The UK is home to species found nowhere else on Earth. But immense pressure from decades of pollution and habitat loss has driven wildlife into catastrophic decline. Shockingly, 1 in 6 species in the UK is now at risk of extinction.
Nature is declining at a speed never previously seen and shows no sign of slowing. It is no longer enough to just protect the wildlife that remains – we need the next UK Government to align across departments to put nature into recovery, on land and at sea, by the end of the next Parliament.
Nature is vital to us all – for the food we eat, the water we drink, the air we breathe, and the space to help us feel secure, happy, and healthy. In recent years, we have also seen increasing numbers of people actively looking for ways to access nature close to where they live. Without urgent action to bring wildlife back from the brink, communities across the UK risk bearing an unimaginable cost.
In Warwickshire, we're working towards this goal by reintroducing species such as the hazel dormouse, and benefitting threatened bittern, water vole, willow tit and white-clawed crayfish through its ‘Reviving our Wetlands’ project. But there is more work to be done.
To bring back our lost wildlife and put it on a path to recovery, we’re calling on all political parties to...
Make more space for nature
To reverse the declines of wildlife, more places are needed for nature. Currently, just 3% of land and 8% of English waters are properly protected for nature – this is nowhere near enough. The next UK Government should launch an Olympic-style cross-government delivery project to protect and restore at least 30% of land and sea for nature by 2030.
Stop damage to Marine Protected Areas
We might not have coastline in Warwickshire, but the UK’s seas are being poisoned by sewage discharges and river pollution is draining into them on a daily basis. Even our protected areas at sea are being damaged by unsustainable development and destructive fishing methods such as bottom trawling. It must stop. Marine Protected Areas should be properly protected – with destructive practices banned and development avoided.
Bring wild beavers back to every county
Beavers are nature’s finest ‘wetland engineers’. Returning beavers to the wild can be a game changer for restoring lost wetlands and benefitting all kinds of wildlife. Moreover, beavers can help to reduce the risk of wildfires and flooding which threaten people’s homes. Bringing back wild beavers to every county in England is a critical part of addressing the climate and nature crises.
What we want to see is not words, but rhetoric; not empty promises but a government that acts. Positive, long term action to help our biodiversity recover.Wildlife TV Presenter and Vice President, The Wildlife Trusts