Leek Post & Times

Trust calls for more action on ‘nature’s recovery’

- ■ visit www.staffs-wildlife.org.uk/nature-deserves-better

STAFFORDSH­IRE Wildlife Trust (SWT) is calling on the community and local leaders to back a petition demanding the Government set more ambitious legally-binding targets for nature’s recovery.

The plea follows the publicatio­n of targets within the Environmen­t Act, which will set the legal framework for restoring nature for years to come, and a Nature Recovery Green Paper, which focusses on the protection of our most precious sites for wildlife. Consultati­on on these papers ends on Wednesday, May 11.

The proposals will fail to stop nature’s decline, let alone enable it to recover. Therefore, the Trust and colleagues around the country are campaignin­g for significan­t changes.

For the past 50 years, habitat loss has led to a drastic decline in nature. UK wildlife population­s are the lowest they have ever been.

The Government’s target is to halt wildlife decline by 2030 and increase species abundance by 10 per cent by 2042. If, as expected, wildlife continues to decline for the rest of the decade, it could mean that wildlife is less abundant by 2042 than it is now.

The current targets could see Staffordsh­ire lose species such as snipe, curlew, lapwing and willow tit. Already threatened species such as water voles, white-clawed crayfish, and black oil beetles would also face extinction.

Instead, the Government should set a target to increase the abundance of species by at least 20 per cent by 2042 compared to 2022 levels.

The Government’s Nature Recovery Green Paper also falls short.

The extent and quality of our most precious wildlife habitats are crucial to nature’s recovery, and in its 25 Year Environmen­t Plan, published in 2021, the Government previously committed to achieving ‘favourable condition’ for 75 per cent of protected sites. Favourable condition’ means that sites are being managed so that the wildlife living there is thriving. However, a target for this is missing from the Paper entirely.

In Staffordsh­ire, we have 67 designated Sites of Special Scientific Interests (SSSIS) including iconic places such The Roaches, pictured above, and Cannock Chase. However, only a third of these sites are classed as being in a favourable condition. Many are home to threatened species so if they aren’t improved, those species will be lost. The Government should set a habitats target for at least 75 per cent of our finest wildlife sites to be in ‘favourable’ condition by 2042.

Using present day levels as a benchmark is misleading and will not lead to an increase in wildlife. Instead, the Government should set a target to increase the abundance of species by at least 20 per cent by 2042 compared to 2022 levels.

Liz Peck, Advocacy and Campaigns Manager for SWT, said:

“Over the past five decades, our wildlife has dramatical­ly declined and one in ten species in England is on the brink of extinction. Without positive action, things will only get worse. The Government must introduce more ambitious targets. “In Staffordsh­ire, we need to improve the ecological condition of protected sites and expand the amount protected, connecting new sites to the existing site network.

“We’re calling for our community to back our national petition and have also asked MPS to take action. We must all demand better for wildlife.”

Significan­t gaps also remain in the proposed Environmen­t Act targets, including no overall target for the ecological condition of rivers and streams beyond 2027, when the target mandated under the EU’S Water Framework Directive expires.

Currently, of the Trent Valley watercours­es in Staffordsh­ire, only 1 out of 41 is of good ecological status. 14 are rated as ‘moderate,’ 22 ‘poor’ and four are ‘bad.’

Liz adds: “We have some of the worst-quality rivers in Europe. In England, only 14 per cent of rivers achieve ‘good ecological status.’ Pollution from agricultur­e, sewage, roads and plastics is destroying freshwater habitats and making our rivers dangerous. The Government needs to set a long-term target for at least 75 per cent of rivers, streams and other freshwater bodies to reach an overall “clean waters” status by 2042.”

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