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a greenish-brown
and unpleasant land
four scenarios
for the future of UK farming in the wake of the 2001 foot and mouth crisis
(co-written with hari kunzru; illustrated by catherine story)
mute #20, 07.01

scenario
1: blasted heath
a wild and lawless place
After the final demise of upland
farming and the consolidation of Britain's remaining food production into
the East Anglian prairie belt, large areas of Scotland, Wales and the
Southwest are designated official government wilderness areas (GWA's).
Grand plans are devised to mould these areas of underused land into national
parks, recreating as far as possible conditions before the first major
Bronze Age interventions into the landscape. "It will be," announced
the Department of the Environment, "as if the wellington boot of
man had never been felt on this green and pleasant land."
The decision causea huge protests
by the remaining population of the GWAs, many of whom object to the imposition
of this "ahistorical" form of management on landscape which
their crofting and hill-farming communities had shaped through agriculture.
"Britain's countryside is an artefact of rumination," insists
the head of the National Farmer's Union. "Sheep and cows give this
land its unique appearance." A brief occupation of the Cullain GWA
by Gaelic-speaking activists, protesting at the "New Highland Clearances"
is put down by a mixed force of police and park rangers.
Private infrastructure providers
see which way the wind was blowing and gradually withdraw transport, communications,
health and leisure facilities, accelerating the depopulation of the GWAs.
This is followed by the catastrophic recession of the 2030s, which devastates
the global economy. Hard-pressed to provide basic services for major population
centres, government wilderness management schemes are first suspended
then abandoned altogether. The GWAs become unmanaged areas, land no one
either wants or can afford to use. Officially designated as "commons"
but under nominal regulation preventing legal building, farming, mining
or other "non ecological uses", the GWA's fall out of public
consciousness, used only by a declining number of walkers and climbers.
The usual twenty-first century demographic
factors (declining birthratea, carcinomas, immune system diseases, fast-mutating
eurovirii and acute food allergies) reduce Britain's population to a third
of its former size, and further informal wilderness areas are added to
the official GWA's which in their unmanaged condition become colonised
by bracken and heather. In the absence of government control, a semi-nomadic
population of travellers, survivalists, millennarians and outlaws begin
to eke out a living in these places, occasionally holding up intercity
bus services or making food raids on the fortified shopping centres of
border towns. Gradually, in some areas, deciduous oak forests, bluebell
meadows and wetlands slowly re-established themselves. Other areas are
blasted heaths and dumping grounds, toxic empty spaces that are shunned
by decent TV-fearing folk, who scare their children with stories of what
happens up there on the moors. (HK)

scenario
2: black
forest
a nation of neo-woodlanders
An historic third Labour term in
2005 and a long delayed referendum on the Euro in 2006 (with 51% voting
in favour) begins the long vaunted economic amalgamation of the UK with
Europe. This combined with a complete overall of the crop quota system
and a scraping of the subsidies in the wake of the 2001 Foot and Mouth
crisis leaves the farming community unable to reestablish its export markets.
By 2008 all but the largest and most industrial of agricultural operations
have completely collapsed.
An immediate and effective response
is sought and, for once, not only found but implemented: the subsidies
paid for switching arable or grazing land to maintained woodland or renewable
plantations are tripled. Farmers switch to being foresters in droves;
those who don't sell up to landlords who include foreign logging interests
and the Crown. As patterns of changing landuse emerge zoning is introduced,
and encouraged by new international subsidies for the production of carbon
sinks and "planetary lungs" a wide corridor of woodland emerges
around the river valleys of the Avon and the Trent, stretching all the
way from Dorset to Nottinghamshire.
As the rural population leaves the
area in ever greater numbers, mainly relocating to the megacity that threatens
to completely urbanise a triangular region in the southeast of England
(cornered by London in the north and Southampton and Brighton in the south),
rural villages and even isolated towns decline and die. Grazing land is
after all no longer needed, most meat by now being grown headless and
legless in arrays of bio-vats. In its new role one as of the most powerful
sectors of the government, the Forestry Commission pushes for a serious
wildwood policy to be implemented and the government agrees to a series
of compulsory land acquisitions and road demolishing the effect of which
is to turn the backbone of England into one vast forest, a tree sea lapping
at the shores of the island-like urban centres of Birmingham, Derby and
Reading.
This is the new "Wooden Heart
of England", and by 2040 it is once again possible (or it would be
if it wasn't for intervention of several large motorways) for a squirrel
to travel between the mouths of the Humber and the Severn with out ever
having to set foot upon the ground. Around the forest, of course, the
culture changes too. With the country looking increasingly lizard backed,
Mayan philosophies take hold. A whole new industry of wood crafts springs
up, and Britain becomes a centre of excellence in the manufacture of hand-made
furniture and toy wooden trains and those little biplanes you always see
in shops selling "traditional" toys. Arborocentrism grip the
nation, and where there aren't woodlands there are orchards, and cider
replaces beer as the national drink. Wassailing undergoes a grand renaissance;
tree-houses become highly sought after; Druidism overtakes the Church
of England as the leading religion. Political malcontents identify ever
more strongly with the figure of Robin Hood, and football is banned, replaced
by archery. By 2050 it's judged that up to half a million people may be
subsiding illegally in the forest, though it is argued that they actually
cause less damage than the parties of rich business men who are said to
be paying up to €100,000 for the chance to rampage illegally through
the undergrowth in pursuit of wild boar. (JF)

