Today's Parade Of Storms Showing Just How Unprepared The UK Is For Tomorrow's Climate Breakdown [View all]
Last edited Tue Dec 10, 2024, 04:37 PM - Edit history (1)
EDIT
Nothing feels as dumb as smart tech in a blackout. Overnight we lost not only light, heat and the ability to do anything from bank transactions to checking email on the apps I normally use, but temporarily we also lost connection to the outside world. (Mobile signal only works at the end of our rural lane when boosted by the wifi hub, 4G is wildly patchy and even our old-school cordless landline dies without power.) Life, in short, went analogue. Though we were thankfully reconnected on Saturday night, as of Monday morning 100,000 households had gone two nights and counting without power no joke for the old, frail or ill-prepared.
Emma Pinchbeck, the chief executive of the independent Climate Change Committee, which advises government, warns that Britain is nowhere near ready for the chaos that shifting weather patterns could bring. Too much of our essential infrastructure wasnt built to withstand the conditions seen last weekend, which implies more power outages and more disrupted travel. Were behind on flood defences, and are still inexplicably building houses on flood plains despite the clue being very much in the name (dont be surprised if flood risk becomes the new frontier for nimby arguments against housebuilding in 2025, not all of them justified). But were also unprepared for freak hot summers leaving city dwellers sweltering in overheated flats. The governments most recent climate risk assessment talks ominously of cascading failures, where one bit of toppling infrastructure crashes into the next: a power cut affecting water treatment facilities knocking out fresh water supplies for days, say, as happened in East Sussex two years ago during Storm Eunice.
But climate isnt the only growing obstacle to keeping the power on. In September 2022, a series of underwater explosions hit the Nord Stream gas pipeline off the Danish coast; a month later, the undersea cables supplying Shetland with internet were mysteriously damaged. Sabotage and cyber-attacks could all too easily be used to start a literal cold war, in which Russia or other hostile actors hold a shivering west to ransom over its insatiable need for heat, light and wifi. Think of the CrowdStrike debacle last summer when a rogue update to antivirus software led to planes being grounded, bank transactions frozen and hospitals cancelling procedures to imagine the potential for causing havoc, except this time with an added layer of panic triggered by feeling actively under attack.
Finland, Denmark, Norway and Sweden all countries whose geography puts them on the frontline have issued advice to citizens on stockpiling enough tinned food, water and essential medicines to outlast a three-day emergency. In Britain, where parts of Whitehall are still haunted by memories of Francis Maude blithely suggesting everyone keep a jerry can of petrol handy during a threatened 2012 fuel strike, talk of national resilience still feels at best a bit Dads Army and at worst like a ridiculous overreaction. I scoffed along with everyone else at last years official government advice to get a battery-powered radio and a stash of torches. But last weekend has brought out my inner prepper, if only for self-soothing purposes.
EDIT
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/dec/10/storm-darragh-power-cuts-britain