Monthly Archives: June 2017

Ecologist Exclusive: Theresa May’s views on fox hunting lack scientific validity

Theresa May recently reconfirmed her support for fox hunting1 and previously expounded her arguments in a 2015 letter2, demonstrating a profound misunderstanding of the welfare and disease risks involved. She states that “hunting with hounds results in almost instantaneous death”, without any supporting evidence, although the Burns report3 concluded that hunting with hounds has “serious welfare implications” for quarry animals such as foxes, deer, hares and mink. Pathological examinations of wildlife killed illegally by hunts, show injuries consistent with prolonged suffering4.

She cites a “need for wildlife management to protect vulnerable animals”2, views which are out of step with recent conservation science proving the lack of efficacy of such attempts at predator control56 and demonstrating that hounds are not a suitable method for dealing with diseased wild animals. Since the introduction of the Hunting Act, fox populations across the UK have remained roughly stable7. While foxes do take some livestock, they do not have a significant impact on farming incomes8, obviating the need for human interference.

She cites support from “over 500 Members of the RCVS” although no such list has been published. Indeed, if death by hunting with hounds really were humane, the few remaining veterinarians who support hunting could offer that as a euthanasia option for the humane destruction of their clients’ pets, which of course they do not.

The running of hounds over extensive areas of farmland has biosecurity implications for the control of diseases, particularly that of bovine TB9, recently discovered in the Kimblewick Hunt’s hounds10, with potential implications for the health of domestic animals and people over six home counties 11.

Hunting with hounds was stopped during the Foot and Mouth Disease outbreak of 2001. A reinstatement of the biohazard presented by hunting with hounds would be totally inappropriate given the government’s failed badger culling and TB policies, which have resulted in epidemic spread of bovine TB in cattle to new areas of the country previously unaffected by the disease12. In April there was a new cattle herd TB breakdown near Theresa May’s own Maidenhead constituency, which also falls within the Kimblewick hunting range, at Henley-on-Thames12.

The Government’s promised Disease Risk Assessment of the Kimblewick hound outbreak, and results from disease investigations both locally and nationally in hounds, need to be made public before the General Election. Theresa May has made hunting with hounds an election issue, but her arguments are evidence light, prejudice heavy, and take no account of the disease risks. Her support is based on ignorance of the scientific facts and the objective cruelty involved. Such a lack of empathy casts grave doubt on the suitability of Mrs May to negotiate animal welfare and protection policies under Brexit.

We urge voters to ask Theresa May to explain the reasons she is supporting such a regressive and high-risk policy as a return to hunting with hounds.

Dr Iain McGill BSc (Hons) BVetMed MRCVS. Director, Prion Interest Group, Director VATC, Lead author VVNABC

Dr Mark Jones BVSc MSc (Stir) MSc (UL) MRCVS

Professor Andrew Knight MANZCVS DipECAWBM (AWSEL) DACAW PhD MRCVS SFHEA. Director, Centre for Animal Welfare, University of Winchester, European & RCVS Veterinary Specialist in Animal Welfare Science, Ethics and Law; American Veterinary Specialist in Animal Welfare

 

Dr Andre Menache BSc (Hons) BVSc DipECAWBM (AWSEL) MRCVS. European & RCVS Veterinary Specialist in Animal Welfare Science, Ethics and Law

References

1.http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/election-2017-39861011

2. Letter by Theresa May to a constituent, explaining her views on hunting with hounds. (2015) Vets & Vet Nurses Against The Badger Cull

3. Committee of Inquiry into Hunting with Dogs in England & Wales

4.Wildlife killed by illegal hunts show injuries consistent with prolonged suffering

5. Treves, A., Krofel M. & McManus, J. (2016) Predator Control should not be a shot in the dark. Frontiers in Ecology and The Environment 14, 7, 380-388.

6. Rushton, S.P., Shirley, M.D.F., Macdonald, D.W. & Reynolds, J.C. (2006). Effects of culling fox

populations at the landscape scale: A spatially explicit population modelling approach. The

Journal of Wildlife Management, 70: 1102-1110.

7. Since the introduction of the Hunting Act fox populations have remained roughly stable

8. McDonald, R., Baker, P. & Harris, S. (1997). Is the fox a pest? Electra Publishing, Cheddar,

Somerset.

9. Jahns, J. J. Callanan, M. C. McElroy, D. J. Sammin, H. F. Bassett (2011) Post-mortem Findings in Irish Culled Hounds. J. Comp. Path, Vol. 145, 59-67.

10. Foxhounds euthanised after becoming infected with bovine TB

11. McGill, I, Abraham M, Boscolo S, Eastwood B., et al (2017 in press) Veterinary professionals oppose any return to hunting mammals with hounds (The Veterinary Times, June 5th 2017)

12. http://www.ibtb.co.uk

 

 

This letter, released today, coincides with the publications of an article by this author and some 20 of his colleagues in the Veterinary Times (see ref. 11 above) and was offered exclusively to the Ecologist for online publication today

 

 

 

 

 

Ecologist Exclusive: Theresa May’s views on fox hunting lack scientific validity

Theresa May recently reconfirmed her support for fox hunting1 and previously expounded her arguments in a 2015 letter2, demonstrating a profound misunderstanding of the welfare and disease risks involved. She states that “hunting with hounds results in almost instantaneous death”, without any supporting evidence, although the Burns report3 concluded that hunting with hounds has “serious welfare implications” for quarry animals such as foxes, deer, hares and mink. Pathological examinations of wildlife killed illegally by hunts, show injuries consistent with prolonged suffering4.

She cites a “need for wildlife management to protect vulnerable animals”2, views which are out of step with recent conservation science proving the lack of efficacy of such attempts at predator control56 and demonstrating that hounds are not a suitable method for dealing with diseased wild animals. Since the introduction of the Hunting Act, fox populations across the UK have remained roughly stable7. While foxes do take some livestock, they do not have a significant impact on farming incomes8, obviating the need for human interference.

