Projects to restore kelp forests, create new woodland, deliver
natural flood risk management, and improve water quality are
among an initial 27 schemes to benefit from a pioneering new fund
to drive private investment in nature and tackle climate change,
Defra, the Environment Agency & Natural England have
announced today (14 July 2021).
Organisations across England have been awarded up to
£100,000 each, as part of the ground-breaking £10 million Natural
Environment Investment Readiness Fund. The funding will be used
to develop the projects to the point they can provide a return on
investment by capturing the value of carbon, water quality,
biodiversity and other benefits provided by natural assets such
as woodlands, peatlands, catchments and landscapes.
Funding has been awarded to environmental groups,
businesses and local authorities to develop projects that protect
and enhance nature while also demonstrating innovative approaches
to generating revenues from the wide range of benefits that
nature provides.
Revenues will be generated through the sale of carbon and
biodiversity units, natural flood management benefits and through
reduced water treatment costs. In developing these revenue
streams, the Fund will help create a pipeline of projects for the
private sector to invest in, and develop new funding models that
can be scaled and replicated elsewhere.
Projects receiving funding focus on tackling climate change
and restoring nature through schemes such as woodland and habitat
creation, peatland restoration, sustainable drainage and river
catchment management.
Examples include developing a carbon credit model for
saltmarshes across England; kelp forest restoration off the
Sussex coast; woodland creation in North Yorkshire; and peatland
restoration in Greater Manchester.
Environment Minister said:
“To tackle the environmental challenges we face from
climate change and biodiversity loss, it is crucial that domestic
natural environment projects are able to attract private
investment alongside support from the public sector.
“Unleashing innovation and growing new sources of finance,
such as through the Natural Environment Investment Readiness
Fund, are fundamental for delivering nature recovery and
developing nature-based solutions to achieve net zero carbon
emissions by 2050.”
Chair of the Environment Agency, Emma Howard Boyd
said:
“With the right structure, nature-based projects can be
scaled up by private finance, helping to reduce emissions,
prepare for climate shocks and create jobs.
“From a new business model for multi-functional forestry in
Yorkshire, to an investment fund to transform farmland in
Norfolk, these projects will provide evidence of funding models
to make industries fit for the future, reach net zero by 2050,
and create a nature positive future.
“With COP26 coming to the UK this year, this demonstrates
how to create investable propositions for nature based solutions
to the climate emergency.”
Tony Juniper, Chair of Natural England,
said:
“Restoring Nature is essential for tackling climate change
and supporting a strong, sustainable economy. Mobilising private
finance can make a huge contribution to this and NEIRF is among
the steps needed right now to help unlock that investment.
“I am very pleased that Natural England is providing
technical input into the fund, helping to identify projects that
will enable the public, private and charitable sectors to
collaborate in genuine partnership to deliver nature recovery and
action on climate change.”
Working on behalf of Defra and HMT, delivery partners the
Environment Agency, Natural England and the Access Foundation for
Social Investment will support the projects and make the
knowledge generated available to the public to encourage similar
approaches to access private sector finance for nature projects
in the future.
The Green Finance Institute (GFI) has supported DEFRA and
the Environment Agency throughout the Fund’s launch including
leading a series of educational workshops for interested
applicants, and acting as third party assessor and advisor over
the application and awards process.
Chief Executive of the GFI, Dr Rhian-Mari Thomas
said:
“The recent Dasgupta Review made clear the value of nature
to our economy and society and the need for investment in
nature-positive projects. The Fund will accelerate private
investment in nature, as will the learnings derived from the
successful applicants and their projects. We look forward to
continuing our support for this transformative
initiative.”
Subject to confirmation, the Environment Agency and Defra
are planning to launch a further application round later this
year.
Since the Prime Minister’s 10 Point Plan publication we
have enshrined the UK’s sixth carbon budget in law, proposing a
target which would reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 78% by 2035
compared to 1990 levels.
We are also encouraging countries to join the UK’s call to
protect at least 30% of the global ocean within Marine Protected
Areas (MPAs) by 2030, as announced by the UK at the UN General
Assembly in September 2018. We were also the first major economy
to set a legally binding net zero greenhouse gas emissions target
by 2050.
ENDS
Notes to editors:
Natural Environment Investment Readiness Fund
project case studies:
Project
|
Applicant
|
Grant
|
Detail
|
New Forest Net Zero: Investment Models for Nature
Restoration
|
New Forest National Park Authority
|
£99,229
|
Map the restoration of arable and neutral grasslands
to woodland and fens, across three public and privately
owned sites within the NPA in an area of high development
pressure. The project will scope work needed to restore
woodlands and wetlands, resulting in carbon sequestration,
habitat creation and improvements in water quality.
