- Environment Secretary Thérèse Coffey sets out UK
support to protect the world’s
oceans and natural habitats
- UK Government pledges £30 million to the Big Nature Impact
Fund – a new public-private fund to invest in nature protection
and restoration
- Ahead of next month’s crucial UN Convention on Biodiversity
Diversity meeting in Montreal, the UK is seeking a new agreement
to halt and reverse global biodiversity loss
The Environment
Secretary Thérèse Coffey has today called for
renewed global action on nature as she sets out an ambitious path
forward for nature at COP’s Biodiversity Day (16
November).
Outlining the
importance of next month’s vital meeting of the UN Convention on
Biological Diversity in Montreal , she is calling on countries to
come together at that summit and agree a robust global plan
for tackling nature loss. While significant progress has
been made, more action is needed from both the public and private
sectors to bridge the reported $700 billion funding gap needed to
stop nature loss.
Our security,
livelihoods and productivity depend on the global web of life
including our forests and the ocean, with over half of the
world’s GDP reliant on nature.
Today at
Biodiversity Day, the UK Government continues to drive global
efforts to embrace nature to help lower global temperatures
and build a sustainable future. It will:
-
Commit £30 million of
seed finance into the Big Nature Impact Fund – a new
public-private fund for nature in the UK which will unlock
significant private investment
into nature projects, such as new tree planting or restoring
peatlands. Managed by Federated Hermes and Finance Earth, these
habitat creation projects will aid small business growth and
job creation as well as soak up carbon emissions and support
cleaner air and water.
-
Pledge an additional £12
million to the Ocean Risk and Resilience Action
Alliance to
protect and restore vulnerable coastal communities and
habitats
-
Commit a further £6 million to provide
capacity building support to developing countries to increase
commitments to nature and nature-based solutions under the
Paris Agreement, through the UNDP Climate Promise.
-
Announce new UK climate finance contribution of £5
million toward the Inter-American Development
Bank’s (IDB) Multi-Donor Trust Fund for the Amazon. This will
help to tackle deforestation through community-led projects
harnessing local knowledge to protect the world’s most precious
forests that the planet relies on, whilst providing sustainable
business opportunities to Indigenous People whose livelihoods
depend on forests.
-
Raise awareness
of the incredible importance of
mangroves and their role in coastal resilience by
endorsing the Mangrove
Breakthrough led by the UNFCCC High-Level
Champions and the Global Mangrove Alliance. This vital project
aims to secure the future of vital coastal mangrove forests.
-
Highlight the climate benefits of blue
carbon through continued support for the new Global
Ocean Decade Programme for Blue Carbon (GO-BC), which has now
launched a new Global Graduate scheme for early career blue
carbon researchers.
Speaking at
Biodiversity Day at COP27, Environment Secretary Thérèse Coffey
said:
“Over half of
the world’s GDP reliant on nature, which is why
the United
Kingdom put nature at the heart of our COP26 Presidency and
led calls to protect 30 per cent of land and ocean by
2030.
“We continue to
demonstrate international leadership through commitments to
create a natural world that is richer in plants and wildlife to
tackle the climate crisis, and at next month’s meeting of the UN
Convention on Biological Diversity we will strive for an
ambitious agreement that includes a global 30by30 target, a
commitment to halt and reverse biodiversity
loss, and an increase in
resources for the conservation and protection of nature from all
sources.”
, Minister for International
Environment, Climate, Forests & Energy,
said:
“The fastest route to Net Zero
is restoring the world’s forests and protecting nature. And the
value of forests and other ecosystems goes so much further than
climate. The greatest guardians of nature has always been
indigenous people, which is why the UK is delighted to support
communities in the Amazon in their efforts to protect and
restore their environment.”
Global momentum
is now behind plans to halt nature’s decline, with 95 world
leaders and over 100 non-state actors having now signed the
Leaders’ Pledge for Nature which commits to global action to
reverse biodiversity loss by 2030.
This momentum
will only continue if the right incentives are in place. The UK,
together with Ecuador, Gabon and the Maldives, recently led the
creation of a Political Vision: 10 Point Plan for Financing
Biodiversity (10PP), launched with 17 early endorsers. At
COP27, ministers and
representatives from 15 existing signatories and
others were drawn together in a closed door meeting to
kick-start next steps on translating this plan
into action ahead of
CBD-COP15.2 in Montreal.