She cites support from “over 500 Members of the RCVS” although no such list has been published. Indeed, if death by hunting with hounds really were humane, the few remaining veterinarians who support hunting could offer that as a euthanasia option for the humane destruction of their clients’ pets, which of course they do not.

The running of hounds over extensive areas of farmland has biosecurity implications for the control of diseases, particularly that of bovine TB9, recently discovered in the Kimblewick Hunt’s hounds10, with potential implications for the health of domestic animals and people over six home counties 11.

Hunting with hounds was stopped during the Foot and Mouth Disease outbreak of 2001. A reinstatement of the biohazard presented by hunting with hounds would be totally inappropriate given the government’s failed badger culling and TB policies, which have resulted in epidemic spread of bovine TB in cattle to new areas of the country previously unaffected by the disease12. In April there was a new cattle herd TB breakdown near Theresa May’s own Maidenhead constituency, which also falls within the Kimblewick hunting range, at Henley-on-Thames12.

The Government’s promised Disease Risk Assessment of the Kimblewick hound outbreak, and results from disease investigations both locally and nationally in hounds, need to be made public before the General Election. Theresa May has made hunting with hounds an election issue, but her arguments are evidence light, prejudice heavy, and take no account of the disease risks. Her support is based on ignorance of the scientific facts and the objective cruelty involved. Such a lack of empathy casts grave doubt on the suitability of Mrs May to negotiate animal welfare and protection policies under Brexit.

We urge voters to ask Theresa May to explain the reasons she is supporting such a regressive and high-risk policy as a return to hunting with hounds.

Dr Iain McGill BSc (Hons) BVetMed MRCVS. Director, Prion Interest Group, Director VATC, Lead author VVNABC

Dr Mark Jones BVSc MSc (Stir) MSc (UL) MRCVS

Professor Andrew Knight MANZCVS DipECAWBM (AWSEL) DACAW PhD MRCVS SFHEA. Director, Centre for Animal Welfare, University of Winchester, European & RCVS Veterinary Specialist in Animal Welfare Science, Ethics and Law; American Veterinary Specialist in Animal Welfare

 

Dr Andre Menache BSc (Hons) BVSc DipECAWBM (AWSEL) MRCVS. European & RCVS Veterinary Specialist in Animal Welfare Science, Ethics and Law

References

1.http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/election-2017-39861011

2. Letter by Theresa May to a constituent, explaining her views on hunting with hounds. (2015) Vets & Vet Nurses Against The Badger Cull

3. Committee of Inquiry into Hunting with Dogs in England & Wales

4.Wildlife killed by illegal hunts show injuries consistent with prolonged suffering

5. Treves, A., Krofel M. & McManus, J. (2016) Predator Control should not be a shot in the dark. Frontiers in Ecology and The Environment 14, 7, 380-388.

6. Rushton, S.P., Shirley, M.D.F., Macdonald, D.W. & Reynolds, J.C. (2006). Effects of culling fox

populations at the landscape scale: A spatially explicit population modelling approach. The

Journal of Wildlife Management, 70: 1102-1110.

7. Since the introduction of the Hunting Act fox populations have remained roughly stable

8. McDonald, R., Baker, P. & Harris, S. (1997). Is the fox a pest? Electra Publishing, Cheddar,

Somerset.

9. Jahns, J. J. Callanan, M. C. McElroy, D. J. Sammin, H. F. Bassett (2011) Post-mortem Findings in Irish Culled Hounds. J. Comp. Path, Vol. 145, 59-67.

10. Foxhounds euthanised after becoming infected with bovine TB

11. McGill, I, Abraham M, Boscolo S, Eastwood B., et al (2017 in press) Veterinary professionals oppose any return to hunting mammals with hounds (The Veterinary Times, June 5th 2017)

12. http://www.ibtb.co.uk

 

 

This letter, released today, coincides with the publications of an article by this author and some 20 of his colleagues in the Veterinary Times (see ref. 11 above) and was offered exclusively to the Ecologist for online publication today

 

 

 

 

 

Ecologist Exclusive: Theresa May’s views on fox hunting lack scientific validity

Theresa May recently reconfirmed her support for fox hunting1 and previously expounded her arguments in a 2015 letter2, demonstrating a profound misunderstanding of the welfare and disease risks involved. She states that “hunting with hounds results in almost instantaneous death”, without any supporting evidence, although the Burns report3 concluded that hunting with hounds has “serious welfare implications” for quarry animals such as foxes, deer, hares and mink. Pathological examinations of wildlife killed illegally by hunts, show injuries consistent with prolonged suffering4.

She cites a “need for wildlife management to protect vulnerable animals”2, views which are out of step with recent conservation science proving the lack of efficacy of such attempts at predator control56 and demonstrating that hounds are not a suitable method for dealing with diseased wild animals. Since the introduction of the Hunting Act, fox populations across the UK have remained roughly stable7. While foxes do take some livestock, they do not have a significant impact on farming incomes8, obviating the need for human interference.

She cites support from “over 500 Members of the RCVS” although no such list has been published. Indeed, if death by hunting with hounds really were humane, the few remaining veterinarians who support hunting could offer that as a euthanasia option for the humane destruction of their clients’ pets, which of course they do not.

The running of hounds over extensive areas of farmland has biosecurity implications for the control of diseases, particularly that of bovine TB9, recently discovered in the Kimblewick Hunt’s hounds10, with potential implications for the health of domestic animals and people over six home counties 11.

Hunting with hounds was stopped during the Foot and Mouth Disease outbreak of 2001. A reinstatement of the biohazard presented by hunting with hounds would be totally inappropriate given the government’s failed badger culling and TB policies, which have resulted in epidemic spread of bovine TB in cattle to new areas of the country previously unaffected by the disease12. In April there was a new cattle herd TB breakdown near Theresa May’s own Maidenhead constituency, which also falls within the Kimblewick hunting range, at Henley-on-Thames12.

