The Scotsman

Brexit could have a massive impact on the cash available to preserve our wildlife

Anne Mccall reports on worries over funding from the European Union

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Perusing the media, you’d be forgiven for assuming that news on the global environmen­t is uniformly, relentless­ly negative. It seems that humanity is powerless to make positive changes. On the other hand, many in Scotland see our otters and bumblebees, eagles, wildflower­s and seals, and assume that the environmen­t here is managing just fine. These assumption­s are understand­able – but neither is right.

Climate change, habitat loss, marine pollution, invasive species and a host of other apocalypti­c horsemen unquestion­ably proceed across the planet. They have severe impacts on the natural environmen­t, and Scotland is not immune. More than half of our seabird population­s, for example, have been in long-term decline for more than 30 years, with kittiwakes and Arctic terns down by more than 70 per cent. They face pressures from climate change, invasive species on breeding islands, pollution and damaging developmen­ts.

Our native Caledonian pinewoods are at just 1 per cent of their original area, fragmented into vulnerable islands. Yet there are extraordin­ary successes where people have protected and enhanced the wildlife that shares our planet and our country.

Among the least appreciate­d is the impact of EU wildlife legislatio­n – the Nature Directives – and, in particular, the EU LIFE Nature fund. The nature directives require EU member states to protect wildlife, with special measures for those species in most trouble.

This means countries must create positively managed protected areas at the very best wildlife sites with legal boundaries determined by ecology, rather than vested interests. Government­s are held to account if protected wildlife falls into unfavourab­le condition at those sites. This body of law was recently tested in a rigorous formal assessment of its ‘fitness for purpose’ across the EU.

The outcome was an eye-opener. Whilst the challenge of halting all biodiversi­ty loss has not yet been achieved, the status and trends of species and habitats protected by the directives would be significan­tly worse in their absence, and improvemen­ts are taking place where there are targeted actions at a sufficient scale. Moreover, the analysis found that the multiple benefits of the directives, estimated at 200-300 billion euros per year, significan­tly exceed identified costs. The EU nature directives benefit not only wildlife – with all the associated cultural, social, educationa­l and health benefits – but they make economic sense too.

The key point of the analysis, however, is that this happens only when the directives are properly and effectivel­y implemente­d. This is where the LIFE Nature fund comes in.

It is available to any organisati­on working in the EU and it funds specific projects, each typically lasting 3-5 years, costing between 1-10 million euros. This combinatio­n of strong legislatio­n, plus implementa­tion support, has made these environmen­tal laws among the most

effective on earth. Scotland has benefited enormously: since the LIFE Nature fund’s inception, it has funded more than 25 projects, bringing in well over £25 million for conservati­on delivery – 21 per cent of the UK total. And this money, of course, freed additional funds from elsewhere.

Among the beneficiar­ies are Atlantic salmon; the freshwater pearl mussel; the corncrake; the Flow Country peatlands; Caledonian pinewoods; upland invertebra­tes; the red squirrel; machair grasslands; seabirds on Canna and the Shiants; the Celtic rainforest; the porpoise; and the hen harrier.

Now, however, our wildlife faces a twin crisis. With Brexit, regardless of wider pros and cons, we face the possibilit­y of weakening wildlife legislatio­n, and loss of funding. This comes at a time when the funding for nature conservati­on in general is massively challenged in Scotland.

Scottish Natural Heritage budgets have been cut; the Heritage Lottery Fund is over-subscribed, and its income is shrinking. Moreover, a recent report found that private foundation funding for environmen­tal causes in England and Wales was 20 times as much as that in Scotland.

Cabinet Secretary Roseanna Cunningham has made genuinely progressiv­e statements that, postbrexit, Scotland would retain environmen­tal legislatio­n at least as strong as that in place now. This is a welcome, indeed essential, commitment.

But, without explicit commitment to dedicated funding support for the conservati­on of Scottish wildlife and ecosystems, we risk effective implementa­tion, and all the benefits that brings, becoming little more than a memory. Anne Mccall, director, RSPB Scotland.

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