Atlantis Clean Energy - News article | Clean energy news |
        +34 910 180 818   +44 20 3514 1012        
Home > Clean Energy News > News Article
   
News:   All   Concentrated Solar Power   Clean Energy   Climate Change   Water Supply   Pollution
Wed, 12th Apr 2023 8:41:00
‘Even in the realms of extreme, it’s extreme’: how UK music festivals are planning for freak weather
Whether waterlogged from flooding or parched and prone to wildfires, festival sites are having to plan for every eventuality – and the costs are substantial Wellies and sun hats are the traditional first guard against the elements at festivals, but this summer they may not be enough to protect revellers. Flood defences, wildfire response teams and satellite weather-monitoring technology are among the ways UK music festivals are adapting to extreme weather events fuelled by the climate crisis. Last summer’s record high temperatures in the UK hit during festival season, and the changing climate has become one of the industry’s biggest challenges, increasing the frequency, severity and likelihood of weather such as heatwaves and thunderstorms. With preparations underway for this year’s festival season, event organisers are increasing their contingency plans to secure their events, at a time of higher costs in labour, energy and insurance. Standon Calling, a 17,000-capacity festival in Hertfordshire, has felt the force of extreme weather in recent years. In 2021, the team were preparing for a dry weekend and performances by Primal Scream and Craig David. “Forecasts weren’t suggesting we were going to get freak weather,” recalls founder Alex Trenchard. “Then we had double the average rainfall for July fall in around three and a half hours. It was extraordinary.” The downpour left almost a third of the site flooded, with bosses forced to cancel the event on the final day. The evacuation was complicated as local access roads had been closed and some attenders had to leave their cars and belongings behind. The following year, they dug flood irrigation trenches across the site – only to face a heatwave. “You’re now preparing for something that, even in the realms of extreme, is at the extreme end,” Trenchard says. We’re going to have to make plans for weather events that we haven’t seen yet, but are now plausible Ric Robins, Met Office Unpredictable weather has been part of preplanning and risk assessment for UK music festivals for decades. The difference now is, bosses can’t look at past patterns to model their plans. “Throughout the world, and in the UK, we’re seeing unprecedented weather events,” says Ric Robins from the Met Office, who has spent 40 years following British weather and works with events to disseminate weather warnings. “We’re going to have to make plans for weather events that we haven’t seen yet, but are now plausible,” he adds. That will be difficult, because most festival sites are under construction by the time they receive accurate data. “It’s around five to seven days [before the event] when the forecast settles down into something you can plan for,” explains Robins. As a result, festival organisers – under scrutiny from local authorities, emergency services and insurance companies – must now prepare in advance for multiple extreme weather scenarios. Jane Healy is responsible for the water and sanitation provisions at festivals such as Glastonbury and Boomtown, a 60,000-capacity festival in Hampshire where, in August 2022, temperatures peaked around 40C. She recalls there was concern about localised drought. To protect festivalgoers’ welfare, the team were trucking in tankers of extra water, trying to keep it cool enough to drink and using it to dampen down dust. “When you haven’t planned for extreme weather, it’s easy to fall back on the old ways,” she says. For example, shipping in plastic bottles of water. “Quick options, like anything in life, aren’t normally the most sustainable. You’ve got to have your contingencies, even if you don’t use them.” These types of weather events mean festivals are scaling up plans every summer. More than half a million people attend Festival Republic’s events each year, such as Reading and Leeds, Wireless and Download. Last year, the organisers saw the damage caused to homes and villages by wildfires and adapted their plans. “We increased fire crew teams and fire appliances,” says group managing director Melvin Benn. “Instead of our fire teams being central, we created hubs so response times would be shorter.” Real-time monitoring is key. “We contract a satellite weather service, which costs an awful lot of money. It gives us literally minute-by-minute anticipation. I’ve used this technology to keep shows going.” All this necessary adaptation comes at a time of budgeting strain for the festival sector. “Issues of climate change affecting festivals aren’t happening on their own,” says Trenchard. “It’s alongside other factors, such as cancellation insurance. The premiums are rising year-on-year because insurers are having to pay out on weather-related claims.” Already this year, record rainfall has meant Laneway festival in Auckland was called off.   Read original full article
#Climate Change
#Environmental
#Extreme Weather
#Social & Economic
 
     



