in her new role on Friday at the University of Edinburgh’s Roslin Institute in Midlothian discussing solar energy, and with the climate school strikers at Holyrood.

Renewable

She will also focus on ensuring that the decarbonisation of our energy system and investment in green infrastructure leads to the creation of high-skilled, unionised and UK-based green jobs.

As a first priority, she will demand the government step up its action to lower carbon emissions commensurate with its newly adopted 2050 net zero target.

According to the Committee on Climate Change (CCC), the UK is still off track to meet its near term targets in the 2020s and 2030s, despite parliament declaring a climate emergency in May.

Conservatives have continued to back new fracking sites despite evidence that fracking will lock the UK into an energy infrastructure based on fossil fuels long after 2030 when the CCC says gas in the UK must sharply decline.

Since 2015, the Conservatives have introduced huge barriers in the planning system to onshore wind development in England, and blocked onshore wind from competing for subsidies, effectively banning a renewable energy source from replacing existing reliance on fossil fuels.

Revolution

Providing free bus travel will reduce carbon emissions and generate lifelong use of public transport for young people.

Ms Rowley said: “As a campaigner I’m really excited that I’ll be working more closely with the climate movement, including the inspiring youth climate strikers, to urgently move the issue forward.

“Since Parliament declared a climate emergency and adopted the 2050 net zero target the government has not introduced a single practical measure that will help the UK to lower its emissions.

“As a priority, I will be using my position to push them to immediately ban fracking, stop blocking onshore wind and extend free bus travel to under 25s.

“We need to kickstart a Green Industrial Revolution in the UK informed by diverse voices both within and outside of the climate movement.”

This Article

This article is based on a press release from the Labour party. 

Sack Minister for ‘assaulting’ protester

Foreign Office minister Mark Field should be sacked after video footage showed him physically removing a climate change protester from a dinner at Mansion House, a Labour shadow cabinet MP has said. 

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The video clip shows Mr Field stopping a female protester by pushing her against a column before holding her at the back of the neck and forcefully walking her out of the room.

It came as activists interrupted a black-tie event where Chancellor Philip Hammond was giving a speech. According to ITV, Mr Field has referred himself to the Cabinet Office for investigation and has apologised “unreservedly” to the protester.

Horrific

In a statement to the broadcaster, he is quoted as saying: “In the confusion many guests understandably felt threatened and when one protester rushed past me towards the top table I instinctively reacted.

“There was no security present and I was for a split-second genuinely worried she might have been armed. As a result I grasped the intruder firmly in order to remove her from the room as swiftly as possible.”He added that he “deeply” regretted the incident and would cooperate fully with a Cabinet Office investigation. 

After the footage was released Labour MP Jess Phillips tweeted: “She posed no credible threat from what I can see. There is very little else that could justify this and anyone can see that this could have been done without physical contact.

“Every MP has to deal with protest and conflict, it is done with words. To watch this is so so awful.”

Fellow Labour MP Dawn Butler said it was “horrific” and called for Mr Field to be sacked or at least suspended.

Rough handling

Ms Butler, who is shadow secretary of state for women and equalities, tweeted: “Conservative Foreign Office Minister Mark Field violently grabs a woman as she protests about climate change at the bankers’ banquet. This appears to be assault. He must be immediately suspended or sacked. Due to Violence against women.

“I’m sure I’m not the only one who is wondering why no one intervened. So much violence does not seem justified. An investigation needs to take place as soon as possible.”

Independent MP Sarah Wollaston said it was “Absolutely shameful, a male MP marching a woman out of a room by her neck.”

Tory MP George Freeman tweeted: “This looks appallingly rough handling of a woman climate protester in a dress.” 

Conservative former Middle East minister Alistair Burt was shown the clip on BBC’s Newsnight. He said: “I’ve no appreciation of the context… Mark will answer for himself but it looks to be a very difficult situation for everyone concerned.”

Sashes

When contacted by the Press Association, Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt, who is Mr Field’s boss, responded with a text saying “sorry can’t talk now”.