Revenues from these ecosystem services will then be
modelled in the form of carbon, nutrient and biodiversity
credits to demonstrate a case for private
investors.
|
UK Soil & Farm Carbon Code-Piloting and
developing carbon investment readiness
|
Farming and Wildlife Advisory Group South West
(FWAG)
|
£98,000
|
Building on a three year partnership investigating
regenerative agriculture and carbon, aiming to propose a UK
Farm and Soil Code in 2022.
Through this project carbon on farms will be
monetised, particularly through regenerative agricultural
practices enhancing carbon sequestration in soils.
|
Crystal Clear Clyst Bond
|
East Devon District Council
|
£100,000
|
Seek to convert farmland to woodland in an area
experiencing a growth in development, via an Environmental
Impact Bond. This is a council driven project and will lead
to the conversion of agricultural land to woodland.
It will monetise revenue generation from voluntary
carbon credits, biodiversity credits from new habitat
recreation and the Community Infrastructure Levy.
|
The Wildlife Trusts' Habitat Banking Investment
Model
|
Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire Wildlife
Trust
|
£100,000
|
Develop a new habitat banking investment model to
deliver biodiversity net gain at scale. The project is a
consortium of Wildlife Trusts and will define habitat
restoration and creation of grassland, wetland and woodland
at three sites for carbon storage, improved flood
resilience and visitor well-being.
The project will monetise potential for revenue
generation through biodiversity credits.
|
Sussex Bay kelp: a carbon model for kelp forest
restoration
|
Adur District & Worthing Borough Councils
|
£79,000
|
Restore the kelp beds that have been lost to trawling
and create a blue carbon bank to support and sustain the
restoration of a large kelp forest in the new Trawler
Exclusion Zone between Selsey Bill and Shoreham.
The project will explore the voluntary market in
blue carbon sales and proposes to monetise a wide revenue
streams from kelp restoration in the form of aquaculture,
tourism, coastal erosion and flood risk and wate
quality.
|
Wilder Carbon Standard
|
Kent Wildlife Trust
|
£100,000
|
Create a finance facility to facilitate the
restoration of nature at scale funded by carbon finance.
The project will test and develop the ability to generate
new revenue streams across multiple habitats. In particular
this project will develop a carbon standard which can be
linked to wild habitats and generate revenues from
biodiversity credits.
|
Developing a new business model for
multi-functional forestry on Swinton Estate
|
Swinton Estate (The Trustees of Swinton Heirs
Trust)
|
£85,551
|
Create and manage woodlands to optimise the balance
of environmental and commercial outcomes whilst reducing
the intensity of farming on an estate.
The project will generate revenue from forestry
including timber and will monetise wider benefits from
carbon sequestration, biodiversity credits, recreation,
and water quality.
|
Greater Manchester Environment Fund: Scaling Up
Natural Capital Investment
|
Lancashire Wildlife Trust
|
£100,000
|
Raise investment to restore peatland through the
Greater Manchester Environment Fund by modelling revenues
from the sale of carbon and biodiversity credits through
woodland creation and increasing biodiversity.
|
Financing Wetlands for the Stiffkey using
Environmental Impact Bonds
|
Norfolk Rivers Trust
|
£70,000
|
Develop an Environmental Impact Bond to reduce
phosphates and other pollutants entering the River
Stiffkey, reducing the harm to biodiversity.
The project will model revenues from this
intervention in the form of phosphate credits and it will
explore other ecosystem services for additional revenue
sources.
|
Wendling Beck Exemplar Project (WBEP)
|
Norfolk Wildlife Trust
|
£99,718
|
Create an investment fund to deliver a landscape
scale catchment project to transform farmland through river
restoration, grassland and wetland creation.
The project will model revenue generated from sales
of biodiversity, carbon and nutrient credits.
|
An investment model for catchment-scale nature
restoration in the Esk Valley
|
North York Moors National Park Authority
|
£99,261
|
Develop catchment scale river restoration, which will
be funded through the monetisation of carbon, biodiversity
and water management. The National Park will work with the
Esk Valley Farmers Group (EVFG) and pilot an approach that
will be a blueprint for catchment-scale nature restoration
applicable across all National Parks.
|
Warwickshire Carbon and Environmental
Markets
|
Warwickshire County Council
|
£72,000
|
Build and broaden the scope of the Warwickshire
biodiversity net gain market, to bring in wider ecosystem
benefits including carbon and catchment services.
The primary focus of the project is to expand the
biodiversity net gain market to woodland carbon and blend
public funding for tree planting with carbon
credits.
|
A Natural Capital Investment Company for
Accelerating Delivery of Habitat Banks
|
Surrey Wildlife Trust
|
£100,000
|
Establish a natural capital investment company to
model biodiversity net gain at scale in support of
development growth in the southern England.