The Government’s promised Disease Risk Assessment of the Kimblewick hound outbreak, and results from disease investigations both locally and nationally in hounds, need to be made public before the General Election. Theresa May has made hunting with hounds an election issue, but her arguments are evidence light, prejudice heavy, and take no account of the disease risks. Her support is based on ignorance of the scientific facts and the objective cruelty involved. Such a lack of empathy casts grave doubt on the suitability of Mrs May to negotiate animal welfare and protection policies under Brexit.

We urge voters to ask Theresa May to explain the reasons she is supporting such a regressive and high-risk policy as a return to hunting with hounds.

Dr Iain McGill BSc (Hons) BVetMed MRCVS. Director, Prion Interest Group, Director VATC, Lead author VVNABC

Dr Mark Jones BVSc MSc (Stir) MSc (UL) MRCVS

Professor Andrew Knight MANZCVS DipECAWBM (AWSEL) DACAW PhD MRCVS SFHEA. Director, Centre for Animal Welfare, University of Winchester, European & RCVS Veterinary Specialist in Animal Welfare Science, Ethics and Law; American Veterinary Specialist in Animal Welfare

 

Dr Andre Menache BSc (Hons) BVSc DipECAWBM (AWSEL) MRCVS. European & RCVS Veterinary Specialist in Animal Welfare Science, Ethics and Law

References

1.http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/election-2017-39861011

2. Letter by Theresa May to a constituent, explaining her views on hunting with hounds. (2015) Vets & Vet Nurses Against The Badger Cull

3. Committee of Inquiry into Hunting with Dogs in England & Wales

4.Wildlife killed by illegal hunts show injuries consistent with prolonged suffering

5. Treves, A., Krofel M. & McManus, J. (2016) Predator Control should not be a shot in the dark. Frontiers in Ecology and The Environment 14, 7, 380-388.

6. Rushton, S.P., Shirley, M.D.F., Macdonald, D.W. & Reynolds, J.C. (2006). Effects of culling fox

populations at the landscape scale: A spatially explicit population modelling approach. The

Journal of Wildlife Management, 70: 1102-1110.

7. Since the introduction of the Hunting Act fox populations have remained roughly stable

8. McDonald, R., Baker, P. & Harris, S. (1997). Is the fox a pest? Electra Publishing, Cheddar,

Somerset.

9. Jahns, J. J. Callanan, M. C. McElroy, D. J. Sammin, H. F. Bassett (2011) Post-mortem Findings in Irish Culled Hounds. J. Comp. Path, Vol. 145, 59-67.

10. Foxhounds euthanised after becoming infected with bovine TB

11. McGill, I, Abraham M, Boscolo S, Eastwood B., et al (2017 in press) Veterinary professionals oppose any return to hunting mammals with hounds (The Veterinary Times, June 5th 2017)

12. http://www.ibtb.co.uk

 

 

This letter, released today, coincides with the publications of an article by this author and some 20 of his colleagues in the Veterinary Times (see ref. 11 above) and was offered exclusively to the Ecologist for online publication today

 

 

 

 

 

Ecologist Exclusive: Theresa May’s views on fox hunting lack scientific validity

Theresa May recently reconfirmed her support for fox hunting1 and previously expounded her arguments in a 2015 letter2, demonstrating a profound misunderstanding of the welfare and disease risks involved. She states that “hunting with hounds results in almost instantaneous death”, without any supporting evidence, although the Burns report3 concluded that hunting with hounds has “serious welfare implications” for quarry animals such as foxes, deer, hares and mink. Pathological examinations of wildlife killed illegally by hunts, show injuries consistent with prolonged suffering4.

She cites a “need for wildlife management to protect vulnerable animals”2, views which are out of step with recent conservation science proving the lack of efficacy of such attempts at predator control56 and demonstrating that hounds are not a suitable method for dealing with diseased wild animals. Since the introduction of the Hunting Act, fox populations across the UK have remained roughly stable7. While foxes do take some livestock, they do not have a significant impact on farming incomes8, obviating the need for human interference.

She cites support from “over 500 Members of the RCVS” although no such list has been published. Indeed, if death by hunting with hounds really were humane, the few remaining veterinarians who support hunting could offer that as a euthanasia option for the humane destruction of their clients’ pets, which of course they do not.

The running of hounds over extensive areas of farmland has biosecurity implications for the control of diseases, particularly that of bovine TB9, recently discovered in the Kimblewick Hunt’s hounds10, with potential implications for the health of domestic animals and people over six home counties 11.

Hunting with hounds was stopped during the Foot and Mouth Disease outbreak of 2001. A reinstatement of the biohazard presented by hunting with hounds would be totally inappropriate given the government’s failed badger culling and TB policies, which have resulted in epidemic spread of bovine TB in cattle to new areas of the country previously unaffected by the disease12. In April there was a new cattle herd TB breakdown near Theresa May’s own Maidenhead constituency, which also falls within the Kimblewick hunting range, at Henley-on-Thames12.

The Government’s promised Disease Risk Assessment of the Kimblewick hound outbreak, and results from disease investigations both locally and nationally in hounds, need to be made public before the General Election. Theresa May has made hunting with hounds an election issue, but her arguments are evidence light, prejudice heavy, and take no account of the disease risks. Her support is based on ignorance of the scientific facts and the objective cruelty involved. Such a lack of empathy casts grave doubt on the suitability of Mrs May to negotiate animal welfare and protection policies under Brexit.

We urge voters to ask Theresa May to explain the reasons she is supporting such a regressive and high-risk policy as a return to hunting with hounds.