Mr Hammond had barely started his address when activists interrupted the event in the City of London on Thursday night. The disruption lasted several minutes before a slow hand clap broke out among the seated guests, and Mr Hammond got back to his feet at 9.05pm.

To a round of applause, Mr Hammond then said: “The irony of course is that this is the Government that has just led the world by committing to a zero-carbon economy by 2050.”

Greenpeace later said 40 of its activists, some of whom wore red evening dresses with sashes that read “climate emergency”, had interrupted the event, which was being broadcast live on television.

Footage later released by Greenpeace shows a line-up of protesters, including men who are wearing black suits and bow ties and women in red dresses and sashes, walking alongside the building, then rushing up a set of stairs and streaming into the dining hall.

Finance

A spokesman said he would not comment on how the group managed to evade security to get into the high-profile event.

In response to the video of Mr Field, the organisation tweeted: “Instead of assaulting peaceful women protesters, @MarkFieldUK would be better off spending his time tackling the #ClimateEmergency.”

Greenpeace said the activists had wanted to deliver a speech on how the current system has failed. Mr Hammond paused his speech at the request of an official in the dining hall who asked him to let security and other staff clear the noisy activists away.

The sound of alarms could be heard in the background. Senior captains of industry and top City executives were among the invited guests.

Retiring Bank of England Governor Mark Carney later made his final Mansion House speech, which was about the future of finance. He spoke about a new economy driven by changes in technology, demographics and the environment.

A City of London Police spokesman said: “We were alerted at 9.03pm. Officers arrived to help with their ejection. Once in the presence of the police, the protesters were co-operative and left the premises. No arrests were made.”

These Authors

Brendan Montague is editor of The Ecologist. Helen William and Jennifer McKiernan are reporters for the Press Association.

Himalayan glacier melt accelerating

The rate at which Himalayan glaciers are melting has doubled in recent years, according to research which used spy satellite pictures from the Cold War.

Analysis from 40 years of satellite observations across India, China, Nepal and Bhutan shows loss of ice from the glaciers in the region – described as the Third Pole – has accelerated as the climate warms.

Some of the images used were captured by military satellites in the 1970s, which took thousands of pictures worldwide before ejecting film recovery capsules and parachuting them to Earth over the Pacific.

Loss

The scientists used the recently declassified spy satellite photographs to create 3D models and combined them with modern satellite imagery to produce a consistent set of data showing the changing elevation of glaciers over time.

They quantified the ice loss trends for 650 of the largest glaciers along a 2,000km (1,240 mile) sweep of the Himalayas from Spiti Lahaul, northern India to Bhutan, which account for around 55 percent of the region’s total amount of ice.

Ice loss from glaciers is important because it contributes to rising sea levels.

The glaciers high in the Himalayan mountains are also an important source of water for drinking, agriculture and hydropower for hundreds of millions of people downriver in south Asia.

Results from the comprehensive study published in the journal Science Advances indicate that the glaciers across the Himalayas have experienced significant loss in the thickness of ice over the past 40 years.

Rainfall

Ice was being lost twice as fast in the period 2000-2016 compared to 1975-2000, and the trend was consistent across the region – suggesting a warmer climate was the main driver, researchers said.

The thickness of the ice had shrunk by around 43cm a year on average in the 21st century, around twice the rate seen between 1975 and 2000.

Researchers estimated that less than three-quarters (72%) of the total amount of ice present in the region in 1975 was still there in 2016.

Lead author Joshua Maurer, from Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory said: “This is the clearest picture yet of how fast Himalayan glaciers are melting over this time interval, and why.”

While other factors such as changes in rainfall and increase in soot from industry landing on the ice and speeding up melting could be playing a role, the researchers said temperature was the overarching force.

Warming

Data from weather stations in the high mountains of Asia have recorded temperature increases of around 1C between 2000 and 2016.

The team compiled temperature data from the study period and calculated the amount of melting the warming conditions would be expected to produce – which matched the figures for what happened, the scientists said.

