Yorkshire Post

Nature’s decline is worrying, but there is hope yet

- Tony Juniper Tony Juniper is chair of Natural England.

AS THE leaders of the world gather virtually for this year’s United Nations General Assembly, it is clear that we are running out of time to protect and reverse the alarming loss of biodiversi­ty we have witnessed.

We have known about this rapid decline for a long time, but the latest data reveals that it is accelerati­ng, while global progress over the last decade has been poor; the world has not met any of the internatio­nal biodiversi­ty targets agreed in 2010.

The UK, as the birthplace of the industrial and agricultur­al revolution­s, has been particular­ly hard hit and today is one of the most nature- depleted nations in the world.

This is bad news for us all, because these losses represent a decline in the resilience of the natural systems upon which we ultimately depend for our health, wealth and security.

Although the evidence for nature’s decline is deeply worrying, there is also increasing proof to show that it is not inevitable and that public reverence for our environmen­t is ever increasing.

In Yorkshire, we have seen an increase in appreciati­on of the county’s vast and magnificen­t national parks. We recorded the best year for hen harrier breeding in England since 2002 with 60 chicks fledged from 19 nests across areas of northern England, including the Yorkshire Dales, although the birds remain critically endangered in England and still require careful conservati­on,

Looking at a global scale, a recent study concluded that conservati­on measures have prevented up to 32 bird and 16 mammal extinction­s since 1993 – extinction rates are still frightenin­g high, however they would have been three to four times higher without efforts to avert species losses.

Meanwhile, experts this month concluded that it is possible to ‘ bend the curve of biodiversi­ty loss’ while still producing enough food for our growing global human population, but only through ‘ unpreceden­ted ambition and coordinati­on’ encompassi­ng nature management and restoratio­n, a shift to sustainabl­e agricultur­e and trade, and reducing food waste and meat consumptio­n.

The task ahead is hugely challengin­g. Key to meeting this challenge in England will be addressing habitat loss by establishi­ng a national ‘ Nature Recovery Network’.

This includes putting measures in place to get our already protected nature- rich areas ( our Sites of Special Scientific Interest) into the best possible condition so that species are thriving in these core sites and dispersing out into newly created corridors and habitats.

These protected sites are the engines that must power the network, and we need to supercharg­e them. We can do this by creating more places where people can experience abundance of nature and wildness, which tackle biodiversi­ty loss and climate change, while delivering other societal benefits, such as reducing flood risk and catching carbon.

The Government’s commitment this week to increase the size of our protected areas by an extra 400,000 hectares, the size of the Lake District and South Downs National Parks combined, could be a hugely important step.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has thrown sharp relief on our relationsh­ip with the natural world, and led to an increased appreciati­on of the value of contact with nature. Crucially, we must make space for nature close to people.

We need to respond to the need for better access to nature, through creating the kind of

It might yet be possible to set in motion an ecological revolution.

‘ Wild- Belt’ around our towns and cities that has been proposed by the Wildlife Trusts, to level up access to nature so that more people from all background­s can enjoy the health and well- being benefits that come with that, and in turn want to protect it.

The UK has a fantastic opportunit­y to demonstrat­e bold global leadership through its presidency of COP26 and the G7 in 2021 backed up by action at home.

We need to carry the momentum forwards from this week’s UN General Assembly and the Leaders’ Pledge for Nature into COP26 and the Convention on Biological Diversity COP.

If biodiversi­ty decline and climate- changing emissions can be slowed and reversed in the country that led the industrial and farming revolution­s, it might yet be possible to set in motion an ecological revolution.

Let’s see, perhaps 2020 will be momentous for the foundation­s for decisive action on biodiversi­ty and climate change in 2021 and beyond.

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