The Scotsman

Investing in the natural world pays dividends, writes Jonny Hughes

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The storms which devastated parts of Scotland over Christmas and New Year three years ago cost the Scottish economy up to £700 million. The cost to the NHS of air pollution is estimated at £2 billion a year, and historic overfishin­g of our seas has cost us tens of billions in lost profits over many decades.

Incurring such costs also has social and environmen­tal consequenc­es as jobs are threatened and the natural world is damaged. So rather than spending money on fixing these problems after the fact, is there a way of stopping them happening in the first place?

This stitch-in-time approach to public policy is called ‘preventati­ve spend’ and it can be so successful it’s a wonder why we don’t do it more often. Over the past 10 years, the Scottish Government has been investing in NHS smoking cessation services, a programme that seeks to reduce the annual cost of fighting tobaccorel­ated illnesses, which amounts to £300m.

Last year, a report for Westminste­r’s All-party Parliament­ary Group on Smoking and Health found these programmes could deliver expected returns of 1,100 per cent over five years. Where else might we get such astonishin­g returns on investment of public funds?

An overlooked area for preventati­ve spend is Scotland’s natural capital, essentiall­y another term for assets like air, water, soil, minerals, plants and animals. These combine to form ecosystems which, when in a healthy state, yield valuable flows of benefits to people including clean air and water, nutritious food, renewable energy and raw materials for infrastruc­ture and goods.

Ecosystems also provide us with less obvious benefits – 90 per cent of human diseases are treated with drugs derived from nature. In Scotland, we now more fully understand how woodlands and peatlands protect us from floods, lock away carbon, and help our physical and mental well-being. Investing in the restoratio­n and conservati­on of nature will help maximise these benefits and could save us all money.

Pickering in Yorkshire has been using preventati­ve spend to tackle flooding. In 2007, during its fourth flood in 10 years, the town suffered damage amounting to almost £7m. When funding for a flood wall was rejected due to a cost of £20m, a group of local authoritie­s, landowners and regulatory agencies planted 40,000 trees, restored drained moorland and installed ‘leaky dams’ along streams. This investment in nature, costing just over five per cent of the original £20m budget, saved the town from the disastrous 2015 Christmas floods which inflicted an estimated £1.6 billion of damage across northern England.

Schemes like that are being replicated across the UK with largely positive results. The Office for National Statistics recently reported that green spaces in cities save NHS England over £211m by reducing air pollution. Another study found a weekly 30-minute visit to a city park reduces the prevalence of high blood pressure in the population by 9 per cent and reduces depression rates by 7 per cent.

This week, the Scottish Forum on Natural Capital and Scottish Natural Heritage will be holding a roundtable for public sector agencies on how preventati­ve spend on natural capital could create a greener, healthier and more prosperous Scotland. You can follow its progress through @Scotnatcap on Twitter. Jonny Hughes is chief executive of the Scottish Wildlife Trust. Follow him on Twitter @Jonnyecolo­gy

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