Issue 117

Hello and welcome to the Voice for Arran, we hope you are well and in good spirits despite the continuing corona restrictions. We have a full December issue for you, with a mix of local and global topics, and themes that span across current activities and discussions taking place in and around Arran.

There was unfortunate news last month with the vote by the SNP and the Conservatives not to back the call by the Scottish Greens to declare a Nature Emergency. However MSPs are continuing work this month on Scotland’s EU Continuity Bill. This is the Bill that will deliver post-Brexit environmental protections, including an Environment Watchdog for Scotland. As we report in this issue, in ‘Welcome improvements to Scotland’s EU exit laws, but bill must go further for nature’, initial amendments were discussed in November, with final voting to take place in December. This is a critical time then both in terms of raising the public’s awareness and for the future protection of Scotland’s precious landscapes and ecosystems. So far, the watchdog has not been granted power to take enforcement action on individual complaints about environmental damage and people in Scotland are at risk of losing access to environmental justice once the UK leaves the EU at the end of 2020.

Complaints such as these make up the bulk of the European Commission’s environmental work, and also seems, albeit in a different form, to be a practice upheld in US law. In ‘Nature on the Ballot and the Parliament of Things’, Kurt Cobb refers to the recent American election where he says nature was apparent on the ballot across all levels of government. Citizens in the US are given the right to decide on a range of conservation projects and amendments, so that in Orange County, Florida for example, voters recently overwhelmingly approved a charter amendment to give rights to two rivers to be free from pollution. Without these kinds of political and legal channels, or in Scotland’s case an effective environmental watchdog, the organising work of communities that is so evident around Scotland and in Arran (see in this issue the work of OurSeas Coalition in campaigning for better fisheries management), will most probably remain marginal. At best, environmental guardians will be a strong and passionate voice, yet in this legal and political context, the knowledge, commitment and energy they hold and which should be central, will be easily ignored by government and bureaucratic structures.

Sally Campbell’s piece on soya and the destruction of the Cerrado forest in Brazil points to a similar problem, this time through the business of an opaque multinational corporation. Cargill, America’s second biggest private company, controls huge swathes of soya production in Brazil and is linked to the associated deforestation taking place there. The local communities fighting against these issues on the ground have no real recourse against such a corporate giant which “has insinuated itself into almost every aspect of global agribusiness”. Meanwhile consumers in the UK have no idea that the chicken they buy from the supermarket has been fed on the crop responsible for this situation. The case for local, sustainable agriculture, and more local food supply has never been clearer, and The Arran Pioneer Project and the Basta collective in Berlin (see Food for Thought article) are two examples of groups taking community growing into their own hands. Whether intentionally political or not, groups such as these are resisting the globally unaccountable practices that define much of our current food system.

If these matters inspire you into some Christmassy environmental and political action, there are a range of online consultations and surveys to keep us busy while we are missing the usual festivities and gatherings! North Ayrshire are looking for input into their new Wellbeing engagement programme and COAST are seeking views from the community about their development plan. The Scottish Government are holding a consultation on Single-use Plastics which runs until the beginning of the new year, and finally there is still time to write to your MSP asking them to strengthen the proposed and vital Environmental Watchdog. The environmental imbalances we are experiencing come back to what Kurt Cobb says is our inability to understand things in nature as actors and not mere objects, as well as “our inability to place ourselves in a framework that stops separating humans from our surroundings….The recognition of the rights of nature is a beginning for this process” but we must also use our “voice to carry its concerns forward into our everyday social and political lives”. We hope you have a great month and from all of us at the Voice, have a lovely Christmas when it comes!

Welcome improvements to Scotland’s EU exit laws, but bill must go further for nature

MSPs received more than 17,000 emails calling for a strong, independent Scottish environment watchdog. On 24th and 25th November, MSPs voted to make important improvements to the Scottish government's EU Continuity Bill, including strengthening the independence of the new watchdog. But as it stands, the watchdog still won't be able to take action on individual complaints raised by citizens about environmental damage. The Fight for Scotland's Nature campaign is pushing for this change ahead of MSPs' final vote on the bill in December.


Poem for December

The Peace of Wild Things

When despair for the world grows in me

and I wake in the night at the least sound

in fear of what my life and children's lives may be,

I go and lie down where the wood drake

rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds.

I come into the peace of wild things

who do not tax their lives with forethought

of grief. I come into the presence of still water.

