It's clear that feelings have been running high. A lot of us feel very strongly about the proposed destruction of a spectacular part of the beautiful area where we live. But it's important for our health and well-being that we have beauty around us. I found an interesting paper published by a team at the University of Essex about this. A major part of it focuses on the benefits of physical exercise and the importance of the countryside in enabling people to take exercise, but it also touches on the important contribution of the natural environment in maintaining the mental health of the population. Here are some snippets:-
How does nature make us feel? Much, of course, depends on what else is important in our lives. Is it a
good or a bad day? Irrespective of where we come from, it seems that the presence of living things makes
us feel good. They help us when we feel stressed, and if there is green vegetation, blue sky and water in the
scene, then we like it even more. This idea that the quality of nature affects our mental health is not a new
one, but it has not greatly affected the planning of our urban and rural environments, nor the setting of
public health priorities.
There is substantial evidence that links the natural environment with good physical health and
psychological well-being.
In the face of widespread and growing threats to the natural environment, two major arguments about
the need for conservation have come to dominate: the environment should be conserved for ethical
(Leopold, 1949; Eckersley, 1999) or economic (Costanza et al., 1997; Sandifer et al., 2004) reasons.
Relatively little attention, though, has been paid to the potential emotional and health benefits. Nature
and livings things, it seems, tend to make most people feel good (Kellert and Wilson, 1993; Maller et
al., 2002).
the social and physical environment has long been known to influence mental well-being,
affect behaviour, interpersonal relationships and actual mental states, as well as shape relations with
nature. The design of the built and natural environment thus matters for mental health (Newman,
1980; Freeman, 1984, 1998; Halpern, 1995; Kaplan et al., 1998; Pretty and Ward, 2001).
I have long felt that this idea of the natural beauty of our environment contributing to our mental and emotional well-being (and by implication its destruction being harmful to it) should be at least a part of our deliberations about what SSE are proposing here. I know the dangers of selective quotation, but this paper seems at a first glance to bear out my contention.