Dr Iain McGill BSc (Hons) BVetMed MRCVS. Director, Prion Interest Group, Director VATC, Lead author VVNABC

Dr Mark Jones BVSc MSc (Stir) MSc (UL) MRCVS

Professor Andrew Knight MANZCVS DipECAWBM (AWSEL) DACAW PhD MRCVS SFHEA. Director, Centre for Animal Welfare, University of Winchester, European & RCVS Veterinary Specialist in Animal Welfare Science, Ethics and Law; American Veterinary Specialist in Animal Welfare

 

Dr Andre Menache BSc (Hons) BVSc DipECAWBM (AWSEL) MRCVS. European & RCVS Veterinary Specialist in Animal Welfare Science, Ethics and Law

References

1.http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/election-2017-39861011

2. Letter by Theresa May to a constituent, explaining her views on hunting with hounds. (2015) Vets & Vet Nurses Against The Badger Cull

3. Committee of Inquiry into Hunting with Dogs in England & Wales

4.Wildlife killed by illegal hunts show injuries consistent with prolonged suffering

5. Treves, A., Krofel M. & McManus, J. (2016) Predator Control should not be a shot in the dark. Frontiers in Ecology and The Environment 14, 7, 380-388.

6. Rushton, S.P., Shirley, M.D.F., Macdonald, D.W. & Reynolds, J.C. (2006). Effects of culling fox

populations at the landscape scale: A spatially explicit population modelling approach. The

Journal of Wildlife Management, 70: 1102-1110.

7. Since the introduction of the Hunting Act fox populations have remained roughly stable

8. McDonald, R., Baker, P. & Harris, S. (1997). Is the fox a pest? Electra Publishing, Cheddar,

Somerset.

9. Jahns, J. J. Callanan, M. C. McElroy, D. J. Sammin, H. F. Bassett (2011) Post-mortem Findings in Irish Culled Hounds. J. Comp. Path, Vol. 145, 59-67.

10. Foxhounds euthanised after becoming infected with bovine TB

11. McGill, I, Abraham M, Boscolo S, Eastwood B., et al (2017 in press) Veterinary professionals oppose any return to hunting mammals with hounds (The Veterinary Times, June 5th 2017)

12. http://www.ibtb.co.uk

 

 

This letter, released today, coincides with the publications of an article by this author and some 20 of his colleagues in the Veterinary Times (see ref. 11 above) and was offered exclusively to the Ecologist for online publication today

 

 

 

 

 

Ecologist Exclusive: Theresa May’s views on fox hunting lack scientific validity

Theresa May recently reconfirmed her support for fox hunting1 and previously expounded her arguments in a 2015 letter2, demonstrating a profound misunderstanding of the welfare and disease risks involved. She states that “hunting with hounds results in almost instantaneous death”, without any supporting evidence, although the Burns report3 concluded that hunting with hounds has “serious welfare implications” for quarry animals such as foxes, deer, hares and mink. Pathological examinations of wildlife killed illegally by hunts, show injuries consistent with prolonged suffering4.

She cites a “need for wildlife management to protect vulnerable animals”2, views which are out of step with recent conservation science proving the lack of efficacy of such attempts at predator control56 and demonstrating that hounds are not a suitable method for dealing with diseased wild animals. Since the introduction of the Hunting Act, fox populations across the UK have remained roughly stable7. While foxes do take some livestock, they do not have a significant impact on farming incomes8, obviating the need for human interference.

She cites support from “over 500 Members of the RCVS” although no such list has been published. Indeed, if death by hunting with hounds really were humane, the few remaining veterinarians who support hunting could offer that as a euthanasia option for the humane destruction of their clients’ pets, which of course they do not.

The running of hounds over extensive areas of farmland has biosecurity implications for the control of diseases, particularly that of bovine TB9, recently discovered in the Kimblewick Hunt’s hounds10, with potential implications for the health of domestic animals and people over six home counties 11.

Hunting with hounds was stopped during the Foot and Mouth Disease outbreak of 2001. A reinstatement of the biohazard presented by hunting with hounds would be totally inappropriate given the government’s failed badger culling and TB policies, which have resulted in epidemic spread of bovine TB in cattle to new areas of the country previously unaffected by the disease12. In April there was a new cattle herd TB breakdown near Theresa May’s own Maidenhead constituency, which also falls within the Kimblewick hunting range, at Henley-on-Thames12.

The Government’s promised Disease Risk Assessment of the Kimblewick hound outbreak, and results from disease investigations both locally and nationally in hounds, need to be made public before the General Election. Theresa May has made hunting with hounds an election issue, but her arguments are evidence light, prejudice heavy, and take no account of the disease risks. Her support is based on ignorance of the scientific facts and the objective cruelty involved. Such a lack of empathy casts grave doubt on the suitability of Mrs May to negotiate animal welfare and protection policies under Brexit.

We urge voters to ask Theresa May to explain the reasons she is supporting such a regressive and high-risk policy as a return to hunting with hounds.

Dr Iain McGill BSc (Hons) BVetMed MRCVS. Director, Prion Interest Group, Director VATC, Lead author VVNABC

Dr Mark Jones BVSc MSc (Stir) MSc (UL) MRCVS

Professor Andrew Knight MANZCVS DipECAWBM (AWSEL) DACAW PhD MRCVS SFHEA. Director, Centre for Animal Welfare, University of Winchester, European & RCVS Veterinary Specialist in Animal Welfare Science, Ethics and Law; American Veterinary Specialist in Animal Welfare

 

Dr Andre Menache BSc (Hons) BVSc DipECAWBM (AWSEL) MRCVS. European & RCVS Veterinary Specialist in Animal Welfare Science, Ethics and Law

References

1.http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/election-2017-39861011

2. Letter by Theresa May to a constituent, explaining her views on hunting with hounds. (2015) Vets & Vet Nurses Against The Badger Cull

3. Committee of Inquiry into Hunting with Dogs in England & Wales

4.Wildlife killed by illegal hunts show injuries consistent with prolonged suffering

5. Treves, A., Krofel M. & McManus, J. (2016) Predator Control should not be a shot in the dark. Frontiers in Ecology and The Environment 14, 7, 380-388.

