20 new nature projects across the country will receive funding to
create and restore critical habitat areas equivalent in total to
the size of York
Iconic species such as lapwings, water voles and dragonflies are
set to benefit as projects will restore saltmarsh, hedgerows and
heathlands
The Fund is expected to help achieve government’s ambitious
targets to protect 30% of land for nature by 2030
Lapwings, water voles and dragonflies are among the species to
benefit from new government funding awarded today (Friday 15th
March) to restore and create nature-rich landscapes across
England.
Twenty conservation projects
will each receive a share of £25 million from the Species
Survival Fund, with the ambition to restore over 3,300 hectares
of critical habitats for wildlife, such as the Atlantic
rainforest, grasslands, woodlands, and wetlands – a total area
equivalent to the size of York.
The projects, which span the length and breadth of the country
from Cornwall to Northumberland, will see over 11.5 kilometres of
chalk river corridor restored in Hertfordshire, coastal and
floodplain marsh improved in Dorset and chalky meadows recovered
across the high peak of
Derbyshire.
Grants of up to £3 million have
been awarded to projects run by wildlife charities, farmers, and
community groups to accelerate nature recovery and support
precious species. The Fund is being delivered by The National
Lottery Heritage Fund on behalf of Defra.
Successful projects that will
benefit from the fund include:
-
£1.7 million to Hertfordshire and Middlesex
Wildlife Trust to restore chalk rivers and create 49 hectares
of wetland habitat across Hertfordshire. Protecting this key
habitat will not only help to mitigate the impacts of climate
change by providing natural flood management but will also help
halt the decline of over 109 different species including water
voles, the UK’s fastest declining mammal.
-
£1.5 million awarded to support a partnership
in the North Wessex Downs Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty,
which will restore over 3 kilometres of chalk stream habitat,
enhance wet woodlands, and improve chalk grasslands. The
project will also see a new flower rich pasture planted,
supporting pollinators and insects to thrive.
-
£1.1 million to Groundwork Greater Manchester
to unlock a thriving nature corridor across the Medlock Valley.
The funding will support the restoration of a range of
grassland, riverbank, wetland, and woodland habitats that will
support species such as willow tit, waxcaps, and rare great
crested newts. The project will also work with volunteers to
connect local communities to nature as part of their everyday
lives.
Environment Minister,
, said:
“The funding awarded
today as part our flagship Species Survival Fund will enable
local authorities, landowners, farmers, and our protected
landscapes organisations to restore nature at scale and provide
valuable green jobs in the
process.
“Only by creating bigger and
better habitats for wildlife will we be able to halt the alarming
decline in species loss. This fund will be a key plank in
achieving our legally binding targets to halt species loss and
protect 30% land for nature by 2030.”
Eilish McGuinness,
Chief Executive at The National Lottery Heritage Fund,
said:
“We are delighted to be working
in partnership with Defra again to distribute funding for these
projects, which will support nature recovery by helping to boost
the quality and quantity of wildlife-rich habitats across
England. This partnership will further our vision for
heritage to be valued, cared for and sustained for everyone, now
and in the future.”
The government is going further
and faster for nature. Since the launch of the Environmental
Improvement Plan a year ago, the government has delivered more
than 50 significant commitments set out in the plan including
planting nearly 5 million trees, accelerating our world leading
farming schemes and becoming the first country in the world to
implement mandatory Biodiversity Net
Gain.
The Species Survival Fund
builds upon the success of similar initiatives like the Green Recovery Challenge Fund
and will create the foundations for ongoing expansion of habitats
to support our wildlife.
Notes
- The Fund is being delivered by The National Lottery Heritage
Fund on behalf of Defra.
- Projects include:
-
Mid-Cornwall Moors recovery – The project will
support a partnership of schools, farmers, and landowners in
restoring priority woodland and heathland
habitats, as well as species rich acidic
grasslands.
-
Restoration of lost habitats for a Wild Peak –
The project will support improvements to a dynamic mosaic of
habitats, including new woodlands and woodland edges, acid and
calcareous meadows.
-
Making space for nature in Dorset – 500
hectares of habitat will be created or revitalised across 18
sites, supporting mixed scrub, floodplain wetlands and purple
moor grass.
-
Coastal Grasslands Reconnected – Durham County
Council will receive funding to restore lowland meadow,
pasture, and grasslands.
-
Habitat Recovery in the Medlock Valley –
Landscape scale capital works will be delivered through this
project, supporting the restoration of grasslands and
protecting the resilience of habitats along riverbanks by
removing weirs.
-
Riparian habitat improvements in Hertfordshire's Chalk
Rivers - Hertfordshire and Middlesex Wildlife Trust
will restore chalk rivers and create 49 hectares of wetland
habitat across Hertfordshire, providing natural flood
management and helping to support over 109 different species.
-
Wet Willow Wildlife Network – The project will
enhance over 500 hectares of wet willow and improve the
connectivity of the landscape, creating joined up spaces for
nature.
-
Nature in the new forest: Saving species, restoring
communities – The New Forest National Park authority
will restore grasslands, hedgerows, woodlands, and
wetlands.
-
Biodiversity Boost: A Journey to a Wilder Druridge
– The project will support over 500 hectares of
habitats for wintering wader birds.
-
Thriving in a Wilder Trent – Nottinghamshire
Wildlife Trust will work with farmers and landowners to improve
28 kilometres of canal, 50 hectares of farmland wetland and
marshlands.
-
Ribble Revival: Room for Rivers – The project
led by the Ribble Catchment Conservation Trust will connect 31
kilometres of river habitat for fish and improve riparian
habitats.
-
Coastal and wetlands: more, better, bigger, joined
– 246 hectares of Coastal and Floodplain Grazing Marsh
will be created, saline lagoons restored, and new reedbeds
added.
-
Stacking the Shire Brook Valley – Sheffield
City Council will plant almost 1500 metres of hedgerows,
improve wetlands, leaky dams and create new sluices and pond
dipping platforms.
-
Bogs and Bitterns: Somerset wetland restoration
– Somerset Wildlife Trust will work across seven
locations in the area, enhancing and expanding over 54 hectares
of wetland habitat.
-
Freshwater Renaissance – The National Trust
will work across Somerset, Norfolk, Cumbria, and Cheshire
increasing connectivity in riparian corridors and removing
invasive species to allow native species to thrive.
-
Cumbrian and Southwest Rainforest Restoration
– Over 580 hectares of Atlantic rainforest will be
restored by the Woodland Trust, supporting key species such as
wood warblers.
-
Nature Rich Miterdale – A mosaic of upland
oak-birch, montane scrub and species rich grassland will be
enhanced and expanded by the University of Leeds.
-
Newcastle’s Nature Networks – Urban Green will
improve pollinator pathways across Newcastle upon Tyne by
delivering habitat improvements in 33 public parks, 4 nature
reserves and other public green spaces that will form part of
Newcastle’s Nature Networks and support key priority species
including bees, dingy skipper, small heath, and wall
butterflies.
-
Wetter for Waders: Enhancing Somerset’s Coastal
Wetlands – The Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust will work
across over 300 hectares of floodplain, grazing marsh, and
freshwater habitats to rewet and restore the landscape for
wildlife.
-
Partnerships for Nature in the North Wessex Downs AONB
– The project will restore over 3 kilometres of chalk
stream habitat, enhance wet woodlands, and improve chalk
grasslands. It will also see a new flower rich pasture planted,
supporting pollinators and insects to thrive.