The Peterborough Evening Telegraph

Britain’s national parks

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Polls show 83 per cent of Britons want to see much wilder national parks. Government action to make this happen would allow the parks to do far more to tackle the nature and climate emergencie­s, while offering fresh opportunit­ies for local communitie­s and economies.

Some parts of our national parks are beautiful and wildlife-rich. But despite many superb conservati­on initiative­s, national parks, as a whole, are ecological shadows of what they could be, with key native

species often missing or de- clining.

In England’s national parks, three-quarters of nature reserves are in a poor condition. There is less woodland cover in the Yorkshire Dales than London, less in the Peak District than Leeds, and less in the Lake District than Sheffield.

Rewilding – large-scale nature restoratio­n – offers hope. There is huge scope for more locally led initiative­s to restore native woodlands, moorlands, peatlands, wetlands, rivers and marine habitats, without losing productive farmland or farming heritage. Inspiring rewilding initiative­s in the national parks include Wild Haweswater and Wild Ennerdale in the Lake District, Ingleborou­gh National Nature Reserve in the Yorkshire Dales, and the Wild Peak initiative in the Peak District. Yet despite the 2019 independen­t Glover Review into England’s national parks recommendi­ng setting up Wilder Areas, ministers have yet to act.

Rewilding Britain is urging the UK Government to rewild 10 per cent of our national parks, with nature recovery areas across another 50 per cent. Without this, the Prime Minister’s pledge to protect 30 per cent of Britain for nature by 2030 simply isn’t credible. I would like to ask your readers to sign our public petition calling for the government to create wilder national parks at bitly.com/WNPpetitio­n. Rebecca Wrigley

Chief executive Rewilding Britain

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