Showing posts with label Somerset. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Somerset. Show all posts

Sunday, 9 February 2014

it's the food stupid!

The growthtards crack me up. We've been warning for YEARS that climate change will have all sorts of negative effects but the 'tards either didn't believe us or thought it would take so long that it would have no effect on them personally, so didn't matter.

In the last few months we've seen almost daily CC effects here in southern Britain. A few miles down the road from me the land has been flooded for over a month, with absolutely no end in sight. Our wonderful coastline has taken a huge battering and will never be quite the same again. Transport links south west of here have been shredded by a series of unprecedented  Atlantic storms that have been triggered directly by upper atmosphere effects of warming over the Arctic. It seems that suddenly the countries fringeing the Arctic are now the front line, and we have a very interesting and disturbing few decades ahead.

And now it's beginning to affect food supplies - as we have been warning about this as well over the last few decades.

THIS IS WHAT CLIMATE CHANGE MEANS YOU IDIOTS!!

Severe floods 'threaten food security', say farmers and environmental groups

Government accused of failing to address effects of climate change on coastal and rural areas
Flooded village of Moorland
Aerial view of the flooded village of Moorland in Somerset. Photograph: James Dadzitis/SWNS.com

Severe flooding threatens to undermine the country's food security, according to farmers and environmental groups, who today accuse the government of failing to address the effects of climate change on coastal and rural areas.

As gales swept southern and western parts of the UK, with already drenched counties bearing the brunt of the storms, it has emerged that parliament's select committee on the environment warned in a report last year that "the current model for allocating flood defence funding is biased towards protecting property, which means that funding is largely allocated to urban areas. Defra's [the Department of the Environment's] failure to protect rural areas poses a long-term risk to the security of UK food production, as a high proportion of the most valuable agricultural land is at risk of flooding."

"We need a response from government that recognises the importance for our long-term food security of safeguarding high-quality farmland," said Neil Sinden of the Campaign to Protect Rural England. "We need to view the countryside as more than a place for building, and value it for the food it provides."
Defra has estimated that 35,000 hectares of high-quality horticultural and arable land will be flooded at least once every three years by the 2020s. This could rise to around 130,000 hectares by the 2080s if there is no change to current flood defence provision.

Peter Kendall, chairman of the National Farmers Union, which has produced evidence showing that 58% of England's most productive farmland lies within a floodplain, said the floods were a wake-up call for a country that has "believed for too long that producing food wasn't a big issue".

"We are seeing more of these intense extreme weather events," Kendall said. "Climate change does now really challenge mankind's ability to feed itself."

He said much of the flooding was down to "almost a deliberate policy of neglect of the watercourses" that had seen the Environment Agency "putting birds first and people second", a reference to the agency's attempts to encourage more wetland areas in the UK to promote biodiversity.

His comments were the latest salvo fired at the agency's chairman, Lord Smith, who was defended robustly by wildlife charities. In a letter in the Observer, the heads of the RSPB, the Wildfowl and Wetland Trusts, the Wildlife Trusts and the Angling Trust, said: "Ultimately, it is governments that have set the policies that have hamstrung flood planning in some vulnerable areas: allowing homes to be built and failing to make both homes and farmland more resilient to floods. Cuts to the Environment Agency merely risk reducing it from a flood-management body to an emergency response service and making future floods even more damaging."
Whistleblowers within the agency told the Observer that frontline flood staff were being cut, despite Smith's pledges that reducing the agency's emergency response was a "red line" that could not be crossed.

"People need to be aware that some of the frontline staff are taking a big hit, particularly when we are facing some of the worst flooding ever seen in southern England," said one EA source. He said that, at the same time that frontline staff were being put onto 24/7 duty rotas, managers were being asked to cut staff by 13% across all regions. "This salami slicing approach is entirely wrong," he said.

"This government is steadily dismantling the nation's ability to tackle flooding and prepare for climate change," said Friends of the Earth's Guy Shrubsole.

An Environment Agency spokesman said: "The planned reductions in posts will not affect the Environment Agency's ability to respond to flooding incidents."