6. Rushton, S.P., Shirley, M.D.F., Macdonald, D.W. & Reynolds, J.C. (2006). Effects of culling fox

populations at the landscape scale: A spatially explicit population modelling approach. The

Journal of Wildlife Management, 70: 1102-1110.

7. Since the introduction of the Hunting Act fox populations have remained roughly stable

8. McDonald, R., Baker, P. & Harris, S. (1997). Is the fox a pest? Electra Publishing, Cheddar,

Somerset.

9. Jahns, J. J. Callanan, M. C. McElroy, D. J. Sammin, H. F. Bassett (2011) Post-mortem Findings in Irish Culled Hounds. J. Comp. Path, Vol. 145, 59-67.

10. Foxhounds euthanised after becoming infected with bovine TB

11. McGill, I, Abraham M, Boscolo S, Eastwood B., et al (2017 in press) Veterinary professionals oppose any return to hunting mammals with hounds (The Veterinary Times, June 5th 2017)

12. http://www.ibtb.co.uk

 

 

This letter, released today, coincides with the publications of an article by this author and some 20 of his colleagues in the Veterinary Times (see ref. 11 above) and was offered exclusively to the Ecologist for online publication today

 

 

 

 

 

The Tree Line: Poems for Trees, Woods & People

Published on June 1st to coincide with London Tree Week [London Tree Week] The Tree Line: Poems for Trees, Woods & People is not only a beautiful and generous anthology of 60, specially commissioned poems, it has also been published with the support of the Legal Sustainability Alliance [Legal Sustainability Alliance]to celebrate the 800th anniversary of the Charter of the Forest and a new Charter for Trees, Woods and People [Tree Charter]

As Clive Anderson, President of the Woodland Trust, writes in his Foreword, this is ‘A sylvan anthology to enjoy rather like a walk in the woods – the eye attracted by a variety of shades and tomes of subtly different subject matter, style and form: wit and irony intertwined with eulogies, effusions and epiphanies.’.

It’s an anthology of diverse, vibrant and considered reflections, ideas and styles that bear witness to the vitality of trees in our daily existence, whether it’s D. M. Black’s observation that, ‘Trees have more DNA/than you or I.’; Peter Carpenter’s reflection on the unknown identity of a tree bought from a long defunct Woolworths that, ‘down the London Road, gives its pick/and mix shadows, like Pissarro in Norwood.’; Alison Brackenbury’s reminiscence of a childhood spent in trees, ‘The beech trees straining to their light/sighed in my blood.’; or Andy Brown’s Committal, in response to John Burnside’s Nocturne: Christmas, 2012, where he writes: ‘I also wish to carry on, here’s how:/inter me deep in loamy woodland soil,/then plant a sapling oak above my head,/so hair and skin and bone my be reborn’ – the anthology is a skilful and engaging mix, well edited by Michael McKimm, whose own poem Love Poem with Beech Coppard is included.

But the anthology is more than a sylvan walk. It stems from an urgent necessity to engage with and protect our environment, and this conversation lies at its heart. In the ways of artistry, this necessity is expressed by these poems and those wisdoms they embody, and with which we want to engage via our own, personal landscapes, represented not least by the enduring resilience of the tree, a living thing that can both predate and outlast us all.

I think in particular of the Ankerwycke yew tree in Surrey, said to have witnessed at least 2,000 years of history already. Here, apparently, Henry Vlll conducted some of his first liaisons with Anne Boleyn, which ultimately led to the break with Rome and creation of the Church of England. Often planted in churchyards, the Celts in particular considered the yew a holy tree, symbolising death and resurrection; and in that endurance lies our ecological hope.

More apposite to this anthology, perhaps, the Ankerwycke yew is said to be the spot at Runnymede where King John signed the Magna Carta in 1215. Two years later, in 1217, all the rules that related to forests that were included in the original Magna Carta were brought together in a dedicated Charter of the Forest. It is this 800 year-old charter that the Woodland Trust, along with numerous other organisations [The Charter Story] is celebrating with a new Charter for Trees, Woods and People for the 21st century.  What is also brilliant is that for every signature, they’ll plant a tree – at the time of writing, over 60,000 people already have: join them here [Sign The Tree Charter Petition] and make history, too. 

It’s not just individuals that have signed up to this. The Legal Sustainability Alliance (LSA) is a network of leading law firms committed to working collaboratively to encourage all employees of law firms to measure, manage and reduce their carbon footprint and to take action for a more sustainable future. In supporting and commissioning this unique poetry anthology, the LSA has created another platform for promoting awareness and commitment to good environmental practice.

In promotion of this commitment, the anthology’s publication, the Charter for Trees and the LSA’s 10th anniversary – and, really, in celebration too of the way industry and commerce and art can work together to the greater good – the Worple Press is hosting numerous events over the rest of the year in London, Bristol, the New Forest, Nottinghamshire and Winchester, further details are available here [Tree Line Events]

This Book

The Tree Line: Poems for Trees, Woods & People, is published by the Worple Press, price £10.00 [http://www.worplepress.com]

This Author

Harriet Griffey is the Ecologist’s London-based Cultural Editor and is also Editorial Consultant at One Hand Clapping magazine [https://www.onehandclapping.online

 

 

 

Poland’s primeval forest is under serious attack

Bialowieza Forest is Poland’s only natural UNESCO world heritage site – a Natura 2000 protected area and a rare remnant of the primeval forest that used to stretch across the European Plain.

The Polish government’s claim that to protect the forest, it must cut it down infuriates scientists, NGOs and the European Commission alike. The latter told the Polish government on April 27 that it had a last 30 days to call a halt to the logging or face prosecution for breaching EU conservation regulations. And whilst that deadline has now expired, Poland’s environment ministry, led by Jan Szyszko, has shown no sign of backing down.