Mr Maurer said: “It looks just like what we would expect if warming were the dominant driver of ice loss.”

This Author

Emily Beament is Press Association environment correspondent. 

Why we should all strike4climate

More than 867 strikes took place across the world for the second Fridays For Future International School Strike for Climate last month. In the Netherlands, students from over 22 cities have skipped school since the beginning of the year.

For the second edition of the global strike, young people met up not far from a plastic whale at Utrecht’s train station, heading for a climate march and a rally in a local park.

The sun illuminated their commitment: some youngsters had travelled more than two hours on crowded trains to participate. Tens of hundreds were carrying their placards and flags, with or without the support of their schools. 

Common goals

Coming from Portugal, where Matilde Alvim and her folks were back on the streets of Lisbon, I decided to join the young protesters on my way to Schumacher College’s alumni gathering.

I didn’t know any protesters when I arrived in Utrecht and as I started walking in search of the march, I was lucky to bump into a group of like-minded young women. One of them would be singing at the park’s stage in twenty minutes. 

Walking and talking to 17-year old Wijs De Groot, I discovered that some groups were striking weekly, sometimes on different weekdays, while others organised events and discussions.

Wijs told me that her mother didn’t want her to be there. She loves her art school, and has a special interest in materials, which is connected to her enthusiasm for sustainable fashion – all that combined with a clear trust that climate action is something worth fighting for. 

Students from other establishments have been punished for missing school, but Wijs’ teachers supported their pupils, only asking them for a proof of their participation in the self-organised political actions.

Real education

Colourful, creative  banners proved to me and to other supporters that younger generations have been doing their homework – they are committed to being co-responsible for our common future.

That inspiring Friday lecture left me with a voluntary assignment: reflect on how I want to spend my Fridays (For Future).

Inspired by Greta Thunberg’s speech, I have recently forsaken my plan to start a PhD related to climate change. Thunberg, at 16 years old, encouraged me to stop studying and instead do what I can to block this path of no return.

Greta will be striking on Fridays until countries like Sweden are fully comitted to the Paris Agreement. According to her, “there is no point in studying for a future that soon will be no more”.

With this sentence, she also denounces the enormous gap between theory-based education and the reality of not being schooled to lead: “our house is on fire”.

Deep reflection

The task requires empathy and meaningful participation – the era of education for the sake of well-paid jobs is over. We need a shift in collective perception right now.

Business as usual ignores climate change and the living planet. The planet’s ability to self-regulate, life on Earth, and the rights of all living beings to existence are at stake. All of us should be striking on Fridays – at the least. 

The CEOs of fossil fuel corporations should take this day off to ask themselves what to tell their grandchildren.

Presidents could practice deep reflection on Fridays to consider the rights of those most affected by climate breakdown and those yet to be born, and remember indigenous cultures that teach us to act only if decisions will benefit seven generations ahead. 

I dream of chiefs of state joining Extinction Rebellion. Hopefully, we will see parents joining their kids on Fridays, asking themselves where their work is taking them, and what kind of education kids need to shrink human levels of apathy, inertia, and greed. Shouldn’t all of us be striking on Fridays?

Positive change

Another 17-year old – whose name means “springtime” in Dutch – told me on my flight back that she is also trying to stop flying. 

Lente said that she became vegan in response to her increasing concerns about western lifestyle, as most of her friends had done too.

To stop is not the same as doing nothing, it is an important action. Without a foot on the break, our society is incapable of opening space for fresh ideas, learn with past experience without fearfully recreating the past, and observe what nature and the youth can teach society. 

The youth’s message is to stop resisting a shift in climate-consciousness – rather embrace it, learn with it. We, the younger generations know that the crisis cannot be addressed with same thinking that created it.

Despite many leaders’ sadness and desperation, we have the energy and will to drive positive change. After many school years learning concepts like to reuse, recycle, conserve nature, protect animals, respect others and live sustainably, we are the ones daring to ask, what do we want to sustain?