scenario
3: leisureland UK
folk is the new dotcom
In the wake of the BSE, foot and
mouth, GM, munce-rot and neosalmonella crises, the climate of public opinion
turns against farming. Perceived as dowdy, dangerous and frankly unfashionable,
it is decided that Britain's countryside would yield most revenue through
intensive high-end tourism, the experience of the west of Ireland and
America's Blue Mountains having shown that post-agricultural landscapes
could generate huge visitor numbers, as well as providing employment in
the service sector for many of those sidelined by mechanised agriculture.
The subsidy system is abolished and arrangements are made to serve the
nation's food needs with a two-tier system of dirt-cheap agricultural
imports and organic show farms, the latter catering to the specialist
produce needs of the urban elite.
International studies on tourist
satisfaction requirements produce a national plan based around the construction
of ViewNet, a public-private partnership infrastructure of "WideAngles"
and "Heritage Nodes". The former are scenically located coachparks,
the latter retro-styled population centres devoted to the production and
retail of handicrafts, locally-themed refreshments, outdoor supplies and
countryside activities, both types of site being linked by a well-maintained
network of dual carriageways. ViewNet's aim is to make 85% of Britain's
post-agricultural wildlands accessible on a day-trip basis to the cash-rich
'grey market' of scenery-hungry retirees, who require low gradient walks,
good toilet facilities and easily-available CPR. This aim is achieved
within ten years of ViewNet's inception, the so-called Cream Tea Revolution
thus successfully transforming Britain's failing rural economies into
economic powerhouses, propelling the Social Mediocratic Party into a record
breaking fourth term.
It is generally accepted that Britain (whose landscape has been continually
altered since Neolithic times) has no true pristine wilderness areas,
and that man-made structures such as dolmens, sheepfolds, ruined bothies
and thatched cottages are a major tourist draw. The principle of the acceptability
of human intervention opens the way for Britain's world-beating programme
of wilderness landscaping, in which celebrity gardeners were given vast
areas of wildland to improve. Dell-turfing, the dynamiting of new crags,
the mass construction of gazebos and reflowing of rivers to create spectacular
waterfalls resulted. The Suffolk Glen, the Cotswold Rose Fields and the
acclaimed Windermere Water Feature are among the lasting legacies of this.
As demand for heritage skills balloons,
the country experiences a national shortage of dry stone wallers, tartan
dyers, lace makers, and other traditional craftspeople. At the same time
competition from national tourism schemes in Europe and Asia threaten
the new countryside renaissance. The government responds with a series
of radical measures, ranging from the coaching inn quotas and shortbread
laws to local ordinances enforcing the wearing of folkloric costume within
five miles of a ViewNet node. National Folk Colleges in Inverness, Aberystwyth
and Saint Ives now produce smock-wearing graduates who tour the country,
advising on local custom revenue streams, new folk skills and the correct
management of heritage show breeds like the Shetland Pony and the Blackfaced
Cheviot sheep. A pioneering scheme arranged in consultation with film
producers in Los Angeles and Bombay has created UltraHighland, the super-pristine
area to the North of Fort William reserved for elite media use: UltraHighland's
newly landscaped upland forest panoramas boast some of the greatest depths
of field in Northern Europe, as well as the Rob Roy croft'n'castle complex,
so popular with film-makers that it has to be booked up to five years
in advance. Such is the success of the scheme that Cornwall is to hold
a referendum on whether to return all settlement patterns and visual phenomena
to their 1790 state, in response to the new vogue for piracy and smuggling
epics. (HK)

scenario
4: erratic
eden
from chiantishire to The Day After
Having made no dent in improving
public services and faced with the possibility of a country v. city civil
war as tensions in the countryside between disenfrancised farm workers,
crazed aristocrats, confused hunt protesters and belligerant petrol lobbyists
threaten to explode, the Labour party is ushered from office in disgrace
in 2007. It is replaced by a revitalised Tory hardcore intent on separating
England not only from Europe but from a fully devolved Scotland and Wales
as well (though not Northern Ireland). Clinging hard to a dead currency,
a dead culture, a stringent immigration (and emigration) policy and a
resurgence of nationalistic attitudes last common during the reign of
Henry V, Fortress England is (still)born.
Anne Widdicombe, the new prime minister,
cuts ties with Europe and takes the country into NAFTA, exhanging US rights
to all English military bases in perpetuity for an series of farming protectionisms
and subsidies which are used to prop up an agriculture based entirely
on the small-farming model. Traditionalism is encouraged throughout the
shires as Widdicombe's Tories attempt to recreate a rural idyll that recalls
the countryside of yore. While advances in the manipulation of the human
genome are exploited and encouraged, in a surprise concession to the organic
lobby biotechnology on crops and livestock is forbidden; England is to
be a pure example of organic farming, a beacon to the world. A fashion
for cart-horses and hand-ploughs develops into a trend.
But alas, the dream of a traditional
english agriculture replete with reinvigorated Christian/pagan festivals
and young children taking time off school to work the land was reckoned
without the factor of global warming. As the new agriculture takes shape
the climate begins to change, ambient temperatures rising by five degrees
in as many years. With the Meditteranean a burning cauldron the shores
of which are rapidly turning into desert, English farmers begin to cultivate
vines, olives, almonds and other, formerly more southern, crops. By 2050
their vineyards and olive groves have started to mature, and die-back
of traditional British flora has turned the English countryside into something
that more resembles Tuscany than any landscape by Constable.
French and Italian media types buy
abandoned village schools and convert them into luxurious second homes,
bases from which they wander through picturesque local markets sampling
the many and varied interesting cheeses produced by peculiar hippy farming
types many of whom have gone as far as to reject the pound, preferring
to conduct business exclusively in groats, and all seems well and good
until in the accident misfiring of a Chinese warhead targetted on the
radar station at USAF Fylingdales. Fortunately for the US Star Wars program
(by then fully established) the warhead goes astray; unfortunately for
English small-holder farming it lands on Warwickshire, destroying Coventry
and spreading a radioactive plume across seven counties. Once again, English
agriculture must go back to square one. (JF)
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