In a move that has sent shivers down the spines of hairdressers, estate agents, and anyone with a receding hairline and a midlife crisis, His Majesty’s Government has announced draconian new emissions regulations that threaten to drive the convertible car to the brink of extinction. The open-top motoring experience, that most glorious of British traditions (just behind queueing and complaining about the weather), is to be sacrificed on the altar of environmental piety.
But let us not mince words. This is not about saving the planet. This is a calculated act of cultural vandalism. The convertible is the automotive equivalent of a jazz musician: impractical, noisy, and perpetually exposed to the elements. It is the car of choice for the optimist, the hedonist, and the frankly delusional. And now, the bureaucrats in their sensible saloons have decided that we must all conform to the bland, hermetically sealed future of electric hatchbacks.
I can picture the scene in Whitehall. A room full of men and women who have never experienced the sheer, unadulterated joy of accelerating through a tunnel with the roof down and the stereo blasting “Bohemian Rhapsody.” They sit there, crunching numbers on clipboards, calculating grams of CO2 per kilometre, and they declare that the convertible must die. They don’t care that it makes you feel alive. They don’t care that it is the only form of transport that allows you to simultaneously enjoy a Cornetto and the smell of freshly cut grass. They care about targets. About deadlines. About the all-consuming, soul-destroying tyranny of net zero.
And what of the alternatives? The electric convertible? A contradiction in terms. You cannot have an open-top electric car. Where would the wind noise come from? The soundtrack of a convertible is the roaring engine, the whistling wind, the screams of a terrified passenger. An electric convertible would be like a silent disco: all the gesturing, none of the catharsis.
But do not despair, my fellow hedonists. The British spirit is not so easily crushed. We will find ways to subvert the system. We will retrofit vintage drop-tops with hybrid engines, or perhaps simply run them on the tears of eco-warriors. We will hold clandestine meetings in multi-storey car parks, gossiping about the good old days when you could buy a Mazda MX-5 without a moral quandary.
Until then, I will be found at the nearest pub, mourning the death of freedom with a large gin and tonic, watching the drizzle fall on an empty car park, dreaming of a world where the wind still whistles through one’s hair and the sun still warms one’s bald patch.