This Author

Rafaela Graça Scheiffer is a Brazilian biologist who recently concluded her MSc in Holistic Science at Schumacher College. She is based in Faro, Portugal, where she investigates the local connection between water, community, and climate.

Rare Notts dormice reintroduced

Eleven hazel dormice released into an undisclosed woodland location near Retford, in Nottinghamshire.

The People’s Trust for Endangered Species (PTES) State of Britain’s Dormice 2016 report confirmed that hazel dormice had disappeared from 17 English counties since the end of the nineteenth century, and that recent records reveal populations have probably fallen by a third since 2000.

Loss of woodland and hedgerow habitat, as well as changes to traditional countryside management practices, are all factors which have caused this decline.

Dormouse stronghold

The release of 11 dormice this week will bolster the existing reintroduced populations of hazel dormice already in the area by increasing genetic diversity and therefore helping the long-term survival of this endangered species.

The release follows three previous reintroductions which took place in 2013, 2014 and 2015. These three woodlands are all owned by the Nottinghamshire Wildlife Trust and are located within a five-mile radius of each other.

Ian White, Dormouse & Training Officer at PTES explains: “This week’s release is the next phase of a wider landscape project, as this site was where we released 40 dormice. Over the last five years, we’ve reintroduced over 100 hazel dormice into this part of the county, in three different woodlands.

“By releasing more dormice again this year, we hope to achieve our aim of connecting the three separate populations and increasing the gene pool, consequently creating a dormouse stronghold in the region.”

Ian continues: “Since the previous reintroductions, dormice have become well dispersed throughout all three woodlands, which is fantastic as it shows they have adapted and settled into their new surroundings.

“To ensure these populations continue to thrive, each woodland will require ongoing woodland management, which is something our colleagues at the Nottinghamshire Wildlife Trust and Nottinghamshire Dormouse Group have been doing successfully since 2013.”

Smooth transition

This release and previous reintroductions would not be possible without weeks of hard work by partners PTES, Nottinghamshire Wildlife Trust, Nottinghamshire Dormouse Group, Natural England, ZSL (Zoological Society of London), Paignton Zoo and the Common Dormouse Captive Breeders Group. Each are involved in the different stages of the dormouse reintroduction:

All dormice being released this week are captive bred by members of the Common Dormouse Captive Breeders Group

Prior to release, the dormice undergo a nine-week quarantine period at ZSL London Zoo and Paignton Zoo in Devon, during which vets from both institutions conduct a full health examination to check they are in tip-top condition and to reduce the risk of them passing on non-native diseases, so that they have the best chance of forming a healthy population in the wild

Once all dormice have been given the green light, they are carefully transported to the reintroduction location, where staff from PTES, Natural England and members of Nottinghamshire Dormouse Group, will be on hand to ensure the smooth transition from travel nest-boxes to their new woodland home

New home

Tony Sainsbury, Senior Research Fellow, ZSL and lead Disease Risk Analysis and Health Surveillance (DRAHS) Project (NE and ZSL) explains: ”The health of all species being translocated needs careful management and monitoring both before and after the release. 

“The effects of squirrelpox virus on red squirrel populations in England, and the chytrid fungus on amphibians worldwide, provide warnings of the dangers of unplanned translocations.

“At DRAHS we are pleased to have been monitoring the health of reintroduced dormice throughout England for nearly 20 years.”

After the reintroduction, the dormice spend the next 10 days in large release cages, which are checked daily and are connected to trees containing natural foliage, food and water to help the dormice become acclimatised to their new surroundings.

After this, a small door in the cages are opened, leaving the dormice free to explore their new home. Eventually, the release cages are removed once the dormice have settled into the wood.

Great success

Lorna Griffiths, Chair of the Nottinghamshire Dormouse Group adds: “Not only have the dormice dispersed throughout their original release sites, but also populated nearby woodlands, increasing their stronghold in the wider landscape.”

Michael Walker, Reserve Management and Monitoring Officer at Nottinghamshire Wildlife Trust, says: “The introductions in Nottinghamshire have been a great success and these extra animals will help to ensure that their future is secure as they venture out into the wider landscape.”

