The draft Environment Bill published today by the Government does
not go far enough to tackle the serious environmental challenges
we face or provide legal certainty for the future of our natural
world, say The Wildlife Trusts. Nor does the accompanying policy
note.
The Bill and policy note fall short in a number of
ways:
-
The proposed green watchdog is too
weak. Much more is needed if it is to bear any
comparison to the environmental enforcement powers currently
held by the European Commission and Court. To do this the
watchdog would need to be more independent and able to hold the
whole Government to account, including through having powers to
issue fines if the Government fails to implement environmental
legislation properly.
-
The Policy Note misses out nature recovery
networks. We are disappointed that it fails to
propose key measures needed to secure nature’s recovery; not
least requiring the production of nature recovery network maps
and compliance with these. (See The Wildlife
Trusts’ Wilder
Britain proposals.)
The Government
has committed in its manifesto to being the first generation to
leave the environment in a better state than it
found it. Leaving the E.U. and then introducing a weak
Environment Bill will not achieve this. The Wildlife Trusts
believe that this Bill, so far, is not good
enough.
Nothing can replace the full powers now
held by the EU and European Court of Justice that have forced us
to clean up our rivers and seas and protect key wildlife
sites. But a really powerful independent watchdog would
make a big difference.
Stephanie Hilborne OBE, Chief Executive of
The Wildlife Trusts, says:
“We fought hard to secure this
Environment Bill and recognise that Defra has worked hard to
produce it, but the stark reality is that other Government
Departments have weakened the draft
substantially.
“Wildlife is in freefall and the
Government’s proposals for a new Environment Bill fall well short
of what is needed to leave the environment in a better state for
the next generation.
Now Ministers and MPs must improve upon
this draft Bill to create a bold
visionary piece of legislation proportionate to the vast
environmental challenge we face. Unless they do, we will
regret losing still more wildlife and the health of our
ecosystems for generations to
come.
Critically, an ambitious Bill would put
nature’s recovery on to a statutory footing by mapping out where
wildlife must be protected and where habitats must be improved –
a Nature Recovery Network on land and at
sea.”
We need the Environment Bill to give
us:
-
Nature Targets: legal targets for
nature's recovery that politicians must ultimately achieve and
regularly report on progress towards e.g. safer air to breathe
in our cities
-
A Nature Recovery Network: a
joined-up network of habitats that provide enough space for
wildlife to recover and for people to thrive.
-
Legislation is needed to drive the creation of
Nature Recovery Networks so that they are mapped and
delivered locally. It is also needed to protect and join-up
important places for wildlife, to bring nature into every
neighbourhood and to ensure everyone, whatever their
background, has access to wildlife-rich natural green
space.
Read about The Wildlife Trusts’ vision for a Nature
Recovery Network here.
The Wildlife Trusts are asking people to meet their
MP in person to discuss the need for a strong Environment Act
– here. Over a thousand
people have contacted MPs.