Without policy clarity, urgent investment in research, skills
training and the introduction of a new advisory service for
farmers and land managers, the Government’s ambitious plans for
nature-based solutions are at severe risk of failure, putting net
zero by 2050 at risk as well as undermining the agricultural
sector, a House of Lords Committee has said.
The Lords Science and Technology
Committee has today (Thursday 27 January) published a report,
Nature-based solutions: rhetoric
or reality?, examining the role that nature-based
solutions can and should play in reducing the UK’s net greenhouse
gas emissions and restoring nature as part of the Government’s
plan to achieve net zero by 2050.
The Committee found that:
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Nature-based solutions are not a substitute for rapid
decarbonisation, but they can play a significant role in
reaching net zero and restoring UK nature. As well as
restoring habitats and creating new ones, it must be a priority
to better manage and preserve existing natural habitats.
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More research is urgently needed to address significant
scientific uncertainties about how much carbon is stored in
terrestrial and marine habitats, and how much
CO2 these habitats can reliably sequester in the
future. Importantly, nature-based solutions are not just about
tree planting; they need to be specific to each of a range of
habitats.
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The UK does not have the requisite skills to deliver
nature-based solutions at scale. The Government
acknowledges this, but there has been no formal assessment of
the skills needed, nor a route to providing training in the
timescales required for the Government’s plans for an
agricultural transition over the next decade. The skills
deficits range from forestry, ecology, and peatland
restoration, to advice for land managers.
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Policy uncertainty is hindering the adoption of
nature-based solutions. While lessons should be
learned as nature-based solutions are rolled out, the lack of
detail about the Environmental Land Management schemes (the
UK’s post-Brexit agricultural subsidies) jeopardises the
roll-out of nature-based solutions and the wider agricultural
transition. Land managers need some certainty if the
Government’s targets are to be met.
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Nature-based solutions in support of net zero emissions
will not work without the support of farmers and land
managers. Communication and engagement with those
responsible for implementing nature-based solutions has been
inadequate so far.
The Committee calls for:
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The Government to support research and demonstration
projects, ranging from basic science to pilot
projects, across the country in different marine and
terrestrial habitats to clarify what actions and interventions
are effective and quantify these effects.
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A training and advisory service for farmers and land
managers to help them negotiate a new and complex
funding landscape, and to change land management practices
where appropriate. Tenancy agreements may need to change to
enable the costs and benefits to be shared between the tenant
and landowner.
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Guaranteed funding for land managers and farmers over
the long term to ensure that they can take the right
actions for the environment and stay in business.
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The Government to define the role of carbon and natural
capital markets. A lack of regulation risks private
investment being directed towards schemes that will provide few
benefits for the environment and undermine the urgent effort to
reduce emissions.
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The Government to set out how competing demands on land
will be balanced and how they will ensure
environmentally damaging activities are not simply offshored.
Chair of the House of Lords Science and Technology
Committee said:
“While the Government's plans for nature-based solutions are
ambitious and have much potential to help the UK achieve net zero
by 2050 as well as restore its natural environment, these
plans are at severe risk of failure. They will not work
without the support of farmers and land managers, and investment
in the skills needed to restore nature.
“In the United Kingdom, 72 per cent of land is agricultural,
so it is essential that farmers are fully engaged and supported
by the Government. This support must take the form of:
incentives; training; an advisory service; and support to adapt
to changes in farming methods, subsidies, and land use. Key
decisions must be made about how the UK should use its land and
the role of nature and carbon markets in supporting nature
restoration.
“The Committee’s recommendations are not only vital to help
the Government achieve net zero by 2050 and restore the UK’s
natural environment, but they can also help to address other
societal challenges and secure an improved environment for future
generations. The Glasgow Climate Pact, signed at COP26,
emphasises the importance of “protecting, conserving, and
restoring nature and ecosystems” to tackle climate change. The UK
can still achieve this, but only with a renewed policy
effort.”.
Notes to editors:
- Nature based solutions - The term “nature-based solutions” is
used to mean working with the grain of nature to achieve a range
of benefits, including enhanced biodiversity, flood alleviation,
better livelihoods for local communities, and contributing to
greenhouse gas reductions, either by storing carbon or by
preventing its release. The focus in this report is on the role
of nature-based solutions in reducing carbon emissions and
sequestering carbon, as part of the Government's plan to achieve
net zero by 2050.