And I feel above me the day - blind stars

waiting with their light. For a time


The Long Read – Soya and the Cerrado

Soya and it's relationship to Brazil's Cerrado Destruction 

A report by Sally Campbell

Rachel Carson in 1962 in Silent Spring wrote…"The history of life on earth has become the history of interactions between living things and their surroundings…Only within the moment of time represented by the present century has one species. man.. acquired sufficient power to alter the nature of his world”.Welcome to the Anthropocene !What is SOYA?
  • From 2012 to 2020, the largest soybean producing countries were the US, Brazil, Argentina, China, Paraguay, India, and Canada, in that order. But in May 2020 Brazil surpassed the USA as the largest producer of soybeans worldwide producing 124 million metric tons.
  • China is one of the top global producers of soybeans, but this country largely consumes the product within its own borders, and is also one of the largest importers of soybeans.
  • Brazil's soybean production is significant, but it is contributing to the deforestation of the Amazon rainforest. Recently, soya production in the Cerrado region of Brazil is driving an additional environmental disaster.
  • The difference between the soya bean and grain (wheat, barley, rice, oats) is it is high in protein and hence its value as a foodstuff.

The Arran Pioneer Project crowdfunder is launched

Help Us Grow Food Around Arran

As reported in previous issues of the Voice, The Arran Pioneer Project CIC is a group of Islanders working together regarding the lease / donation of areas of unused land on the Isle of Arran to cultivate and grow food. They have recently launched a crowdfunding campaign to help support their work. Please read below for further information and click here to go to the crowdfunding page

The team at The Arran Pioneer Project write:


Protest camps and #lovemillstonepoint

Campaign Campout is the term that the Friends of Millstone Point use to describe the presence of two tents at Millstone Point, mainly over weekends during October and November. Their idea has been to draw attention to – and object to - the planning application by the Scottish Salmon Company to install a large salmon farm just offshore here. At present this is a wild and windswept coast, a little south east of Laggan cottage, within the North Arran Scenic Area, and home to wildlife such as seals, porpoise, otters and basking sharks.


Nature on the Ballot and the Parliament of Things

An article by Kurt Cobb, printed here 22nd November 2020

There were some obvious and even historic ways in which nature was on the ballot this year in the United States:

• Orange County, Florida voters overwhelmingly approved a charter amendment to give rights to two rivers to be free from pollution. By a margin of 89 percent, voters approved “the right to sue corporate polluters in court, without having to show they have been personally harmed, as state law requires.” The state legislature’s preemption of local jurisdiction regarding rights of nature may not be an obstacle if it is ruled unconstitutional in a case currently before the courts.
• American participation in the Paris Agreement, the climate accord reached by the world’s governments in 2015, was also on the ballot indirectly. President Donald Trump withdrew the United States from the agreement. Trump’s opponent, Joe Biden, pledged to have the United States rejoin.
• Numerous conservation millages, like this one in Washtenaw County, Michigan, were approved by voters for various conservation projects such as tree planting, protecting habitat and assisting efforts to keep surface and groundwater clean.


Food for Thought

Leander Jones looks at the role of community supported agriculture as a 21st-century antidote to the destructive and increasingly fragile corporate agricultural model. The feature image shows members of the Basta community supported agriculture collective working the farm. Image courtesy of Hof Basta.

In the past few decades fundamental flaws in the global food system have been increasingly thrust into the public eye. The rise of industrial agriculture – combining increased use of fertilisers and pesticides with aesthetics-focused crop modification and long-distance transportation – has led to devastation of the environment and turbocharged an extractive model that thrives on exploitation of the world’s producers. The relentless quest to maximise production – and profits – per acre is destroying the very land on which this production depends. It is akin to setting your house on fire to save on energy bills.


Consultation on restrictions to single-use plastics

The Scottish Government is currently holding a consultation on restrictions to single-use plastics (SUP). The issue of single-use plastics has become a popular concern over the past couple of years and one that has seen much attention in the media and some action already implemented by governments to stem the production of SUP such as cotton buds and microbeads.

Local environmental group Think about Plastic (TAP) is keen to participate in the consultation and chair, Helen How, has already attended a Zoom meeting with Zero Waste Scotland (ZWS) to try to gather more information about what ZWS is proposing. TAP are encouraging both individuals, businesses and organisations on Arran to find out more and get involved. The issues are complex and questions remain over what could replace SUP. Bioplastic such as Vegware has become a common replacement in many food outlets and takeaways, as these have been promoted as biodegradable and so more environmentally friendly. However Vegware can take months or longer to break down, and generally end up in the general waste bin. There needs to be some coordinated solutions brought in across many levels. For example facilities which enable compostable materials to be composted (with appropriate temperatures) could form part of a strategy dealing with SUP.


