OPINION
GUEST ESSAY
Britain Is Melting
July 20,
2022, 1:00 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/20/opinion/britain-heatwave-conservatives.html
By Moya
Lothian-McLean
Ms.
Lothian-McLean is a journalist who writes about Britain’s politics and culture.
LONDON —
Britain’s chickens have come home to roast.
A
dependably temperate climate has this week given way to extreme heat. “HOTTER
THAN THE SAHARA,” bellowed the front page of the aptly titled tabloid The Sun
on Monday. Worryingly, it proved to be a rare instance of accuracy from the
paper. By midafternoon that day, British meteorologists confirmed that England,
Scotland and Northern Ireland had all experienced the highest temperatures of
the year so far. Wales went one scarier, breaking its record for the hottest
day not once but twice.
For all the
problems they pose, temperatures up to 40 degrees Celsius, or 104 degrees
Fahrenheit, tend not to be too disruptive for continental Europeans. But
Britain could not cope. Parts of Southern England — where the heat was fiercest
— buckled, literally at times, with reports of “melting” runways halting air
traffic. Schools across the country closed, railways reduced service and hospitals
canceled routine appointments and surgeries, bracing for heat-wave-induced
pressure on emergency departments.
The British
media, never happier than when the weather goes awry, responded with barely
concealed relish. Live briefings charted the chaos wrought by the rising
mercury while celebrity doctors offered insightful advice such as “drink water”
on daytime TV. Chirruping lifestyle features informed an overheating populace
that gazpacho — the Spanish cold soup — could provide short-term relief or,
better yet, a quick rubdown with onion juice would ease any discomfort. Social
media was awash with tips for the sun stricken, from lying down to taking
regular cold showers.
However
well meaning, the advice reveals how fundamentally unprepared the country is to
deal with the heat. This sort of weather (tempered by air-conditioning, of
course) was once something only the wealthy, with their luxury holidays abroad,
could afford to reach. Now, thanks to climate change increasing the frequency
and severity of heat waves, it is the common inheritance of all — a far from
pleasurable experience of sweltering in heat-trapped homes whose burden falls
disproportionately on the shoulders of the poor and the elderly.
Britain is
melting, and we’ve got nothing more than water-soaked towels and improvised
foot baths to get us through it.
There’s
certainly no aid coming from the Conservative government. Dominic Raab, the
deputy prime minister and one of the few cabinet members not to resign during
the successful revolt against Boris Johnson, instructed the public to cultivate
“resilience” when it came to the stultifying heat. Individuals need to adapt,
he said, not the state. And besides, Mr. Raab blithely told broadcasters, “We
ought to enjoy the sunshine.”
One suspects
that such resilience would be easier to summon if successive Conservative
governments had not neglected official warnings to fortify Britain’s
infrastructure against the growing threat of extreme heat. In 2021 a government
advisory body, the Climate Change Committee, found that the government was
comprehensively failing to protect people from extreme weather conditions. “The
United Kingdom has the capacity and the resources to respond effectively,” the
report stated. “Yet it has not done so.”
There’s no
sign of that changing any time soon. In fact, even the government’s vestigial
commitments to combat climate change could soon be rolled back. As Britain
braced itself to broil on Sunday night, Conservative leadership hopefuls
gathered for a televised debate. Amid awkward jousting and truly terrible turns
of phrase, a common thread emerged: No candidate was prepared to commit without
qualification to reaching net-zero carbon emissions by 2050, a 2019
Conservative manifesto pledge already criticized as too little, too late by
scientists.
Although
Liz Truss and Penny Mordaunt said they would back the goal, most candidates
fretted about the financial cost of an energy transition. Kemi Badenoch, the
self-proclaimed “anti-woke” former equalities minister whose leadership bid has
been endorsed by the fascist group Britain First, went the furthest. “If we
bankrupt ourselves,” she said, “we will be leaving a terrible future for our
children.” Better a smaller state deficit than a livable planet.
It’s an
argument that withers under the merciless glare of the sun. It’s not just that
thermometers across the country show that the hideous heat of the future is
already here. It’s also that, according to one estimate, climate adaptation is
up to 10 times as cost-efficient as inaction. Doing nothing makes neither human
nor economic sense.
The partial
exception to the equivocating chorus was Rishi Sunak, long seen as a possible
successor to Mr. Johnson. But though generally more amenable to green policies,
Mr. Sunak was reportedly resistant to allocate funding to climate projects
while he was finance minister — and seems willing to shy away from climate
measures in the name of fiscal probity. These noncommittal positions won’t
damage his standing in the contest for Conservative leader, though. Polling
reveals that climate action is the lowest priority for the roughly 180,000
Conservative members who get to decide the next leader of the country.
In such an
environment, climate fatalism is understandable. But immediate solutions to
extreme weather conditions already exist: planting more trees, building
designated cool spaces and insulating houses to keep heat out rather than in.
These are not new discoveries. “The answer,” as Prof. Mike Tipton has said,
citing ancient Rome’s penchant for fountains and public gardens, “has been
there for at least 2,000 years.”
Britons
have a choice beyond which household fan to buy, whether we realize it or not.
Either we sit and boil like lobsters in a pot or force ourselves to face the
future that seemed so comfortingly far away until, suddenly, it wasn’t.
Moya
Lothian-McLean (@mlothianmclean) is a contributing editor at Novara Media and a
freelance journalist.


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