John craven

2 min read

ADAPTATION IS THE KEY TO MANAGING CLIMATE CHANGE

COUNTRYFILE ISSUES

In October last year, Storm Babet caused water to leak through the east-side windows of Hardwick Hall in Derbyshire; staff had to quickly move a 300-strong collection of historically important books to save them from damage
Photo: Alamy, Oliver Edwards

For many centuries they have stood four-square against the elements, but now the nation’s historic buildings are being threatened by climate change. Like in so many of the less-grand houses where you and I live, recent storms left a trail of destruction.

At Cragside in Northumberland, the first house in the world to be powered by hydro-electricity, ironically, flood water swamped the powerhouse. At Hardwick Hall in Derbyshire, a historic collection of 300 books had to be rescued when rain leaked in through the windows.

What is that, you might ask, in comparison to the suffering of thousands of people still drying out their homes? The answer is that global warming impacts all levels of society, which is why the National Trust, which looks after 250,000 hectares of countryside, 28,000 buildings, gardens and nature reserves and 780 miles of coastline, has just launched a wide-ranging strategy: ‘A Climate for Change’.

It urges the Government to take the situation more seriously, with new laws creating national targets to work towards and a designated minister in the Cabinet driving the action. “Climate adaptation must be at the heart of government and decision-making,” it says, and calls for vital support for sectors most likely to be affected and greater investment in research.

‘Adaptation’ has become the key word among those demanding action; in simple terms, it means coming up with solutions to combat current and future impacts on people, livelihoods and ecosystems.

“The process we’ve proposed is: first, understanding the problems and the options, then taking early action,” the Trust’s climate adviser Keith Jones told me. “As long as we keep emitting carbon in the volumes we do, we are going to have to adapt. Conservation is about the management of change – it always has been.

“A very simple example: if we build in areas prone to flooding, then building-in recovery at the start is the next best thi

This article is from...

Related Articles

Related Articles