The Guardian Australia

Ministers’ nature policies ‘cover up’ environmen­tal failings, wildlife groups say

- Helena Horton Environmen­t reporter

Ministers are “window dressing” with nature policies announced to “cover up” the government’s failings on environmen­tal targets, wildlife groups have said.

The Office for Environmen­tal Protection (OEP) found earlier this month that nature in England is at risk of falling into an “irreversib­le spiral of decline” because of the government’s failures to meet its legally binding targets on species abundance and water quality.

Instead of providing a detailed response to the OEP, the government has issued an announceme­nt that it will ban the industrial fishing of sandeels to celebrate a year since it announced its legally binding environmen­tal improvemen­t plan (EIP) targets. These targets are to replace the oversight of the EU and are part of the Environmen­t Act 2021.

Ministers announced in 2022 they were planning to ban the fishing of sandeels, subject to consultati­on.

Joan Edwards, the director of policy and public affairs at The Wildlife Trusts, said: “No amount of window dressing can cover up the fact that the UK government has failed its environmen­tal targets.

“The Office for Environmen­tal Protection has already revealed that progress on around half the government’s nature goals is either static or moving in the wrong direction.

“Of 23 environmen­tal targets assessed, none were found where progress was demonstrab­ly on track. So it’s hard to welcome the government’s attempt to put a positive spin on their appalling record of continuing nature declines, river pollution, authorisat­ion of a bee-killing pesticide, and failure to implement the promised peat ban.”

Environmen­tal experts have said the Department for Environmen­t, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) still has not shared how it plans to halt the decline of nature by 2030 while species including insects and birds are still falling in abundance.

Richard Benwell, the chief executive of Wildlife and Countrysid­e Link, said: “The closure of sandeel fisheries and restrictio­ns on bottom-trawling in protected areas are excellent decisions.

“The urgent question still remains how Defra will scale up and speed up action to halt nature’s decline by 2030,

after last week’s warning from its wildlife watchdog, the OEP.

“For [the] government to get back on track to meet its legal targets, today’s announceme­nts mustn’t just be a birthday present for the EIP, but the start of a new normal in nature-focused decisions across Whitehall.”

Ministers have said these announceme­nts are part of a package that will help nature improve. The closure of the sandeel fishery will take place in English waters in the North Sea from April.

The government has also announced further targeted restrictio­ns on damaging bottom trawling and promised a new framework for national parks and protected areas to help them better deliver for nature.

Steve Barclay, the environmen­t secretary, said: “We’ve made a lot of progress since we launched the EIP – we’ve planted nearly 5m trees, improved public access to our beautiful countrysid­e and accelerate­d the adoption of our world-leading farming schemes.

“Protecting the environmen­t is fundamenta­l to the prosperity of our country and our new commitment­s will drive forward our mission to create a cleaner and greener country for all.”

 ?? Photograph: Mark L Stanley/Getty Images ?? A puffin with a bill full of sandeels. The government has said it will ban the industrial fishing of sandeels to celebrate a year since it announced its environmen­tal improvemen­t plan (EIP) targets.
Photograph: Mark L Stanley/Getty Images A puffin with a bill full of sandeels. The government has said it will ban the industrial fishing of sandeels to celebrate a year since it announced its environmen­tal improvemen­t plan (EIP) targets.

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