Piotr Barczak from the European Environmental Bureau says: “The Commission’s ultimatum has just been breached by the Polish government. Axes are still chopping down trees in Bialowieza and the public is still being manipulated. Environmental law infringement is clear. Bialowieza is not a commercial plantation and will never be.”

Bialowieza Forest is home to giant spruce trees, oaks and ash trees, and more than 20,000 animal species. The most famous of these is the European bison. The forest stretches over parts of Poland and Belarus.

Since Polish Environment Minister Jan Szyszko approved the proposal from State Forests Service to expand the planned logging areas in the Bialowieza forest district, the forest in now threatened by irreversible degradation of natural habitats.

In the new 10-year plan, the logging volume tripled to 188,000 m³. This is supposed to ‘protect’ the remaining forest from spruce bark beetles that threaten spruce trees and protect tourists and rangers from falling dead trees. However, these justifications are heavily criticized by scientists and Environmental Justice Organisations (EJOs) who claim instead that the spruce bark beetle outbreak is a natural process that occurs in periods of 8-10 years.

The on the ground reality suggests that the Polish government has other motivations. Almost half of the trees marked for logging are not even trees of those species affected by the spruce bark beetle. Commercial interests are the real reason. The State Forests Service is now required to be financially self-sufficient, and selling logged wood generates profits.

The State Council for Nature Conservation in Poland and a large part of the public is against the new logging plans, with protests in larger Polish cities and on logging locations ongoing.

Seven Environmental Justice Organisations together with ClientEarth have lodged a complaint against the plans to the EU commission, asking it to intervene.

According to the lodged complaint, the logging plans go against several EU directives. For example, the approval of the environment minister was given despite not having carried out an assessment to determine whether the increased logging would have an adverse effect on the integrity of the Natura 2000 site.

The EJOs want the EU Commission to quickly intervene to halt the irreversible loss that would be caused by intense logging and to ensure the protection of the Bialowieza Forest in compliance with the Habitats Directive. Both the European Commission and UNESCO have since then strongly advised the Polish government against continuing with the expanded logging project.

Protests against the logging have been aired by Professor Mikael Marder in Al Jazeera and Arthur Neslen in The Guardian. The conflict is now likely to move to many places at the same time: the European court, the streets, a petition, in media and, not least, in the forests themselves.

Maps, images and more detail on this conflict can be found in the Atlas of Environmental Justice.

This Author 

Nick Meynen works at the EnvJustice project in the European Environment Bureau but he is also a freelance journalist, a regular contributor to the Ecologist and an author. Additional contributions to this article were made by Joel Tillgren, Philipp Kuhn and Emma Brodén from Lund University

 

 

 

 

 

Trump’s decision to leave the Paris Agreement is unconscionable

The whole of the Paris Agreement is based upon goodwill: There are no punitive actions or means to enforce the agreement.

That goodwill also includes the Green Climate Fund for transferring money from rich countries to developing countries for building resilience, mitigating and adapting to the effects of climate change.

The U.S. has pledged US$3 billion and has delivered $1 billion but seems unlikely to add to that. That alone undermines a lot of the goodwill. And it will be a major sore point in all small island-states and developing countries that have not caused the problem of global warming.

The U.S. leadership was essential in Paris. If the U.S. does not lead by example – and we have a moral and ethical responsibility to do so as the country that has contributed more than any other to accumulated greenhouse gas emissions so far – then why should anyone else go along?

Unless there is a universal carbon tax, fossil fuels appear to be the cheapest form of energy. That’s not true, of course, because of all the downstream effects on air quality and climate change.

So now what we are likely to face is either some form of trade wars in which heavy tariffs are used against the U.S. and other renegades, or the whole thing collapses and we all spiral into a race to the bottom, to see who can exploit and thus destroy the planet first.

Yes, other things are moving in positive directions, such as more use of renewable energy, but not yet fast enough: Ask India what it will do if it does not get technology transfer and help.

The U.S. cannot opt out without major other consequences, including those to the planet. Without the U.S. and Paris, we crash through the critical 2 degrees Celsius threshold before 2060 – the point at which climate scientists like me consider the most dangerous effects from climate change will become strongly evident – perhaps a decade earlier owing to U.S. pullout.

And this means increasing trouble with ecosystems being out of whack with the climate, trouble farming current crops, and increasing shortages of food and water.

But if Paris is fully implemented and feeds back on itself to a new energy economy, we can delay 2 degrees C by 40 years, maybe.

I believe that we will go through 2 degrees C by 2100 regardless. But with more time, we can adapt so much better. It will be bad enough under the best scenarios, but this could be bringing doomsday forward by 50 years (or more).

*Kevin Trenberth, Distinguished Senior Scientist, National Center for Atmospheric Research

 

Paris withdrawal puts American businesses last

If ever there was a decision contrary to our country’s business and economic interests – never mind our global standing and the impact on the poor countries most vulnerable to climate change – this may be it.

Corporate America already knows this. That’s why a cross-section of leading companies, including industrial powerhouses like General Electric and 3M, urged the president to stay in the plan, which would allow the U.S. a greater say in how the agreement evolves.

Even oil companies like ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips have expressed support.

That’s in part because American companies have been leaders in developing clean energy, which has given U.S. manufacturing a competitive advantage in a sector that will only grow in importance. Withdrawal from Paris undermines this.

Besides ignoring the pleas of U.S. CEOs, Trump also rejected the advice of his secretary of state and the wishes of the 195 signatory countries, including American allies such as Germany and France, who pressed hard during the recent G-7 meeting to persuade Trump to stay in. They even suggested that the U.S. might have some leeway to reduce rather than increase its efforts on CO2 reduction – the accord, after all, is voluntary. Rather, we’ve now thrown in our lot with Syria and Nicaragua, the only other countries that have rejected the accord.

