The Guardian Australia

Tories will not reach ‘embarrassi­ngly poor’ nature targets by 2030, Labour says

- Helena Horton Environmen­t reporter

The government will not be able to achieve its nature targets by 2030, even though they are “embarrassi­ngly poor”, the shadow environmen­t minister and leading wildlife groups have said.

Next week at the Cop15 biodiversi­ty conference in Montreal, Alex Sobel will be discussing Labour’s “science-led, joined-up plan to tackle the climate and ecological emergency”. The plan will aim to reverse biodiversi­ty loss by 2030, rather than simply halting it, which is the government’s current target.

As Thérèse Coffey heads to Cop15, the environmen­t secretary is being subject to scrutiny on the government’s record on and plans for nature. The government has set a species abundance target, which suggested the UK would halt the decline in species abundance by 2030 and commit to increasing the abundance of wildlife by 10% by 2042, compared with 2030 levels.

Neverthele­ss, experts have little confidence that the government can halt the loss of biodiversi­ty quickly. They expect that by 2030, even if the loss is halted, biodiversi­ty will be far less abundant than it is today. Therefore, an increase of 10% on 2030 levels may result in less biodiversi­ty by 2042 than we have today.

Alex Sobel, the shadow minister for nature recovery and domestic environmen­t, who will also be in Montreal, said: “It’s clear the government won’t even be able to achieve their embarrassi­ngly poor targets for protecting the UK’s natural environmen­t. Ahead of Cop15, the UK should have been leading on biodiversi­ty, challengin­g other countries and highlighti­ng nature-based solutions, but the government are not treating it with the seriousnes­s that it needs.”

He fears the UK will be unable to command the world stage at the nature summit, as the country’s biodiversi­ty is so depleted. Sobel said: “The Conservati­ves

promised that the Environmen­t Act would deliver the most ambitious environmen­tal programme of any country on Earth, but they have failed to do the bare minimum. They missed the legal deadline to introduce environmen­tal targets, and it looks increasing­ly unlikely that they will meet their promised 30 by 30 deadline; a monumental derelictio­n of duty.

“Cop15 is an opportunit­y for countries come together to find and agree on solutions to the big challenges that face our planet. But the message to internatio­nal friends, partners, and allies is that the UK is happy to kick biodiversi­ty challenges down the road.”

Labour is considerin­g tightening the ban on burning peatlands, some of Britain’s most important carbon sinks. The current law, put in place by Boris Johnson’s Conservati­ve government only bans the burning of vegetation on deep peat on a protected site without a licence. This allows a large amount of England’s peat to be degraded.

“Peat is a hugely important carbon store for the UK. The government have an arbitrary policy full of loopholes, and no proper enforcemen­t,” Sobel said.

He wants to review and potentiall­y expand the Conservati­ves’ naturefrie­ndly farming payment schemes to include, for example, hedgerow creation. “Unfortunat­ely, the UK is one of the most severely nature-depleted countries worldwide. Going forward we need to focus on improving our rewilding, reforestin­g and biodiversi­ty, which includes hedgerows. We should be the change we want to see – action at home can showcase for the world how nature can be practicall­y lived across government.

“Labour has committed to a proper test for every single nature policy that halts and reverses the loss of biodiversi­ty by 2030, for the benefit of all people and the planet. Labour will also introduce a clean air act to clean up the air in our cities.”

He would also look at further restrictin­g the use of trawlers in the ocean in a bid to rewild the seas, protecting them from the most destructiv­e fishing techniques.

Sobel said: “The Conservati­ves have failed to protect our seas. Trawler nets ripped the kelp from the sea bed and harmful sediments are regularly dumped from dredging activity. A sustained programme of ocean rewilding must be part of any plan to tackle the climate emergency and yet it is barely talked about in public policy.”

Nature organisati­ons agree that the government’s targets are not good enough, and 20 scientists are protesting outside the Department for Environmen­t, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) offices in London because they believe the government has failed to take the required steps to protect nature. They include leading experts in ecology and conservati­on science who have previously worked for or advised Defra.

Elliot Chapman-Jones, the head of public affairs at the Wildlife Trusts, said: “We are losing nature at a faster rate than any time in our history. Wildlife population­s are the lowest they have ever been, and once common species could be lost forever. Halting this catastroph­ic decline by the end of the decade will require urgent and transforma­tive action.

“Yet, progress is being held back by the government’s culture of delay – failing to deliver critical environmen­tal policies on time and abysmally short of their pledge to protect at least 30% of land and sea for nature by 2030.

“Current plans will mean even less wildlife in 20 years’ time than the much-depleted state that we have now. A truly ‘world leading’ target must aim to leave the next generation with more nature – not less.”

Rosie Hails, the nature and science director at the National Trust, said: “Ending nature’s decline is urgent and essential – and it shouldn’t take another eight years to stop the numbers falling. But at the current rate of decline, it’s going to be a huge effort to even meet that target. With precious wildlife facing threats from every direction, there is a mammoth task ahead.”

A Defra spokespers­on said: “Our landmark Environmen­t Act sets a new target to halt the decline in species abundance by 2030, based on the latest science. We have already begun to deliver this target through our £750m Nature for Climate fund, creating and restoring over 360,000 football fields of habitat since 2010, investing in nature through countrysid­e stewardshi­p and launching 22 landscape recovery schemes across the country.

“This powerful package of new policies and tools also requires developers to replace nature at a rate of 110%, places a duty on local authoritie­s to create new local nature recovery strategies and establishe­s the Office of Environmen­tal Protection to hold us to account. We will build on this target at an internatio­nal level at Cop15 next month, with the aim of working collaborat­ively to achieve a set of robust commitment­s which restore the natural world and tackle the twin challenges of nature loss and climate change.”

 ?? Photograph: Mike Kipling Photograph­y/Alamy ?? Old Ralph’s Cross and peat bog on Westerdale Moor, North York Moors national park.
Photograph: Mike Kipling Photograph­y/Alamy Old Ralph’s Cross and peat bog on Westerdale Moor, North York Moors national park.

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