In a World of Their Own
By George Monbiot
By downplaying and misrepresenting our environmental crisis,
David Attenborough and the BBC have generated complacency, confusion and
ignorance.
Knowingly creating a false impression of the world: this is
a serious matter. It is more serious still when the BBC does it, and yet worse
when the presenter is “the most trusted man in Britain”. But, as his latest
interview with the Observer reveals, Sir David Attenborough sticks to his line
that fully representing environmental issues is a “turn-off”.
His new series, Dynasties, will mention the pressures
affecting wildlife, but Attenborough makes it clear that it will play them
down. To do otherwise, he suggests, would be “proselytising” and “alarmist”.
His series will be “a great relief from the political landscape which otherwise
dominates our thoughts.” In light of the astonishing rate of collapse of the
animal populations he features, alongside most of the rest of the world’s
living systems, and when broadcasting as a whole has disgracefully failed to
represent such truths, I don’t think such escapism is appropriate or
justifiable.
It is not proselytising or alarmist to tell us the raw truth
about what is happening to the world, however much it might discomfit us. Nor
do I believe that revealing the marvels of nature automatically translates into
environmental action, as the executive producer of Dynasties claims. I’ve come
to believe it can have the opposite effect.
For many years, wildlife film-making has presented a
pristine living world. It has created an impression of security and abundance,
even in places afflicted by cascading ecological collapse. The cameras reassure
us that there are vast tracts of wilderness in which wildlife continues to
thrive. They cultivate complacency, not action.
You cannot do such a thing passively. Wildlife filmmakers I
know tell me that the effort to portray what looks like an untouched ecosystem
becomes harder every year. They have to choose their camera angles ever more
carefully to exclude the evidence of destruction, travel further to find the
Edens they depict. They know, and many feel deeply uncomfortable about it, that
they are telling a false story, creating a fairytale world which persuades us
that all is well, in the midst of an existential crisis. While many people,
thanks in large part to David Attenborough, are now quite well informed about
wildlife, we remain astonishingly ignorant about what is happening to it.
What makes Attenborough’s comments particularly odd is that
they come just a year after the final episode of his Blue Planet II series
triggered a massive effort to reduce plastic pollution. Though the programme
made a complete dog’s breakfast of the issue, the response demonstrated a vast
public appetite for information about the environmental crisis, and an urgent
desire to act on it.
Since 1985, when I started work in the department that has
made most of his programmes, I’ve pressed the BBC to reveal environmental
realities, often with dismal results. In 1995, I spent several months with a
producer, developing a novel and imaginative proposal for an environmental
series. The producer returned from his meeting with the channel controller in a
state of shock. “He just looked at the title and asked ‘Is this environment?’.
I said yes. He said, ‘I’ve spent two years trying to get environment off this
fucking channel. Why the fuck are you bringing me environment?’”. I later
discovered that this response was typical. The controllers weren’t indifferent.
They were actively hostile. If you ask me whether the BBC or ExxonMobil has
done more to frustrate environmental action in this country, I would say the
BBC.
We all knew that only one person had the power to break this
dam. For decades, David Attenborough, a former channel controller widely seen
as the living embodiment of the BBC, has been able to make any programme he
wants. So where, we kept asking, was he? At last, in 2000, he presented an
environmental series: The State of the Planet.
It was an interesting and watchable series, but it left us
with nowhere to go and nothing to do. Only in the last few seconds of the final
episode was there a hint that structural forces might be at play: “real success
can only come if there’s a change in our societies, in our economics and in our
politics.” But what change? What economics? What politics? He had given us no
clues.
To make matters worse, it was sandwiched between further
programmes of his about the wonders of nature, that created a strong impression
of robust planetary health. He might have been describing two different worlds.
Six years later, he made another environmental series, The Truth about Climate
Change. And this, in my view, was a total disaster.
It told us nothing about the driving forces behind climate
breakdown. The only mention of fossil fuel companies was as part of the
solution: “the people who extract fossil fuels like oil and gas have now come
up with a way to put carbon dioxide back under ground.” Apart from the general
“we”, the only distinct force identified as responsible was the “1.3 billion
Chinese”. That a large proportion of Chinese emissions are caused by
manufacturing the goods we buy was not mentioned. The series immediately
triggered a new form of climate denial: I was bombarded with people telling me
there was no point in taking action in Britain, because the Chinese were
killing the planet.
If Attenborough’s environmentalism has a coherent theme, it
is shifting the blame away from powerful forces and onto either society in
general or the poor and weak. Sometimes it becomes pretty dark. In 2013, he
told the Telegraph “What are all these famines in Ethiopia? What are they
about? They’re about too many people for too little land … We say, get the
United Nations to send them bags of flour. That’s barmy.”
There had not been a famine in Ethiopia for 28 years, and
the last one was caused not by an absolute food shortage, but by civil war and
government policies. His suggestion that food relief is counter-productive
suggests he has read nothing on the subject since Thomas Malthus’s essay in
1798. But, cruel and ignorant as these comments were, they were more or less
cost-free. By contrast, you do not remain a national treasure by upsetting
powerful vested interests: look at the flak the wildlife and environmental
presenter Chris Packham attracts.
I have always been entranced by David Attenborough’s
wildlife programmes, but astonished by his consistent failure to mount a
coherent, truthful and effective defence of the living world he loves. His
revelation of the wonders of nature has been a great public service. But
withholding the knowledge we need to defend it is, I believe, a grave
disservice.
monbiot.com
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