The government's response to the floods is threatening to damage the Tory brand in rural areas. Jeremy Browne, the Liberal Democrat MP for Taunton Deane, said that the Conservatives had left themselves open to criticism, having rebranded themselves as a "green" party, only to lose enthusiasm after a couple of years in office.

"People have good reason to believe that that was a fairly cynical exercise and that much of the party remains unconvinced of the need to have a coherent environmental policy," Browne said.

flooding on the levels

Somerset Levels - the real battle is getting the Government to pay

Oliver Tickell
9th February 2014

Populist urban growthtard media and politicians have chosen the Somerset Levels as their battle field for fighting the 'green' agenda. There is just one problem - the facts. On the Levels themselves, there is a remarkable consensus about the way forward - and the future is Green.

There is a Plan, there is a Vision - and the only real question is how to drive it forward.

It has all made for a fantastic media drama - the striking shots of the inundated Somerset Levels, whole villages under water, wild accusations of incompetence and skullduggery thrown at the Environment Agency, fierce swipes at the 'environment brigade' in general - accused of putting birds and flowers before people flooded out of their homes - claims of a fragile rural economy put at risk - and the ever louder cry of "Dredge, dredge, dredge!"

But where does this captivating narrative come from? It is, as The Ecologist has uncovered, a completely false narrative that has been worked up by Britain's constantly attention-seeking media, with the active connivance of populist politicians and commentators desperate to drive a right-wing anti-Green agenda - and for whom the Somerset floods provide the perfect battle field.

An astonishing agreement has been reached

The truth is that an astonishing consensus has been reached among all the principal parties with interests in the Levels: Somerset County Council, the Somerset District Councils, the National Farmers Union (NFU), the Somerset Consortium of Drainage Boards, the Farming and Wildlife Advisory Group (FWAG), Somerset Wildlife Trust, the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB), the official wildlife agency Natural England, and the Environment Agency.

The 'Vision 2030' document, agreed at the end of January and published yesterday by The Ecologist - its first airing in the entire British media - presents a forward looking and notably 'green' view of how the Somerset Levels and Moors should develop over the next 16 years.

"Extensively managed wet grassland dominates the scene", it says. "The floodplains are managed to accommodate winter flooding whilst reducing flood risk elsewhere." On the low-lying peat moors, "water levels have been adopted which conserve peat soils and avoid the loss of carbon to the atmosphere."

A world class haven for wildlife

The area should become a "world-class haven for wildlife and water fowl. The Levels and Moors are regarded as one of the great natural spectacles in the UK and Europe with a mix of diverse and valuable habitats."

"Previously fragmented habitats such as fen and flower-rich meadows have been re-connected and are widely distributed. In the north of the area over 1,600 ha are managed as reed-bed, open water and bog ... Each winter the wetlands attract large numbers of wintering wildfowl and waders regularly exceeding 130,000 birds. Wetland species such as Crane, Bittern and pollinator populations flourish."

"Optimum use is being made of the agricultural potential of the Levels and Moors, particularly on the higher land, whilst unsustainable farming practices have been adapted or replaced to secure a robust, sustainable base to the local economy."

A flourishing green economy

They are likewise agreed on the need for "a flourishing green economy for food and tourism" to take root. "New businesses, including those based on 'green tourism', have developed, meeting the needs of local people and visitors alike, while brands based on the area's special qualities are helping farmers to add value to the meat, milk and other goods and services that they produce."

An important part of this 'green economy' is tourism drawn by the Levels' internationally important archaeological and historic heritage, which is to be "protected from threats to its survival and is justly celebrated, providing a draw to visitors and a source of pride and identity to local communities."
Meanwhile farmers and landowners are to be "rewarded financially for the public benefits and ecosystem services they provide by their land management including flood risk management, coastal management, carbon storage and the natural environment."

Why is the good news not reported?

That all parties have come together to agree on this view of the future, both progressive and pragmatic, is an astonishing 'good news story' amid the very real tales of human woe.

Perhaps it is for that very reason that the mainstream media have chosen to ignore it. It simply does not fit into their preferred confrontational and simplistic narratives of 'birds versus farmers', or 'floods versus people'.

