The Independent

Government­s must act now to protect our natural world

- REBECCA SPEIGHT

For millions of us trapped at home earlier this year, nature probably never sounded louder: blackbirds singing with no cars to drown them out, blue tits busying themselves about their nests, and the gentle hum of bees in the garden. It kept us going when we needed it most.

The reality, of course, is that nature is facing a crisis of its own and our springs are falling silent. Over 40 million birds have vanished from UK skies in the past 50 years, and just last week the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) reported that global wildlife population­s have fallen by two-thirds since 1970.

Phrases like “wake-up call” have little meaning any more. Australia, the Amazon, the Arctic and California

have all been ablaze; temperatur­es are rising and glaciers are melting. Closer to home, population­s of turtle doves, nightingal­es and swifts are all in freefall.

A decade ago, the world signed up to something called the Aichi Targets – 20 targets to save our natural world. This week we’ll get the final report, and unsurprisi­ngly we expect it to show that we’ve collective­ly failed to make any real progress. Yet again.

The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) believes that the UK may have met as few as three of the 20 targets it agreed to a decade ago, and our analysis shows that in six areas, including protection of sites and species, the UK has gone backwards.

How our government responds and whether it truly grasps the scale of the challenge over the coming years is going to be crucial, not just for wildlife and for people in the UK, but around the world.

Scientists agree that the destructio­n of natural habitats and the trade in wild animals have increased the risk of disease outbreaks like Covid-19. They have also made it clear that without action to protect and restore nature, we have no chance of controllin­g climate change or adapting to its impacts.

We should back the call for protecting 30 per cent of our land and sea for nature by 2030, and we should enshrine this in law with other targets to restore population­s of wild species

The UK government, as host of the UN climate summit in Glasgow next year, has already expressed its ambition to be a global leader in the fight to save nature and to drive forward what are known as naturebase­d solutions to climate change, such as creating native woodlands and restoring peat bogs to store carbon, or creating wetlands to protect communitie­s from flooding.

These are the all-too-rare success stories from around the world, that if scaled up rapidly over the next decade could address the climate crisis, halt the crisis facing nature and put it – and us – on a path to recovery by 2030. There are suggestion­s that the prime minister himself is expected to repeat these pledges at a UN summit later this month.

As world leaders plan to agree in 2021 a new set of what are, quite frankly, last-chance-saloon targets for nature, the UK government’s level of commitment towards its own wildlife is going to be crucial. Without action at home, there is no chance of inspiring a credible global effort.

Does the fate of our climate and our natural world therefore rest with Boris Johnson, his cabinet and the collective leadership of the four countries of the UK? In no small part, it does.

We need to spur the government on towards real leadership at home and on the internatio­nal stage, and ensure that the next decade is not again lost to inaction.

We believe that there are some simple steps that need to happen now if we are going to make the next 10 years count. We should back the call for protecting 30 per cent of our land and sea for nature by 2030, and we should enshrine this in law with other targets to restore population­s of wild species. To achieve these goals, we also need to act now on scandals such as the continued burning of heather on our precious peat bogs.

Above all, the government­s of the world, and particular­ly those of the UK, need to demonstrat­e how a new set of global targets will genuinely make a difference this time. This includes transformi­ng the way we farm and fish, the way we generate electricit­y, and the way we plan the built environmen­t. It also means

providing the funding to deliver for nature at a meaningful scale in the upcoming comprehens­ive spending review.

It is time to turn promises about global environmen­tal leadership into action. The response to a lost decade for nature cannot be more of the same. We have to grasp the opportunit­y to revive our world and it has to be now.

Beccy Speight is chief executive at the RSPB. RSPB’s Revive Our World campaign is pushing for legally binding targets to restore nature and a green recovery across all government­s of the UK. Go to RSPB.org.uk/ReviveOurW­orld to join the call for action

 ?? (RSPB) ?? The decline in the turtle dove population is the steepest of any bird in the UK
(RSPB) The decline in the turtle dove population is the steepest of any bird in the UK

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