Arran Churches Foodbank support at Christmas

Christmas Food Bags

If you, or someone you know, could do with extra support around Christmas please let us know. We can deliver a bag of food to you during the week leading up to Christmas. If you contact us on behalf of someone else, please ask if they would be happy to receive this. We will make up bags according to the number of people in the household. Any information shared with us will be treated confidentially.

Ideally, we would like to know of any requests by 14th December.


Eco Savvy News and an Eco Advent Calendar

In case you haven't seen the latest Eco Savvy newsletters, here are some of the recent Savvy happenings...To start off, here is an Eco Advent Calendar for December.

This year we have put together an eco advent calendar with lots of ideas for a more environmentally friendly Christmas, some of which should save you some money and are fun to do with your family.

If you're very ambitious, try to do them all day by day or do as many as you can in no particular order throughout December and tick them off as you go.




The Arran Gift Box opens in Brodick

Alice Maxwell reports on the opening of the The Arran Gift Box shop in Brodick.

Shiona and Tom McGarrigle have opened their first shop, in Brodick, selling their own creation - Arran Gift Boxes. Shiona is a local lass from Lamlash, and met Tom in Glasgow. During their time in the city they ran the Arran Cheese Shop stall at farmers markets and the Glasgow Christmas Market. They realized how popular Arran goods were and when they returned to Arran they decided to expand. Their gift boxes now sell products from the following businesses:


Infected larch trees on Arran to be cleared

Voice readers on Arran will be aware about the imminent felling of larch trees on the island. For those non Arran readers who may not be, here is a report from Forestry and Land Scotland (FLS) explaining the situation. It also suggests ways we can help slow the spread of the Phytophthora disease. 

Residents on and visitors to Arran are being urged to help slow the spread of a fatal disease that affects larch trees as Forestry and Land Scotland’s South Region team prepares to tackle an outbreak on the island.




New Fire Safety Alarm Regulations

Local MSP Kenneth Gibson tells us in the following article about an extension to the timetable for getting new fire alarms fitted in our homes.

Many of us vividly recall London’s Grenfell Tower tragedy, when fire swept through the building, killing 72 people in June 2017.

Following this horrific incident, a Ministerial Working Group on Building and Fire Safety reviewed Scotland’s own fire safety regulations. After it concluded in January 2019, all parties represented in the Scottish Parliament unanimously agreed on the introduction of new measures to better protect people from the devastating impact an accidental fire could have.


North Ayrshire Wellbeing Conversation

The following message from the North Ayrshire Health and Social Care Partnership tells us about a new programme of engagement, the Wellbeing Conversation, taking place across North Ayrshire and they want to start by asking the people who live and work here a couple of questions. See below for the link to the questionnaire.

Over the next 18 months, we will be speaking to people who live and work in North Ayrshire, to find out what matters to them. The North Ayrshire Wellbeing Conversation is our new programme of engagement, which aims to:


Marine News

Sent in by John Kinsman, station manager at Coastwatch St Monans, east Fife. Feature image shows European Lobster (see Foot and Mouth story below).

Men rescued from sinking vessel

Two men were rescued from a sinking fishing boat which ran aground just off the Fife coast in the early hours of Sunday morning November 15th. The alarm was raised at around 6.15am when the boat suffered a mechanical problem and hit rocks in rough conditions not far from Pittenweem Harbour. Coastguard operations room in Aberdeen paged Anstruther Lifeboat volunteers and both the stations lifeboats. The all-weather and inshore lifeboats were launched to attend.



Recipe for December

Sent in by Anne Kinsman

Feta Salad

Ingredients:
4 tomatoes cut into wedges
Half a cucumber cut into bite size cubes
1 red pepper cored, de-seeded and cut into rings or thinly sliced
1 red onion, thinly sliced
200g (7oz) feta cheese, cubed
100g (3oz) pitted black olives
4 tbsp olive oil
2 tbsp white wine vinegar
2 or 3 tsp finely chopped oregano
Salt and pepper

Method:
1. Arrange the tomatoes, cucumber, red pepper and onion in a serving dish
2. Scatter the cheese and olives over the salad. Season well with salt and pepper and drizzle with the oil and vinegar.
3. Sprinkle over the oregano before serving, and enjoy!


Letter to the Editor

Blairbeg House, Lamlash, Isle of Arran, North Ayrshire, KA27 8JT Tel: 01770-600822 email: sallya.campbell@btinternet.com

In Letter box of VfA November 2020