Day: March 27, 2022

England: For Me, Doing Nothing Is Not An Option.

Phil and I have been friends for what ?; probably 35+ years now.

In the early days we really got to know each other through our live animal (transport) export work from the Kent ports in South East England.

When I was undertaking stray dog and cat issues in Serbia – visit my old site at Serbian Animals Voice (SAV) | a voice for the voiceless – now an archive site only; I would sometimes get sidetracked into other issues of animal welfare, such as farm animals and the disposal of animal carcasses on the roadside.

I worked with another Phil (Brooke) at Compassion In World Farming re the terrible conditions in which farm animals were being kept – you can read about it and see some photos here:

Serbia: Farm Animal Conditions – Update 26/11/10. Formal Statement on Conditions Now Provided by CIWF (Uk). | Serbian Animals Voice (SAV)

Serbia: November 2010 – Conditions ‘Ok’ at a Farm According to Serbian Veterinary Ministry – and Complaining Campaigners, ‘Dont Pressure Us’. | Serbian Animals Voice (SAV)

Serbia: Farm Animal Update 12 and 13/1/11. Throw Straw in the Liquid Excrement and Let Them Get On With It – Nothing Really Changes at the Serbian Republic Veterinary Ministry. | Serbian Animals Voice (SAV)

Like other issues I have covered on this site associated with the battles with the Serbian government, the government always adopts the policy of them being right and us being wrong when they are presented with evidence of abuses.  In the following link you can see the bodies of dead pigs which were literally dumped by farmers next to a min highway.  You have to remember that we were working to improve conditions for stray animals, which included disease monitoring.  Simply dumping dead farm animals on the roadside to (possibly) be picked at and eaten by stray dogs is not an ideal situation as you can appreciate.  See our photos here:

Serbia: Dead Farm Animal Bodies Just Dumped Near the Highway – A Perfect Food Source for Stray Animals; A Perfect method of Spreading Disease, and a Perfect Way for Corrupt Politicians to Keep Catching and Killing Stray Dogs ! | Serbian Animals Voice (SAV)

I have kept Phil informed at different times about the situation for animals in Serbia as personally |I consider it is not good to say the least !

Moving along; after many years of work associated with campaigns, I am now pleased to see that Phil is the CEO of the much respected farm animal welfare organisation ‘Compassion In World Farming’ (CIWF).  We still communicate and pass information over when necessary.

Here is an article by Phil associated with all the climate change issues in Australia.  There is a disturbing video which shows cattle being sept away by the torrential waters of the floods.  I will leave it with Phil to tell you more.

Regards Mark

What the ‘rain bomb’ in Australia tells us about our world bt Phil Lymbery (CEO CIWF)

Three weeks ago, as Russia invaded Ukraine, a tragedy of a different sort was rocking Australia, as a ‘rain bomb’ hit New South Wales and Queensland.  The region was being hit by floods for a second year in a row. The extent and depth of this latest flooding is hard to believe.  Record levels of water.  Tragic deaths.  Hundreds of displaced people and their pets. And I am very sorry to say, literally thousands of dead animals: domestic, farmed and wild.  

Video:

The video of a farmer’s 300-strong dairy herd being caught in the deep water, with half the herd being washed away, will stay with me forever. 

Scientific assessment

As Australian lives were being lost, both human and animal, with homes, cars and livelihoods being destroyed, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) was publishing its latest update on the state of the planet.  

It had a sobering message. 

Climate change is already here and is causing widespread losses, but is set to get worse.  The crisis is upon us, much earlier than first thought. Warming effects on ecosystems are being experienced earlier, are more widespread, and have greater consequences than anticipated.

Too little

While global attempts by humankind to adapt to the worsening climate hazards have increased, most of it is still too little, too late.  

In many ways, Australia’s situation reflects the situation felt by many.  

The Australian people are angry at their government for being too slow to cut carbon emissions and invest in renewables. A report published at the COP26 global summit last year backs up that assessment. It ranked Australia last among 60 countries for policy responses to the climate crisis, largely down to a stubborn reliance on coal-powered energy and coal exports.

But many other governments are equally slow to accept what scientists have been saying for years – we have to transform the way the world produces, consumes and thinks about food.