It is not hard to imagine the hostility Trump showed our allies could adversely affect the outcome of bilateral trade talks with those countries, the kind Trump says he prefers over multilateral deals. In a full-page Wall Street Journal ad, 30 CEOs argued that “there is strong potential for negative trade implications if the United States exits from the Paris Agreement.”

If this is the way of putting American interests first, then look for the sun to rise in the West tomorrow morning.

*Marina v. N. Whitman, Professor of Business Administration and Public Policy, University of Michigan

 

Pulling out of Paris will harm the poor in the US and abroad

Details on precisely what President Trump’s decision to pull the U.S. out of the Paris accord on climate change means and how this decision will be implemented are lacking, but it was already clear that the United States had little intention of meeting its emissions goals.

The proposed dismantling of the Clean Power Plan to limit carbon emissions from power plants would essentially ensure that outcome. But pulling out of Paris also means the U.S. will refuse to make any additional contributions to the U.N. Green Climate Fund.

The fact that the world’s largest economy and the largest per capita emitter will decline to take on policies to curb greenhouse gas emissions and simultaneously refuse to contribute to a fund largely devoted to adaptation measures in the world’s poor countries is dangerous and unprecedented.

The impacts of climate change are not hypotheticals to be worried about far in the future. The last several IPCC reports – the international scientific assessments on climate change done through the U.N. – have made it abundantly clear that impacts are happening now. And even more recent science has shown that the probabilities of even individual extreme weather events (e.g., heat waves) can be attributed to climate change.

The international and domestic U.S. scientific assessments have concluded that climate impacts are disproportionately felt by poor populations both among and within countries – including our own. But such impacts significantly hamper poor countries, which tend to be very dependent on their agricultural sectors, have larger proportions of poor people and typically do not have resources available for recovery from climate-driven damages.

The desires in the developing world to improve quality of life in a sustainable way will not go away. Programs such as the U.N. Sustainable Development Goals are evidence of a deep commitment to those improvements. But with the U.S. decision to abandon the Paris accords, delivering on those commitments just got significantly more difficult.

 *Anthony Janetos, Director, Frederick S. Pardee Center for the Study of the Longer-Range Future and Professor of Earth and Environment, Boston University

 

How American farmers will be hurt

President Trump’s decision to withdraw from the Paris Agreement fails farmers, one of the major constituencies that helped him win the White House.

Arguably, U.S. farmers are the most capable of developing systems to both reduce and remove greenhouse gas emissions. But the Trump administration is ignoring our nation’s farmers as a strategic national asset in the global fight against climate change.

For nearly a century, U.S. agriculture has been the uncontested leader in agricultural innovation. Farmers have had three important sources of support that helped them create the green revolution, which allowed production to keep up with global population growth. These include public research and education from land grant universities; private industry; and public policy, especially the federal farm bill but also state-level policies.

While there are still production challenges, the bigger challenges facing humanity are not increasing yields but maintaining productivity in the face of an increasingly hostile climate and a need to stabilize the climate before it deteriorates further.

Farmers all over the world must innovate to develop environmental services focused on greenhouse gas emissions and sinks. Unfortunately, the general attitude of U.S. farmers prevents them from embracing this new and emerging challenge. Many of them share President Trump’s skepticism about climate change.

Trump’s decision to leave the Paris Agreement is focused on energy policy and doesn’t consider American farmers. Yet agriculture is emerging as one of the most promising players in addressing climate change by sequestering carbon from the atmosphere in the soil. One can argue China, Europe, Australia and possibly even Brazil will start investing in agricultural innovation similar to the way China and Europe are investing in renewable energy.

For the last 100 years, American farmers, their elected officials, industries that serve them and great innovators like George Washington Carver, Henry Wallace and Norman Borlaug have led the world in developing agricultural solutions to big problems. The next big problem is climate change.

American farmers can be at the vanguard of finding agricultural solutions to sequestering carbon. But by abandoning the Paris Agreement, President Trump has shown that he is not going to help American farmers work on these solutions and, thus, reap the benefits.

American farmers could still do it, but the President just made it much more difficult for them to do so and much more likely that farmers in another part of the world will lead the next agricultural revolution.

* Matthew Russell, Resilient Agriculture Coordinator, Drake University

 

Pulling out of the Paris Agreement is unconscionable

Like many, I have worried ever since the 2016 election that this day would come – that Donald Trump would formally announce his intention to withdraw from the Paris Agreement.

As an ethicist, I have been occupied by a very particular question, which is whether withdrawing from the agreement, itself, matters morally.

Some have suggested that the policies to lower emissions matter, not the agreement to enact such policies. If Trump has no intention of holding up America’s end of the deal, then does the actual withdrawal from the agreement make a difference?

I think that it might, because staying in the agreement and going through the motions (but failing) means something fundamentally different from formally withdrawing.

Presumably, many countries will fail in their climate obligations at one time or another. Other parties to the agreement will have the opportunity to admonish them for this failure, and to work together to form a new plan that is more likely to succeed.

But, announcing America’s intention to withdraw from the agreement sends a clear message to the rest of the world that the second-highest emitting nation has no intention of doing its part to save the world’s most vulnerable people from impending harm. Indeed: The U.S. government takes the problem so unseriously, and values the lives of those at risk so little, that it will try desperately to undermine the already far-too-modest climate actions that the Obama administration set in motion.

The game-theoretic puzzle here is a common feature of collective action problems: Abandoning an agreement (or “defecting”) changes the rational deliberation of other parties to the agreement. It may be rational for some nations to sacrifice for the greater good when they believe that everyone will do likewise. But, is it still rational when one of the major players – one who has gained most from causing the problem, and will pay least as the problem becomes more serious – announces his intention to defect?

My hope is that every other party to the Paris Agreement will believe that the answer is yes, and that they will count on us, the American people, to right this wrong as soon as we can. But my most desperate fear is that this announcement will confirm the world’s suspicion that America cannot be trusted to do its part, and that this will make it harder for them to justify making any sacrifice at all.