The project will also explore and quantify income
from natural flood risk management and carbon
sequestration sources.
|
Making the Case for Investment in The Tamar
Valley’s Nature-Based Services'
|
The National Association for Areas of Outstanding
Natural Beauty
|
£99,163
|
Develop a local ecosystem service market through
testing trading mechanisms which will market benefits from
environmental enhancement of five sites in the Tamar
Valley.
The project will identify and monetise a range of
benefits in the form of carbon, biodiversity credits,
natural flood risk management, and water quantity
improvement.
|
A case for a UK Saltmarsh Carbon Code: Evidence,
Intervention, and Investment
|
UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology (UKCEH)
|
£99,931
|
Develop a saltmarsh code to support habitat
restoration activities. The project will involve ground
truthing verification at three sites with the potential to
build a wide umbrella Blue Carbon Code applicable in wider
marine habitats.
The project seeks to develop a rigorous and
scientifically based voluntary certification standard for
those that want to market the climate benefits of
saltmarsh restoration, with assurances to voluntary
carbon market buyers that the climate benefits are
quantifiable, additional and permanent.
|
RSPB Natural Capital Investment Aggregation
Vehicle
|
The RSPB
|
£59,638
|
Develop a method to aggregate equity funding, which
would finance habitat creation in a pipeline of
projects.
It will seek to model revenues through biodiversity
and carbon credits at significant scale, and it will
model this approach in up to six pioneer sites.
|
Landscapes for Water in the Calder and Colne
Catchment
|
National Trust
|
£98,000
|
Improve woodland cover and lead to wider natural
flood management in the Upper Calder and Colne catchment,
leading to landscape change and monetising a suite of
ecosystem service benefits such as from natural flood risk
outcome payments, carbon, and biodiversity credits.
|
Developing a Worcestershire Natural Capital
Investment Partnership
|
Worcestershire County Council
|
£91,118
|
Establish a county-wide natural capital investment
framework for selling biodiversity credits via a habitat
‘bank’. The framework will offer scalability so that all
Worcestershire local authorities can opt in.
The project will explore and model investment from
a reduction of costs associated with flood risk;
sequestration of carbon; provision of pollination
services; providing physical and mental health benefits
to the public through access to nature.
|
Doubling Nature Investment Readiness
Project
|
Mersey Forest
|
£96,000
|
Establish a place based investment vehicle to improve
the Bollin catchment through increased tree cover and
improvements to heathland, bog and wet grassland.
The project will model investment through a bond
repayable through biodiversity, carbon credits and
catchment services such as natural flood risk
management.
|
Hadrian Bond
|
Regenerate Outcomes Company
|
£100,000
|
Establish an Environmental Impact Bond to stimulate
regenerative agricultural practices across a suite of
farms.
The project will seek to fund the Environmental
Impact Bond through modelled revenue from regenerative
agriculture, carbon, biodiversity credits and potentially
wider catchment services such as improved water
quality.
|
Creation of a Hedgerow Carbon Code.
|
Allerton Research & Educational Trust
|
£81,561
|
Develop a hedgerow carbon code to support habitat
enhancement activities and measurement of carbon
sequestration.
The project will include field trials leading to
the development of a verification code, and determine the
potential for enabling farmers to increase the amount of
carbon stored in their hedgerows and trade carbon
credits
|
Buscot and Coleshill: Piloting Place-based
Innovation for the National Trust
|
National Trust
|
£96,500
|
Test a place based natural capital investment
approaches centred on woodland and habitat creation, which
will lead to wider socio economic and water management
interventions.
The project will map and audit the potential
monetisation of a range of ecosystem services from
biodiversity and woodland creation, flood risk
management, improved water quality and ecotourism.
|
Protected Landscape Investment Bank
|
Cornwall Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty
Trust
|
£99,500
|
Develop landscape recovery funding and investment
strategy which will detail a diverse set of income streams
across catchment services, biodiversity and carbon off
setting, tourism and health.
As part of the project, the AONB will map and audit
the potential revenues from environmental enhancement
activities resulting in water quality improvements,
carbon sequestration, habitat creation, flood risk
mitigation and wider services such as tourism, and
health.
|
Green Investment in Greater Lincolnshire
(GIGL)
|
Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust
|
£100,000
|
Establish market mechanisms to trade biodiversity,
carbon and water credits generated through improvements to
agricultural land at a landscape scale.
The project will quantify demand from buyers of
biodiversity, carbon and water credits in Greater
Lincolnshire and work with landowners to identify
nature-based solutions, establishing a registry of
pipeline of shovel ready projects.
|
|