In Memoriam
As our wildlife and ecosystems collapse, remembering is a
radical act.
By George Monbiot
It felt as disorientating as forgetting my pin number. I
stared at the caterpillar, unable to attach a name to it. I don’t think my
mental powers are fading: I still possess an eerie capacity to recall facts and
figures and memorise long screeds of text. This is a specific loss. As a child
and young adult, I delighted in being able to identify almost any wild plant or
animal. And now it has gone. This ability has shrivelled from disuse: I can no
longer identify them because I can no longer find them.
Perhaps this forgetfulness is protective. I have been
averting my eyes. Because I cannot bear to see what we have done to nature, I
no longer see nature itself. Otherwise, the speed of loss would be unendurable.
The collapse can be witnessed from one year to the next. The swift decline of
the swift (down 25% in five years) is marked by the loss of the wild screams
that, until very recently, filled the skies above my house. My ambition to see
the seabird colonies of the Shetlands and St Kilda has been replaced by the
intention never to visit those islands during the breeding season: I could not
bear to see the empty cliffs, whose populations have crashed by some 90% this
century.
I have lived long enough to witness the vanishing of wild
mammals, butterflies, mayflies, songbirds and fish that I once feared my
grandchildren would experience: it has all happened faster than even the
pessimists predicted. Walking in the countryside or snorkelling in the sea is
now as painful to me as an art lover would find her visits to a gallery, if on
every occasion another Old Master had been cut from its frame.
The cause of this acceleration is no mystery. The United
Nations reports that our use of natural resources has tripled in 40 years. The
great expansion of mining, logging, meat production and industrial fishing is
cleansing the planet of its wild places and natural wonders. What economists
proclaim as progress, ecologists recognise as ruin.
This is what has driven the quadrupling of oceanic dead
zones since 1950; the “biological annihilation” represented by the astonishing
collapse of vertebrate populations; the rush to carve up the last intact
forests; the vanishing of coral reefs, glaciers and sea ice; the shrinkage of
lakes, the drainage of wetlands. The living world is dying of consumption.
We have a fatal weakness: a failure to perceive incremental
change. As natural systems shift from one state to another, we almost immediately
forget what we have lost. I have to make a determined effort to remember what I
saw in my youth. Could it really be true that every patch of nettles, at this
time of year, was reamed with caterpillar holes? That flycatchers were so
common I scarcely gave them a second glance? That the rivers, around the autumn
equinox, were almost black with eels?
Others seem oblivious. When I have criticised current
practice, farmers have sent me images of verdant monocultures of perennial rye
grass, with the message “look at this and try telling me we don’t look after
nature”. It’s green, but it’s about as ecologically rich as an airport runway.
One of my readers, Michael Groves, records the shift he has seen in the field
beside his house, where the grass, that used to be cut for hay, is now cut for
silage. Watching the cutters being driven at great speed across the field, he
realised that any remaining wildlife would be shredded. Soon afterwards, he saw
a roe deer standing in the mown grass. She stayed throughout the day and the
following night. When he went to investigate, he found her fawn, its legs
amputated. “I felt sickened, angry and powerless … how long had it taken to
die?”. That “grass-fed meat” the magazines and restaurants fetishise? This is
the reality.
When our memories are wiped as clean as the land, we fail to
demand its restoration. Our forgetting is a gift to industrial lobby groups and
the governments that serve them. Over the past few months, I have been told
repeatedly that the environment secretary, Michael Gove, gets it. I have said
so myself: he genuinely seems to understand what the problems are and what
needs to be done. Unfortunately, he doesn’t do it.
He cannot be blamed for all of the fiascos to which he has
put his name. The 25-year plan for nature was, it seems, gutted by the Prime
Minister’s office. The environmental watchdog he proposed was defanged by the
Treasury (it has subsequently been lent some dentures by Parliament). Other
failures are all his own work. In response to lobbying from sheep farmers, he
has allowed ravens, a highly intelligent and long-lived species just beginning
to recover from centuries of persecution, to be killed once more. There are 24
million sheep in this country and 7400 pairs of ravens. Why must all other species
give way to the white plague?
Responding to complaints that most of our national parks are
wildlife deserts, Gove set up a commission to review them. But governments
choose their conclusions in advance, through the appointments they make. A more
dismal, backward-looking and uninspiring panel would be hard to find: not one
of its members, as far as I can tell, has expressed a desire for significant
change in our national parks, and most of them, if their past statements are
anything to go by, are determined to keep them in their sheepwrecked and
grouse-trashed state.
Now the lobbyists demand a New Zealand settlement for
farming after Brexit: deregulated, upscaled, hostile to both wildlife and the
human eye. If they get their way, no landscape, however treasured, will be safe
from broiler sheds and mega-dairy units, no river protected from run-off and
pollution, no songbird saved from local extinction. The merger between Bayer
and Monsanto brings together the manufacturer of the world’s most lethal pesticides
with the manufacturer of the world’s most lethal herbicides. Already the
concentrated power of these behemoths is a hazard to democracy; together they
threaten both political and ecological disaster. Labour’s environment team have
scarcely a word to say about any of it. Similarly, the big conservation groups,
as usual, have gone missing in inaction.
We forget even our own histories. We fail to recall, for
example, that the Dower report, published in 1945, envisaged wilder national
parks than we now possess, and that the conservation white paper the government
issued in 1947 called for the kind of large-scale protection that is considered
edgy and innovative today. Remembering is a radical act.
That caterpillar, by the way, was a six spot burnet: the larva
of a stunning iridescent black and pink moth that once populated my
neighbourhood and my mind. I will not allow myself to forget again: I will work
to recover the knowledge I have lost. For I now see that without the power of
memory, we cannot hope to defend the world we love.
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