Without transformational change in the global food sector, the world will fall perilously short of sustainability targets set by world leaders for 2030. By Compassion In World Farming’s own analysis, without a move away from industrial animal agriculture – factory farming – several crucial Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) will be rendered unreachable. 

Taking action

We are a world in turmoil facing a planetary crisis like no other. And this is the critical decade for securing a liveable, sustainable future for our children.  

We know the answers, but will humanity heed them?

As Australia starts the massive clean-up operation and tragically counts the dreadful loss of life, what will it take for governments around the world to recognise the severity of climate change?  

What is becoming ever clearer is that actions speak louder than words; climate breakdown is happening now; our planet won’t wait any longer, and neither should we. 

Philip Lymbery | Australia: ‘It’s raining, it’s pouring, the PM is snoring’

England: Could the 1cm ‘Jumping Spider’ Kick Disney Plans Into the Dust ? – Fingers Crossed It Will !

I know this area very well; having been born near to Dartford, one of the ‘local’ towns.

When I was a youngster, I used to play football on an area which is now under threat by this proposal.

This is a report from the ‘Guardian’ newspaper dated 26th March 22.  It is great to see that the tiny ‘jumping spider’, around only 1cm large, could be amongst other fauna and flora which pulls the plug on Frisbeeland.  Fingers crossed.

But we are all to aware of politics and the work of lobbyists.  When we need them most to protect endangered species; sites of ‘Special Scientific Interest’ suddenly get dismissed and overlooked in attempts to get the bulldozers and cranes moving in. 

Who knows what will happen here very soon; but as a local; I know that many people are opposed to the project; with them rather watching the water voles and common buzzards flying overhead, in preference to snow white and all the other aliens which could possibly make this site their home.

Just for the record; Swanscombe, was thee site where ‘Swanscombe Man’ was found – Swanscombe – Wikipedia  – Bone fragments and tools, representing the earliest humans known to have lived in England, have been found from 1935 onwards at the Barnfield Pit about 2 km (1 mile) outside the village. This site is now the Swanscombe Heritage ParkSwanscombe Man (now thought to be female) was a late Homo erectus or an early Archaic Homo sapiens.[2] According to the Natural History Museum, however, the remains are those of a 400,000-year-old early Neanderthal woman.

And, being an old Rocker, Dartford was the town where Mick Jagger and Keith Richards first met (at the station) and went on to form the ‘Rolling Stones’.  Mick was a student at the LSE (London School of Economics); central London being about 20 miles away.  There is a plaque at Dartford station to celebrate the first meet.

Wild horses, tiny jumping spiders, marsh harriers etc; being close to central London, there are times when the right decisions need to be made for environmental protection, rather than the plastic popcorn facility that some wish to see.

We await the investigation results with interest.

Personally, give me the jumpers, fliers and wild horses any time !

Regards Mark (WAV)

Species such as the water vole live on the peninsula. Photograph: Our Wild Life Photography/Alamy
Campaigners say animals such as the common buzzard will lose their homes if the park is built. Photograph: Geoff Smith/Alamy

Evan Bowen-Jones, chief executive of Kent Wildlife Trust, said that if built, the theme park would represent one of the single biggest losses of protected land in the UK. “We would lose an urban oasis – home to species that range from jumping spiders to marsh harriers – for plastic dinosaurs, fairground rides, and yet more gridlock and pollution at a time when the importance of nature to human wellbeing has never been clearer,” he said last week.

Rollercoasters v water voles: ‘Disney-on-Thames’ plan could devastate wildlife

Proposed theme park the size of 136 Wembleys will threaten protected species and local jobs, say campaigners

It promises to be one of Britain’s most unusual planning battles. On one side is an array of endangered wildlife that includes a species of jumping spider. On the other are backers of a theme park that they claim will rival Disneyland in its size and ambition.

The park, called the London Resort, would be built on the Swanscombe peninsula on the Thames, near Gravesend, where it would cover land equivalent to 136 Wembley stadiums and would include themed rides, a water park, conference venues, hotels and a shopping centre.

