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The mess
we're in
British weights and measures are in a mess.
On the one hand, the international metric system (SI) is the official,
legal system for most purposes in the UK. Yet, at the same time, much
of British everyday life remains untouched by the metric system and continues
to use imperial units. Consider the following examples:
Metric |
Imperial
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| Most of British industry and government, including major companies,
the NHS, the armed forces, the police and local authorities, use
the metric system in their internal operations and in some of their
public or official communications. |
In everyday conversation, many British people freely use feet,
stones, acres and miles per gallon, while even people who use metric
units in their work (e.g. as designers, maths teachers or engineers)
feel faintly uncomfortable or embarrassed at using metres, kilograms
or hectares outside the workplace. Much of the non-specialist media
gives primarily imperial units (rarely with metric equivalents).
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| Schools teach mathematics and science primarily in metric. |
Outside the maths or science lesson, many schoolteachers continue
to use imperial units. |
| Some British sports (including rugby union, athletics and swimming)
use metres and kilometres. |
Football commentators refer to "the eighteen yard box". |
| Roads are designed and buildings constructed using exclusively
metres. Regulations for the dimensions of parking bays, road signs and road markings are given in metric units. Commercial vehicles
are required to be equipped with tachographs which record using kilometre-based
measurements. |
Distance signs and speed limits are exclusively in miles, yards
and miles per hour, whilst feet and inches predominate in height
and width restrictions. |
| Court orders to restrain the movement of an individual are specified
in metres. |
Descriptions of criminals wanted by the police are given by the
media exclusively in imperial units. |
| All British meteorological measurement, whether temperature, rainfall
or visibility, uses metric units. Many weather reports and forecasts
in the media give temperatures wholly or mainly in degrees Celsius. |
Holiday brochures often give summer temperatures in degrees Fahrenheit. |
| Most shops (especially larger stores and supermarkets) give prices
per kilogram or litre. |
Many market traders and some small shopkeepers display weights
in pounds and ounces - sometimes (in defiance of the law) without
their metric equivalent. |
| Planning applications and permissions must be expressed exclusively
in metric measurements. DIY and garden supplies are sold in metric
quantities. |
Estate agents give floor space in square feet and room and garden
dimensions in feet and inches. |
| Ordnance Survey maps give distances and heights in kilometres
and metres respectively. |
How did we get into this mess?
How has Britain got into this mess? And why have successive British
governments been so reluctant to bring the changeover saga (which began in 1965) to a conclusion? Why has it been so difficult
to persuade British people to accept the obvious benefits of the changeover?
Regrettably, the answer must be that successive governments have lacked
the political courage to carry through a necessary reform.
- By failing to argue the case for what they knew to be right, by pretending
that the change could be made voluntarily without overt government
backing, by sheltering behind European Directives, they have allowed
opposition to grow and misconceptions to fester.
- They have done nothing to counter the mistaken perception (encouraged
by the media and now very widely believed by the general population)
that the metric system has been imposed on Britain by an undemocratic,
foreign bureaucracy.
- They have failed to publicise adequately the truth - namely, that
the decision to go metric was taken by the elected British government
as long ago as 1965 (well before our entry to the EEC), that the European
Directives were freely agreed by British ministers in the European
Council, and that the necessary legislation (both primary and secondary)
has been passed by the British Parliament.
- Furthermore, even when making decisive changes such as introducing
metric labelling on packages in 1995 and metric weighing at the point
of sale in 2000, governments have chosen not to organise significant
information campaigns to prepare the public for change. As a result
the public has often been ill-prepared and has felt that the changes
were introduced by stealth.
- Lastly, the failure to make changes in a well-coordinated and rapid
way has meant that the British public has not benefited from the consistency
of the metric system. There is no rationale for introducing metric
labelling on packaged food in 1995 and waiting five years for metric
weighing of loose food in 2000. There is no sense in introducing the
sale of petrol in litres in the late 1980s and keeping road distances
in miles. In both examples the consumer has been left struggling with
two systems at once.
The result of this feeble reliance on a voluntary and gradual approach
has been that progress has been excruciatingly slow - and in some fields
virtually imperceptible. It is not too much to say that the voluntary
approach has failed - a failure of government.
Read UKMA’s Report ‘A very British mess’
For a more complete analysis of Britain’s measurement unit mess
and how to fix it, read UKMA’s report. A very British mess, which
was launched by Lord Howe of Aberavon on 8 July 2004 is now available
in an attractive hardcopy format. The report is printed as a 64 page
paperback in full colour. The report draws attention to Britain's measurement
unit mess caused by failing to complete the conversion from imperial
to metric units. The report explains how Britain got into the mess, why
it is important and how to get out of the mess.
The report can be ordered from your bookshop using ISBN 0750310146. The
recommended retail price is £12.50. For more information on the report and
how to order it click here
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