It also completely undermines the battle cry of right wing media commentators who love to wax lyrical about and bungling, uncaring bureaucracies, sustained at massive taxpayer expense but delivering nothing.
Just the thing to justify further cuts in the budget of the Environment Agency, which is aleady to lose 1,700 of its employees, 10% of its head count, just as its services and expertise have never been more desperately needed. The cuts include 550 jobs lost among the very staff responsible for flood response and resilience.

More good sense

Another document that contains an remarkable amount of good sense is the 10-point plan released by the Somerset Consortium of Drainage Boards - one of the bodies signed up to Vision 2030:

  1. Maximise the conveyance of the lowland rivers in Somerset and maintain them.
  2. Construct a tidal exclusion sluice on the River Parrett as already exists on other rivers in Somerset.
  3. All land and property owners in Somerset to contribute to the funding of flood risk management work within their catchments.
  4. Increase soil infiltration and store more flood water in the upper catchments.
  5. Reduce urban run-off.
  6. Promote flood resilience and property level protection in the whole catchment.
  7. Promote and assist the relocation of very flood vulnerable households out of the floodplain.
  8. Acknowledge and provide assistance to land owners on moors identified as flood storage areas.
  9. Provide assistance to farmers and others to adapt their businesses in areas used for flood storage.
  10. Assist farms in flood storage moors to become resilient to flooding and provide assistance to relocate intensive farming activities out of the floodplain with assisted land swops.

Again, there is very little for anyone - even the most committed Green advocate - to disagree with in this document, which is entirely consistent with Vision 2030. There may be some slight scope for debate about the high priority given to dredging - but that's about all.

Now for the real debate - how to make it happen

The key thing now is to move the debate on from the dramatic and diverting but ultimately sterile mischaracterisation portrayed by mainstream media. There is a Plan, there is a Vision - and the only real question is how to drive it forward.

A large part of the money to pay for it - and there will be substantial costs - will have to come from the European Union's agri-environment funding.

A very successful scheme run by Natural England and its predecessors - which paid farmers on the within the Somerset Levels 'Environmentally Sensitive Area (ESA) premiums to maintain high water levels and restore traditional land management practices - has come to an end. It now needs to be replaced with a similar new scheme tailored specifically to the needs of both conservation and farming interests.

Restore funding to the Environment Agency

Meanwhile funding needs to be restored to the Environment Agency so that it cannot merely continue to do the job it was doing before, but expand and enhance its efforts to move beyond the narrow confines of the river channels - where right wing politicos would like the EA's job to begin and end.

Flood and water management must be, as the Somerset Drainage Boards argued, a catchment-wide effort involving not only dredging but sustainable urban drainage, reforestation in headwaters, and management and preservation of floodplains to accommodate floodwaters.

All this will need increases in funding, not the cuts that beleaguered Environment Secretary Owen Paterson is only too willing to impose. And this is the real political battle ahead - getting the Government to pay up.

Sunday, 3 June 2012

gartell railway - narrow gauge on the S&D

Gartell Light Railway steams ahead with expansion

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Saturday, June 02, 2012
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GARTELL Light Railway has achieved a long-held ambition to extend northwards on the track bed of the old Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway.
Now incorporating a working junction, a railway over railway flyover, a level crossing and a new platform for the station named 'Tower View' this railway, with its half-sized trains, is unique on the British heritage scene.
Two steam engines and various diesels haul trains at frequent intervals throughout the day. No need to worry about the weather either as all the coaches are fully enclosed. The line is operated by volunteers who have been highly trained in the duties that it takes to run a safe and efficient railway. Opening at 10am, the first train departs at 10.30am and at regular intervals until 4.30pm. Come early and enjoy one of their legendary bacon or breakfast rolls.
The railway is very family-orientated, and tickets are valid for as many trips as you like, subject to seat availability.
Home cooked food, drinks and snacks are available in the 'Pines' function suite which doubles as the station Buffet/Restaurant, or why not bring a picnic to enjoy by the lake?
On open days the railway is sign-posted from Templecombe and Henstridge. Visit www.glr-online.co.uk See us on Facebook or call 01963 - 370752.