Access All Areas June 2020 | Page 17

JUNE | FEATURE How did you come to work in events, and can you give us a brief overview of the different roles you hold within the industry? I think event organising chose me. As a teenager I was a party organiser for school events and club nights, and at college I was involved with putting on loads of live music. Twenty years ago I ‘found myself’ in a Devon field with 120 friends, a rusty farmers trailer for a stage, and a couple of portaloos. The five friends behind that event are the board of Shambala (Kambe Events) today. As Operations Director for Shambala, I’ve always straddled operations and site management, keeping a very keen eye on sustainability. It helps to be a company Director and manage operations at the same time if you want to engrain sustainability into the life of an organisation. I’m ‘affectionately’ known as a benevolent dictator in this respect. As a result of a relentless ambition to implement sustainability at Shambala and on an industry-wide scale, I’ve grown into a few roles over the years. These include Chair of Vision:2025 – the outdoor events industry environmental steering group – and co-founder and CEO of UK charity Energy Revolution, which is currently rebranding as ecolibrium. decimated industry is trying to chart a course for survival, and individual businesses struggle to stay viable and innovate, it’s hard to predict whether sustainability will remain such a focus for the majority. Thinking more medium-term, however, I hope that we don’t collectively forget that climate change is an existential threat that hasn’t been ‘postponed’, and that we still have to dramatically change how we do things to reduce emissions. If we don’t take this opportunity to design sustainable best practice into our DNA, then I believe Covid and the current economic challenges will seem merely a warning shot in the scheme of things to come. How many people are on the team at Shambala? Are you getting all the support you need from the government? Shambala is a team of 11 in the office all year round and various superstar freelancers. Like so many of our festival organiser friends in the industry, this year is tough. We have in place a combination of what most events are doing: furloughing staff (most of the team currently), applying for a CBIL loan, prudent spending plans, working with our partners, and some help from our audience I expect. Contrary to the headlines from the Association of Independent Festivals about 92% of independent festivals not surviving, we are not at risk as a business. In terms of government support, we would welcome more. I do believe there are grounds for additional support due to the seasonal nature of our businesses and the important role that culture and events play. The unique nature of some festival businesses relying on one hit of income annually is a vulnerability. Unlike businesses in other sectors that could ‘resume trading’ in the coming months, many event businesses have lost a full year’s unrecoverable income and incurred costs. The industry associations such as AIF have yet again showed their value to the sector in representing events and music business to government. We’ve seen a few stories about ‘drive-in’ events as a solution to social distancing. Do you think this is a sustainable solution to our current problems? Let’s face it, nothing replaces a live crowd experience, but drive-in events are a great response to the current challenges. It’s an innovation, but likely either a short-lived phenomena or a minority interest by the nature of it – far fewer can attend. I guess if we have to live with social distancing for a long time, though, it could become a feature of everyday life. It’s a shame it revolves around the car from a climate perspective – we need to be moving away from private car use, which is tricky at this time. Thinking about this reminded me of Cineramageddon at Glastonbury, How will Covid-19 affect people’s attitudes towards sustainability? I believe this is the big question of our current moment in history, and it’s tricky to get a sense of where it’s going. As we’re all aware, there was real global momentum building for the sustainability conversation in 2019. Covid changed everything. Sustainability tends to be a victim of economic hardship and when a “A decimated industry is trying to chart a course for survival… but climate change and ecological breakdown haven’t been postponed until the 2021 event season.” 17