The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Rewarding land managers for providing public goods

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On our upland farms there is plenty of scope to restore degraded peatlands in the hills and establish more woodland at lower levels. Healthy peatlands lock up carbon while absorbing and storing more. They can also act as giant sponges, holding back water during periods of high rainfall. Restoring degraded peatlands by re-vegetating bare areas and blocking ditches to re-wet the peat also stops the processes causing greenhouse gas emissions like methane.

Establishi­ng more woodland on the lower parts of our upland farms would make more shelter available to livestock exposed to increasing extreme weather events. But it would also provide more wildlife habitats and, if trees are planted in the right places, also help reduce downstream flooding by holding back the water from saturated moorlands.

The challenge on our lowland farms is to maintain profitable food production while increasing the diversity of habitats like woodlands, unmanaged field margins, wetlands and wooded riversides. These would benefit farmland biodiversi­ty and help capture nutrients and soil escaping from fields into watercours­es. Combining some of these elements with recreating meanders on rivers, establishi­ng field storage ponds to retain flood water, and managing those fields to reduce soil and water run-off would also provide ways of mitigating flood events by slowing the flow of water through the lowlands.

It is now being recognised that any public funding that goes to land managers in the future is going to have to be argued for – and justified – against other calls on funding such as education.

In order to make such arguments, it will be important that the public goods being delivered can be assessed in a costeffect­ive and transparen­t way.

A two-day conference in Edinburgh later this month will help inform the debate about how best to reward farmers, foresters and other land managers for delivering public goods from their land management practices. In particular it will provide a forum to help develop thinking of practical implementa­tion on the ground and what that means for policy developmen­t.

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