Sea Change: Britain's Coastal Catastrophe

Sea Change: Britain's Coastal Catastrophe

by RichardGirling (Author)

Synopsis

We have a special relationship with the sea. It is the single most powerful driver of our economy, our lifestyle and our politics. It affects what we eat, how we use the land, how we relate to our neighbours, how we travel, even the thickness of our coats. Yet we go on treating it, with childlike faith and unreason, as if we imagine it to be infinitely resourceful and endlessly forgiving. Sea Change addresses such issues as pollution by sewage, nuclear waste and dumping at sea; extinction of fish stocks; destruction of marine environment, impacts of climate change, coastal erosion and rising sea levels; decline of our seaside resorts; the failure of the 'integrated transport policy';and smuggling. In each case Girling questions: how did the situation arise? What are the consequences? What should be done? And what will happen when we fail? His unique voice blends horror, humour and 'just fancy that'; sifting for solutions in the sands, he is utterly compelling, entertaining and inspirational.

$3.24

Save:$18.01 (85%)

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 368
Publisher: Eden Project Books
Published: 02 Jul 2007

ISBN 10: 1903919770
ISBN 13: 9781903919774
Book Overview: Challenging and controversial investigation of our changing relationship with the sea and our coastline.

Media Reviews
Readers will relish these tales of failing fisheries. --Publishers Weekly
Anyone who cares about the coast should read this book--before it is too late. --Nicholas Crane, author, Mercator
Richard Girling calls the sea our civilization's 'amniotic fluid.' His story of its violation by oil pollution, over-fishing, climate-change-driven erosion and our belief that we have the wisdom to 'manage' the marine environment is shocking. --Richard Mabey, author, The Flowering of Britain
For centuries our sea, less our lands, was what characterized us as a people. Now we fly over it, seek it less for work and play, and fail to recognize that it is in crisis. Richard Girling's wonderfully informed, hard hitting, and inspired account of what is happening on our shoreline shatters this ignorance. --Ronald Blythe, author, Akenfield
The most brilliant and devastating attack yet written on bungling, political weakness, incompetence and sheer slowness of those who are meant to be in charge of the seas around our shores. --Adam Nicolson, Evening Standard
Author Bio
Richard Girling is a senior feature writer for The Sunday Times Magazine. In 2002 he was named Specialist Writer of the Year in the UK Press Awards and has been shortlisted for this award in 2005 and 2006. He has been a consultant to the former Department of the Environment and the Department of Culture, Media and Sport and author of campaigns for the Campaign to Protect Rural England (CPRE). He is currently a trustee of the Tree Council.