A second release is also taking place in Lincolnshire this week, where another 11 dormice will be released. This follows a previously successful reintroduction in 2002, so this addition will also strengthen the local dormice population in this area.

These reintroductions play an important role in the long-term conservation of this endangered species and are part of the Species Recovery Programme supported by Natural England.

This year’s two releases are the latest in the programme, which has run for over 25 years, releasing almost 1,000 hazel dormice (the majority of which were bred by the Common Dormouse Captive Breeders Group) back into 12 English counties where dormice once existed, in an effort to rebuild lost populations.

Healthier population

Dr Peter Brotherton, Director, Specialist Services and Programmes, Natural England concludes: “We have seen great success in reintroducing hazel dormice to Nottinghamshire and Lincolnshire though our Species Recovery Programme, and today’s release will mean their numbers can grow.

“This project is helping to maintain woodlands and the links between habitats to allow our dormouse communities to breed and create a healthier population.”

This Article 

This article is based on a press release from the People’s Trust for Endangered Species. 

Trophy hunting ‘imperial’ and ‘unsustainable’

A colonial attitude remains pervasive among those who defend the trophy hunting of elephants. They argue that ‘the west’ must stop lecturing Africans about how to manage their elephants.

But it was Western hunters who shot elephants out to the point where they had to establish reserves, dispossessing and crowding out local communities in the process. 

Fortress conservation and green militarisation are direct functions of these past colonial activities that created a ‘white hunter/black poacher’ narrative.

Imperial saviours

A major part of the reason that local communities are so upset at being excluded from national parks has much to do with how they were established in the first place – largely by colonial authorities creating hunting playgrounds.

Public relations efforts to paint western trophy hunters as the imperial saviours of poor African communities are therefore difficult to countenance. As with colonialism and slavery, the hunting of elephants for sport will eventually be abolished. 

The hunting of elephants for sport is morally dubitable, with hunters arguing that they kill the animals they love for the sake of conservation. In reality, the conservation value of hunting is being questioned, and its direct revenue contributions are rapidly declining

The ostensible indirect benefit through monetary and bushmeat contributions to communities remains questionable in light of governance concerns. 

Woodlands

Botswana, which has a growing elephant poaching problem, reintroduced hunting on the premise that an exploding elephant population had exceeded its carrying capacity. But even Ron Thomson, having defended hunting his entire career, agrees that hunting is not a population-control method and “will have no ecological impact whatsoever on the elephant over-population problem that certainly exists.”

He argues that elephant management in Botswana has nothing to do with hunting or poltics but everything to do with establishing a “management solution to a population of elephants that is very obviously grossly in excess of its habitat’s sustainable carrying capacity.’”

Thomson cites no science in support of his view that carrying capacity has been exceeded. Conversely,  24 scientists contributed to: The Return of the Giants: Ecological Effects of an Increasing Elephant Population, published in Ambio, a scientific journal, in 2004. 

The article states: “Much of the Chobe elephant problem has concerned the role of elephants in the disappearance of the riverine Acacia woodlands on the elevated alluvial plains along the Chobe River.

“As we have shown, these woodlands were probably a transient artefact, caused by artificially low densities of large herbivores following rinderpest and excessive hunting of elephants about 100 years ago, creating a window of opportunity for seedling establishment.

Carrying capacity

“Now that these woodlands have all but disappeared, their re-establishment would require drastic reductions in herbivore populations, including not only elephants, but also smaller browsers like impala.

“Our studies have confirmed that the ecosystem along the Chobe riverfront has changed profoundly since the 1960s, probably reverting towards a situation somewhat similar to the one before the excessive hunting of elephants and the rinderpest panzootic [a virus].

“There is, however, little evidence of a reduction in the carrying capacity for other large herbivores, in fact the dominating species of browsers, grazers and mixed feeders have increased in numbers concurrently with the elephants.