This sort of scenario will not likely mean the end of the Paris Agreement, but it could weaken it considerably, as other nations’ leaders become less willing to make sacrifices on the backs of their people.

In short: Trump’s actions today may further slow our already-too-modest climate action and threaten the health and lives of the most vulnerable. This would be a serious injustice, and its commission by our elected leader is unconscionable.

* Travis N. Rieder, Research Scholar at the Berman Institute of Bioethics, Johns Hopkins University

 

These articles are shared with the Ecologist by The Conversation US (www.theconversation.com)

 

 

Trump’s withdrawal from the Paris Agreement will leave the US increasingly isolated

At a time when costs in the renewable energy sector are falling significantly and clean tech employment is reaching record levels,  President Trump’s decision to withdraw fromthe Paris Agreement ignores the very significant shifts occurring in the global energy system.

Combined with other key economies’ desire (notably the EU and China) to accelerate rather than to stop these trends, politically the US will find itself in growing isolation, and face accusations of scientific ignorance and moral irresponsibility. 

Fortunately for the US and the world at large, American businesses, communities, cities and states are already miles ahead in their assessment and responses to the threats posed by climate change.

Just days after even the shareholders of the world’s largest public oil company ExxonMobil voted in favour of the fossil fuel giant analysing and disclosing the risks it faces due to climate change, so other companies are increasingly integrating proactive responses to climate change in their strategies by setting ambitious science-based carbon reduction targets and aiming to source their electricity almost exclusively from renewable sources.

Put simply, the commercial and economic opportunities are already changing America’s competitive landscape such that this withdrawal will be largely seen as an unwelcome irritation, rather than a wholesale shift in the political economy.

Still, the challenges of a global transition towards a low-carbon economy remain sizeable. American businesses and non-governmental stakeholders should therefore engage with their partners around the world to drive this process and truly live up to the President’s slogan.

*Frederik Dahlmann is Assistant Professor of Global Energy, and researches the transition to a low-carbon economy at of Warwick Business School

 

 

Exxon shareholders back resolution requiring the oil major to disclose the impact of climate policies on its business

Yesterday (31st May, 2017) shareholders at ExxonMobil backed a resolution that requires the oil major to publish an annual assessment of the impact of climate policies on its business.

The resolution gained more than 24 percentage points of shareholder support over last year, bringing the combined votes in favour to 62.3% (from 38.1% in 2016).

This result suggests that all three of Exxon’s largest shareholders (Vanguard, BlackRock and State Street) backed the resolution this year.

The Wall Street Journal writes: “Vanguard Group and BlackRock Inc., Exxon’s two largest shareholders, supported the measure, people familiar with the votes said.” The Washington Post reports the same and also cites voices indicating that State Street supported the resolution.

Last year BlackRock and Vanguard had voted against the resolution. To date, none of the three asset managers have officially confirmed how they voted.

The resolution was co-filed by Church Commissioners for England and New York State Common Retirement Fund and had over 90 investors pre-declaring support.

At yesterday’s annual meeting, Edward Mason, Head of Responsible Investment at Church Commissioners for England, addressed the Exxon board: “Members of the board, do you leave your understanding of climate change at the door when you attend the ExxonMobil board meeting?”, he asked.

The result came just ahead of an announcement by the US president, indicating a decision on the Paris accord will be communicated today (1st June, 2017) at 3:00 P.M. (presumably ET) at the White House Rose Garden.

Against this backdrop, the Exxon vote is an important signal. Politico write: “The Trump administration may be preparing to withdraw the U.S. from the Paris climate change accords, but shareholders at Exxon Mobil and at least one other U.S. oil company are demanding the companies incorporate the international deal in their business models.”

Raj Thamotheram, CEO and Founder of Preventable Surprises said: “Investors voting against management at Exxon is a powerful rebuke to the climate denialist policies of this White House. Markets are moving and Corporate America would be foolish to bet so much on the protection from this regime.”

The vote at Exxon may also be a precedent for shareholder activism at other corporations. “Exxon Mobil was one of the last hold-outs among major oil companies on the issue of climate change. Earlier in May, Occidental Petroleum shareholders also passed a similar motion in a vote at its annual meeting”, writes BBC news.

CNNMoney wrote ahead of the annual meeting that: “the Exxon vote is seen as ground zero for efforts to get fossil fuel companies to acknowledge the ground is shifting beneath them”. 

Sue Reid, Vice-President, Climate & Energy at Investor group Ceres said:This historic majority vote sends a resounding message that market forces are continuing to drive toward low carbon transition, and investors expect companies – especially carbon-intensive companies like Exxon – to show how they are addressing the corresponding risks and opportunities. Business as usual is no longer an option for carbon-intensive companies like Exxon.”

This year, equivalent resolutions were put forward at a number of US Utilities and Oil companies. At all meetings, shareholder support for the 2°C scenario resolutions was substantial and at PPL, Occidental and Exxon a majority was won. In 2015, resolutions asking for climate action passed with resounding support at BP and Shell.

Catherine Howarth, Chief Executive of ShareAction, reminds us that passing resolutions alone is no guarantee for stringent action: “The passing of this resolution is excellent news, marking a step-change in investor sentiment for climate engagement.

“While we celebrate this vote, and others that we hope will follow from it, let’s not forget that the success of climate resolutions ultimately isn’t measured by voting numbers, but by the substantive changes they catalyse.

“The 2015 resolutions at BP and Shell passed with close to 99% support, yet both firms are still pursuing business strategies that take us towards a frightening 3 degrees of temperature growth. We must recognise this is just a first step towards the transformation required by the world’s oil majors to make them safe investments that earn a social licence to operate.”

*This briefing report was compiled by Remo Bebié of the Finance Dialogue.  Previous to his role at Finance Dialogue, Remo worked as a financial news editor with awp Finanznachrichten, a leading Swiss business news agency.