A future for our planet
He has been head of
both BBC1 and BBC2, has commissioned programmes like Porridge
and Monty Python and even introduced colour television to Britain.
However his insights into the workings of our living planet are
his hallmark. Sir David Attenborough talks to Fergus
Byrne about the survival of our world and whether we can still
make a difference.
There are few people that havent at some point in their
lives been captivated by David Attenboroughs engaging descriptions
of the various living organisms on our planet. Now known as Sir
David, after his knighthood in 1995, his career has taken him
to far flung corners of the planet, in search of the natural wonders
of our living world. In his life he has seen half a million flamingos
feeding at dawn on a lake in Africa. He has watched herds of elephant
making their way silently through the forest. He has visited the
Australian Great Barrier Reef and the American Grand Canyon and
has studied the spectacular and glamourous Birds of Paradise as
they flaunted their plumes in New Guinea. He is currently filming
a series about reptiles and amphibians for the BBC and will visit
exotic locations in Australia, South Africa and Madagascar over
the next few months but not before taking time out to visit
Dorset. In September he will officially open the Jurassic Coast
gallery at the Dorset County Museum in Dorchester.
Thanks to a grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund, the existing
Geology gallery has been completely transformed to offer an educational
focal point for all visitors to the Jurassic Coast World Heritage
Site. The gallery charts the full 95 miles of coastline from Exmouth
in Devon to Old Harry Rocks in Dorset. A fascinating geological
story is delivered through touch, sound, text, and interactive
displays, and at levels to suit all ages and all abilities.
Sir David is no stranger to the Jurassic Coast and before talking
about the dangers posed by man to our environment, he spoke of
the dangers posed by nature to man when it comes to fossil collecting.
Like hundreds of thousands of other people I have relished
collecting those ammonites he told me. But these cliffs
are very unstable. If you are picking up stuff from rocks and
boulders at the foot of the cliff you cant do any harm.
These cliffs are under attack by the waves more than by the fossil
collectors, there are a lot of cliff falls.
This year Sir David celebrated his 80th birthday filming giant
tortoises on the Galapagos Islands. His more than 50 years in
broadcasting have taken him to remote and wild places, where his
knowledge and passion for the living world has helped him create
programmes and books that show us the colourful, vibrant and intriguing
world that we share with so many living things. He has shown us
a world of extraordinary diversity and beauty, a world of innovation
and adaptation, where natural survival instinct communes with
seasonal change, and the natural order of animal hierarchy battles
for living space in a rapidly changing world. Through his eyes
we have seen the daily battles of so many creatures as they try
to survive their natural enemies.
It is a world however that is under threat from one incredibly
powerful creature. While Sir David has been able to bring us some
of the more spectacular images from around the natural world,
he is acutely aware of the spectacular and unnatural disaster
that man is bringing to the planet. Uniquely placed to observe
changes in our planet, he says we all must become aware of environmental
damage. He told me, The notion that we, all of us have to
take on board and that we have to recognise, is, that every carbon-dioxide
molecule that we have produced, either breathing, or burning petrol
or fuel or whatever, goes up there and adds to the blanket around
the world, and it will stay up there for a hundred years. And
the fire I sat by 75 years ago the carbon dioxide produced
then is still up there. So even if the world became marvellously
conscientious and stopped breathing carbon dioxide or burning
fuel we would still be in a position where temperatures would
rise. So to some extent we cant stop it all we can
do is ameliorate it. But we ought to reduce the rate of increase.
We are not going to be able to return to levels of fifty years
ago.
Sir David shares the concern that many are turning a blind eye
to the effects of global warming, in fact there are still those
that refuse to believe it exists. If one really took seriously
how you convert sunshine into power, and we are going towards
that, solar power is becoming a real possibility, he said.
Thats going to be huge improvement. The problem at
the moment is that people dont even believe it. I mean Ive
just been in Tucson, Arizona where temperatures have been 110
degrees. And theres this town absolutely roasting, and not
a solar panel in the place!
In our little corner of the world we are fortunate to have a community
that is steeped in culture and living history. Thanks to the vision
of people like Professor Denys Brunsden, our coastline is now
recognised as one of the many wonders of the natural world. Thousands
of visitors will come to explore the rocks and boulders and many
will hope to take home a prize that represents a piece of the
history of life on earth. Sir David Attenborough, like many others
can only hope that our generation and those to follow us will
find some way to ensure a future for our planet. If we are unable
to somehow reverse or repair the persistent environmental damage
that we inflict, we may one day become the very relics that our
visitors so cherish.