“We do not, however, see any ecological reason to artificially change the number of elephants in Chobe National Park, either through culling or opening new dry season ranges by providing extra water from boreholes.”

Habitat complexity

Further to this, 16 scientists co-authored a piece in Science Advances in 2015 that demonstrates that what pro-cullers refers to as ‘destruction’ is more appropriately understood as conversion: “African elephants convert woodland to shrubland, which indirectly improves the browse availability for impala and black rhinoceros.

“By damaging trees, African elephants facilitate increased structural habitat complexity benefiting lizard communities.

“Predation by large predators (for example, lions) on small ungulates is facilitated when African elephants open impenetrable thickets. African elephants are also great dispersers of seeds over long distances.”

Insisting on ‘carrying capacity’ as the primary factor to determine elephant population size betrays Thomson’s worldview that “there is nothing ‘natural’ about wildlife management”.

His view is that the natural order is there mainly to serve man. That attitude subverts the call to steward responsibly to one of mere domination.

Diversity protection 

Thomson laments that “today, all over southern Africa, our national parks are being managed as ‘elephant sanctuaries’ – at great cost to biological diversity” and that we should all be ashamed of ourselves for having allowed this.

Thomson views culling as the only serious ‘management solution’. He is furious that “governments will not cull even the most excessive of elephant populations” and blames biological diversity destruction on this decision alone.

Against all science, reverting to the view that wildlife management is akin to managing an agricultural establishment, Thomson says the optimal carrying capacity in southern Africa is “in the vicinity of one elephant per 5km2”.

Therefore, Botswana on its own may be able to sustainably carry “infinitely less than 50,000”. And, of course, we shouldn’t fear because elephants in rejuvenating habitats will double their population every 10 years and have to be culled again.

His lust for culling on the altar of some utopian notion of species diversity protection is telling. 

Gene depletion

Thomson endorses hunting because “it will provide many benefits to the local rural folk’, again emblematic of colonialist language. But he really believes in mass culling as the only sustainable solution.

Culling is deeply questionable on every level. Elephant populations in Africa are declining at the hands of poachers. Hunting will only amplify the negative effect of poaching, as it also targets large tuskers.

The removal of prime males from elephant families causes social havoc and gene depletion, and culling makes everything worse. 

Added to this, culling actually creates a population problem rather than solving it. In the subsequent 20 years to the Kruger culling of 1994, the elephant population increased non-linearly from about 8000 to 15000 individuals and has continued to grow exponentially.

Perhaps it is most important for Thomson to understand that the culling of the past, much of it overseen by him, has caused irreparable damage to elephants and other species.

Unexpected consequences

It has been found that abilities to process information on social identity and age-related dominance are severely compromised among African elephants that experienced separation from family members and translocation decades previously. 

Professor Don Ross writes: “For a number of years, southern African wildlife managers culled [elephant] herds to prevent over-population from threatening habitat sustainability.

“Typically culls would focus deliberately, though not exclusively, on older bulls who had already made substantial genetic contributions. In consequence, in two South African reserves in the 1990s young bulls were relocated to constitute new bachelor herds, without any older bulls to provide leadership.

“This had dramatic unexpected consequences. The young bulls displayed recurrent, atypical, lethal violence against rhinoceroses, and were occasionally observed forcing copulations with them.”

Thomson really should be aware of these studies that provide detail of the negative effects of culling and the loss of older bull males for elephant herd sociology.

Poaching epidemic

In the context of a poaching epidemic, it simply does not make sense to allow the trophy hunting of older bulls, let alone to cull.

Older bulls’ tusks grow exponentially larger towards the end of their lives and their musth cycles suppress the musth cycles of younger bulls and therefore prevent premature breeding and violent behaviour.

Large tuskers are in severe decline, and must be heavily protected from trophy hunting and poaching, as Dr Michelle Henley has noted.   

Furthermore, trophy hunting of elephants, never mind culling, raises serious moral questions. Thomson’s language is crudely utilitarian – elephant hunting and culling are seen as a means to an end, that end being a utopian bushveld garden free from vegetation transformation or ‘too many elephants.’