However, the project is highly controversial – as will be revealed this week when preliminary hearings are held. Crucially, the theme park is being proposed as a “nationally significant infrastructure project” (NSIP) – a designation usually reserved for major roads, power plants or airports.Species such as the water vole live on the peninsula. Photograph: Our Wild Life Photography/Alamy

NSIPs are finally approved or rejected by the government, not by local authorities, which has raised fears that the decision over the fate of the London Resort is being moved away from community politicians and handed to ministers. “It is a real concern,” said Donna Zimmer, of the Save Swanscombe Peninsula campaign.

In addition, a large chunk of the peninsula has recently been designated a “site of special scientific interest” (SSSI) because of its wide range of rare plants and wildlife.

These include marsh harriers, spoonbills, otters, a wide variety of orchids, and more than 1,700 invertebrate species, including a quarter of the UK’s water beetle species and more than 200 species that are considered of conservation importance.

For good measure, the peninsula is one of only two places in the UK where the critically endangered distinguished jumping spider – Attulus distinguendus – has its home. The distinguished jumping spider is tiny (about 1cm long) and does not spin webs to catch prey but uses its excellent eyesight and an ability to leap distances of more than 10 times its own length to bring down its quarry.

The prospect of a theme park being built on one of only two sites in the UK where Attulus distinguendus is found, and which also supports many other key species, has outraged conservationists. Evan Bowen-Jones, chief executive of Kent Wildlife Trust, said that if built, the theme park would represent one of the single biggest losses of protected land in the UK. “We would lose an urban oasis – home to species that range from jumping spiders to marsh harriers – for plastic dinosaurs, fairground rides, and yet more gridlock and pollution at a time when the importance of nature to human wellbeing has never been clearer,” he said last week.

The London Resort was originally proposed in 2014 and has been subject to widespread delays since then, hold-ups that have infuriated the project’s opponents as well as local MP Gareth Johnson, who initially backed the scheme but is now opposed to it.

“Many of us were excited when this proposal was made public,” said Johnson, the Conservative MP for Dartford. “There could have been huge benefits to the area, if the project was approached in the right way. Instead, we have seen endless delays and uncertainty for local residents and businesses in the area. Enough is enough. Dartford can do better than this theme park,” he said.

Other groups that were initially involved with the project have also withdrawn involvement. These include the BBC and ITV, whose shows would have provided themes for some resort’ rides. One remaining group, Paramount Entertainment, is still linked to the project and is the focus of a campaign by local people who want it to quit as well.

For its part, the company says that the resort would generate 6,000 direct and many more indirect jobs within its first year. But this claim was countered by Craig Bennett, chief executive of The Wildlife Trusts. “The resort would not only wipe out the SSSI here, it would also destroy the local industrial park where about 3,000 people work. Most of these individuals have skilled jobs. These would be lost and replaced with low-skilled, seasonal jobs at the theme park.”A London Resort spokesman denied the project would cause ecological damage. “Huge parts of the land are contaminated. It is largely a brownfield, former industrial site which has been unmanaged, with zero investment for improvement, for decades,” he said, adding that London Resort was committed to investing over £150m to enhance the habitat and would be creating the world’s only carbon neutral theme parks. He also said the project was supported by most local residents and businesses.

London Resort added that it had formally objected to the designation of the peninsula SSSI status and said that the BBC and ITV had not pulled out the project but had merely ended commercial agreements for use of their Intellectual Property.

It is expected that at this week’s planning meeting, the London Resort company will seek to have further delays made to the planning process, while opponents will vigorously oppose such a move.“If further delays are blocked, then we will get a final decision about the project far sooner and, hopefully, one that will block the building of the resort,” said Chris Rose, a campaign consultant who has been involved in coordinating opposition to the project.

The issue for the government is straightforward, added Nicky Britton-Williams, wilder towns officer for Kent Wildlife Trust. “If the government follows through on all of the commitments that ministers have made to the need to protect nature and tackle the climate emergency and put the necessary policies and plans in place, I cannot see how this project could possibly get consent.”

She added: “However, stranger things have happened in politics.”

Rollercoasters v water voles: ‘Disney-on-Thames’ plan could devastate wildlife | Conservation | The Guardian

Concept artwork for the London Resort, showing how it might look if planning permission is granted. Photograph: LRCH

THANKS BUT NO THANKS