Back to Featured Articles
LATEST NEWS
Wed, 10th May 2023
How bankruptcy helps the coal industry avoid environmental liability
Jeff Hoops built Blackjewel into the nation’s sixth largest coal company by acquirin... more
#Coal
#Environmental
#Investment
#Social & Economic
German lawmakers mull creating first citizen assembly
German lawmakers are considering whether to create the country’s first “citizen as... more
#Climate Change
#Government Policies
#Protests
#Social & Economic
Yousaf: Just transition away from oil and gas is a moral imperative
The Scottish First Minister also said his Government will ‘rise to the challenge’ ... more
#Alternative Energy
#Carbon Footprint
#Fossil Fuels
#General Clean Energy
#Government Policies
#Social & Economic
Labor’s hydrogen pledge a ‘great start’ but more needed to become global player, experts say
Australian Hydrogen Council welcomes $2bn funding but MP Sophie Scamps calls it ‘a d... more
#Government Policies
#Hydrogen
#Investment
#Social & Economic
Tue, 9th May 2023
US support for nuclear power soars to highest level in a decade
A Gallup survey released in late April found that 55 percent of U.S. adults support th... more
#Carbon Footprint
#Energy Supply
#Government Policies
#Nuclear
#Social & Economic
Italian oil firm Eni faces lawsuit alleging early knowledge of climate crisis
Exclusive: Company accused of ‘lobbying and greenwashing’ for more fossil fuels de... more
#Carbon Footprint
#Climate Change
#Environmental
#Greenhouse Gas Emissions
#Oil
#Social & Economic
Saudi oil group Aramco to pay more to state despite profits drop
World’s largest energy company’s first-quarter profits fall by 19% to $32bn after ... more
#Government Policies
#Oil
#Social & Economic
Mon, 8th May 2023
UN Forum on Forests: 5 things you need to know
The sustainable management of the world’s forests takes centre stage at the UN Forum... more
#Climate Change
#Deforestation
#Environmental
#Government Policies
#Social & Economic
‘Lack of vision’: UK green energy projects in limbo as grid struggles to keep pace
Clean electricity plans stuck for years because of ‘negligence’ by governments ove... more
#Alternative Energy
#Climate Change
#Energy Supply
#General Clean Energy
#Government Policies
In Norway, the Electric Vehicle Future Has Already Arrived
A traffic intersection in Oslo as the sun is setting. A vehicle is turning to the left... more
#
#Government Policies
#Social & Economic
#Transport
Countries must forge ‘Global Blue Deal’ to protect the ocean: UNCTAD
The ocean can provide vast opportunities for developing countries to build more innova... more
#Climate Change
#Environmental
#Pollution General
#Social & Economic
#Water Pollution
Sun, 7th May 2023
Climate change: Vietnam records highest-ever temperature of 44.1C
Vietnam has recorded its highest ever temperature, just over 44C (111F) - with experts... more
#Climate Change
#Environmental
#Extreme Weather
UK solar energy firm offers ‘shared’ scheme that could save £200 a year
If you would love to have solar panels but don’t own your home or can’t afford the... more
#Carbon Footprint
#Energy Supply
#General Clean Energy
#Photovoltaic Solar Power
#Social & Economic
Canadian province of Alberta declares wildfire emergency
Alberta has declared a state of emergency after wildfires spread across the western Ca... more
#Environmental
#Extreme Weather
#Health
#Wildfires
Fri, 5th May 2023
Filipino activists appeal to British banks over region devastated by oil spill
Environmentalists from the Philippines urge investors to avoid LNG projects which they... more
#Environmental
#Health
#Social & Economic
Shell looks to sell off its stake in controversial Cambo oilfield
Energy firm’s 30% stake in field off Shetlands up for sale amid fierce opposition to... more
#Climate Change
#Greenhouse Gas Emissions
#Protests
#Social & Economic
Drought prompts French ban on garden swimming pools
Garden swimming pools are to be banned from sale in a part of southern France over wor... more
#Drought
#Environmental
#Fresh Water
#Government Policies
Thu, 4th May 2023
Can Morocco solve Europe’s energy crisis?
Morocco has big ambitions to export electricity produced by solar and wind farms to Eu... more
#Concentrated Solar Power
#Electricity
#Energy Supply
#Photovoltaic Solar Power
Pro-Putin businessman emerges as pick to chair Italy’s biggest energy firm
Fears appointing Paolo Scaroni as Enel CEO would undermine US and EU attempts to curb ... more
#Fossil Fuels
#Government Policies
#Natural Gas
#Social & Economic
Wed, 3rd May 2023
Northern Territory clears way for fracking to begin in Beetaloo Basin
Environmental groups and scientists say move will have an unacceptable impact on the c... more
#Climate Change
#Government Policies
#Natural Gas
#Protests
#Social & Economic
New temperature records, food security threats likely as El Niño looms
The development of an El Niño climate pattern in the Pacific Ocean this year is more ... more
#Extreme Weather
#Farming/Agriculture
#Health
#Social & Economic
Snowy Hydro 2.0 project hit by delay of up to two years and another cost blowout
Government-owned company pushes earliest start date of pumped hydro project to the sec... more
#Government Policies
#Hydrogen
#Social & Economic
Australia warned of ‘over-mining’ risk in race to secure minerals needed for clean energy
Research says mining boom to support renewable energy risks ‘significant social and ... more
#Alternative Energy
#Construction
#General Clean Energy
#Government Policies
#Social & Economic
Tue, 2nd May 2023
Climate change: life in ocean ‘twilight zone' at risk from warming
Climate change could dramatically reduce life in the deepest parts of our oceans that ... more
#Climate Change
#Environmental
#Pollution General
 
Results: 4212   1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176    
   




Energy News
How bankruptcy helps the coal industry avoid environmental liability
Wed, 10th May 2023 18:04:00
German lawmakers mull creating first citizen assembly
Wed, 10th May 2023 17:00:00
Yousaf: Just transition away from oil and gas is a moral imperative
Wed, 10th May 2023 14:15:00