The means are justified and rationalised on those grounds, typically with an appeal to ‘stick to the facts’ or to keep emotion out of the equation. 

Governance challenges

Arguments that communities have called for hunting to return are not to be ignored. But to unthinkingly claim that only Western armchair critics are opposed to the practice is to ignore the fact that the whole trophy hunting endeavour (of elephants especially) is imperialistic and morally questionable.

Aside from the moral questions and the conservation consequences of culling and hunting, it’s not clear that governance challenges associated with managing hunting have been solved.

Will local communities get a fair share of hunting revenue (which is globally declining)? How will that money be distributed in a way that genuinely serves community members and incentivises them to drive conservation-driven development?

If bushmeat is what communities are asking for, are there not feasible alternatives to trophy hunting? 

I’m highly sympathetic to the voice of communities, and have written extensively on the topic, but I am not sympathetic to elephant hunting as a solution unless the governance challenges are properly addressed and the science that shows how the extermination of 400 older males a year – in the midst of a poaching crisis – can be ‘sustainable’ when the number of large tuskers are dwindling.

Disrupting sociology

The entire population is also likely in decline. Elephant-themed revenue creation projects, being pioneered on the ground by excellent outfits such as Eco-Exist, which aim to drive down human and elephant conflict, are surely the way forward. 

It is not scientific or objective to divorce the material psychological consequences of culling and hunting elephants from necessary ecological management.

The science shows us that disrupting elephant sociology is inextricably linked to negative conservation consequences.

Increased aggression among elephants due to culling, hunting and poaching will only increase human and elephant conflict. We have to pursue co-existence and shared benefits rather than a crude utilitarianism that wilfully endorses cruelty.     

This Author 

Ross Harvey studied a B.Com in Philosophy, Politics and Economics at the University of Cape Town (UCT), where he also completed an M.Phil in Public Policy. At the end of 2018, he submitted his PhD in Economics, also at UCT. Ross is currently a freelance independent economist who works with The Conservation Action Trust.

Follow him on Twitter: @Harvross

Activists occupy University of Manchester

Student protestors at the University of Manchester were denied access to toilets, water, and internet access whilst occupying a building on campus.

The occupation coincided with the annual conference of the Environmental Association of Universities and Colleges.

The occupation was intended to put pressure on the University to remove its £11.3 million of investments in the fossil fuel industry as part of the People & Planet campaign.

Divestment

The group set up camp outside the office of the Vice Chancellor, Dame Nancy Rothwell, at 9:30 on the morning of Wednesday the 19 June.

At 12:15 campus security had declared that nobody from outside the occupation was allowed to join them or bring them additional supplies. At 14:56 they told the students that they would not be able to walk to the toilets which were on the same corridor without being blocked from returning to the protest. In the evening WiFi in the building was switched off. 

The protestors have maintained that they were consistently peaceful and not disrupting the working day of any of the staff in the building.

Their demands were to meet with the VC or members of the Senior Leadership Team, but these were denied whilst the leadership continued to instruct security to restrict their access to basic facilities. 

Manchester People & Planet members have been campaigning for fossil fuel divestment for 4 years. In February they entered a meeting of the Board of Governors to deliver an open letter calling for divestment. 

Mental wellbeing

The students have said: “The University have ignored us and tried to brush us under the carpet for years. Their awful response to this is just more evidence of how undemocratic senior leadership is at Manchester University”. 

Due to concerns for the physical and mental wellbeing a number of protestors had to leave after 13 hours of occupation, seven of which were without access to toilets.

Staff from the Students’ Union were campaigning for the students to have access to toilets, although they managed to deliver bottles of water their requests were denied. 

The University told the student newspaper, The Mancunion: “The University of Manchester supports the right of any student to protest peacefully and legally. However, our responsibility as a University is to ensure that we do everything we can to minimise disruption to other students and to our staff.”

This Author

Marianne Brooker is The Ecologist‘s content editor. This article is based on a press release from People and Planet at the University of Manchester.