Skip to content

FLOP26's `Deluge'—Rain, Garbage and Rats—Not What the Queen Ordered

The city of Glasgow is as of this writing a flooded mess, with a “yellow weather” warning extending into noon tomorrow as guests are arriving for what is looking more like the real Flop26. Torrential rains have flooded the streets, forcing some people to abandon their cars, stopping traffic, halting train service from London to Glasgow, etc., raising the question of how people are going to be able to get to the Malthusian lovefest scheduled to begin on Halloween on Sunday. The small city of Glasgow is overwhelmed. The Washington Post today reports that on the eve of the summit, trash collectors are threatening to go out on strike, which would certainly be an embarrassment; but even if they don’t, trash and recyclables are collected only three times a month, leading to overflowing trash cans and dumpsters and a big increase in the rat population.

And all this is taking place against a backdrop of a full-blown energy crisis, which the weekly The Spectator blames on the green movement’s push for renewables, added to which was the U.K.’s decision to reduce domestic storage capacity during the COVID pandemic, and failing to carry out maintenance on the all-important North Sea gas rigs. Calmer weather has also caused many wind turbines built around the U.K. to cease operating. No wonder coal stations are being restarted. With fuel and food shortages, The Spectator points out, this is no time to be talking about net zero emissions.

This post is for paying subscribers only

Subscribe

Already have an account? Sign In