As outgoing UNFCCC (UN Framework Convention
on Climate Change) COP Presidents, it is vital that the United
Kingdom’s level of ambition for nature is continued under future
Presidencies to achieve Net Zero goals and halt the damage that
climate change is causing to our
planet.
Looking ahead
to UN CBD, this includes scaling strong investments into
nature-based solutions, committing to protecting and restoring
critical ecosystems, such as mangroves and peatlands, improving
the abundance of species and plants, and halting the decline of
biodiversity to create a more sustainable future and drive
economic growth.
ENDS.
Notes to
editors:
Further information on
the Big Nature Impact Fund
- The new blended fund is being launched with £30 million of
government investment. From the 16 November the fund will start
to engage with private investors to help fund green projects
around the country, this will include tree planting, peat
restoration and water quality improvement projects.
- The £30m seed public investment will drive much greater
investment from the private sector to invest in nature projects
in England to help tackle climate change.
- Investment generated through the fund will support new
woodland creation in England – equivalent to 15-16 million trees
of new planting. The fund will also support peatland restoration
and habitat creation.
- The Big Nature Impact Fund will boost the economy through new
nature recovery projects that will create green jobs, secure
existing ones and open up new avenues in UK green
finance.
- Projects will generate revenue to provide a financial return
for investors by selling high-integrity carbon and biodiversity
units to businesses to help them fulfil their net zero
commitments and biodiversity net gain
obligations.
At the UN CBD meeting in Montreal
in December, the United Kingdom
will:
- Seek further support for the target to protect at least 30%
of the land and of the ocean globally by 2030 (‘30by30’)
- Continue leading calls for ambitious and meaningful outcomes
for the ocean
- Aim to provide a significant increase in the mobilisation of
resources from all sources to fund the global effort to halt
nature loss.
- Look to strengthen mechanisms for holding countries to
account for implementing the framework.
- Work towards agreement on ensuring that benefits arising from
the use of biodiversity are shared with the communities that take
care of them
Forests
- The Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) Multi-Donor Trust
Fund for the Amazon is a new initiative that will work to promote
forest protection and sustainable development across the Amazon.
As part of the initiative, the UK will work together with the
IDB, Amazon countries and other key regional stakeholders, and
partners such as the Netherlands and Germany, to fund innovative
projects that improve management of vital forest landscapes,
support sustainable, nature-positive livelihoods for indigenous
people and local communities, and upscale economic solutions to
eliminate deforestation and ecosystem degradation. The initiative
will deliver support across eight Amazon countries - Brazil,
Colombia, Bolivia, Peru, Guyana, Venezuela, Ecuador, and
Suriname.
- In addition, we invested over £2 million through the
Mobilising Finance for Forests programme in projects to conserve,
restore and sustainably manage two million hectares of tropical
forest landscapes that will reduce emissions significantly by
2030.
- This year, the UK has also invested through the UK’s
Conflict, Stability and Security Fund (CSSF) an additional
£800,000 in climate security projects tackling the illegal
drivers of deforestation in the Amazon region.
Mangroves
breakthrough:
- The Mangrove Breakthrough was launched by the Global Mangrove
Alliance (GMA) in conjunction with Nigel Topping and the UNFCCC
High-Level Climate Champions (HLCs). They launched at COP27 on
10 November with endorsements from states (including the UK) and
non-state actors.
- The Mangrove Breakthrough’s aims to catalyse the financial
support needed to achieve its target of $4bn corresponding to
15million hectares of mangroves globally by 2030, through
collective action on halting mangrove loss, restoring half of
recent losses, doubling protection of mangroves globally, and
ensuring sustainable long-term finance for all existing
mangroves.
- The ambition aligns with Defra and HMG priorities to champion
ocean-climate action and to drive forward a step change in
nature-based solutions, including under the Blue Planet Fund, and
towards the Glasgow Leaders Declaration on Forests, recognising
mangroves as blue forests.
GO-BC:
- Defra provides support for the running of Global Ocean Decade
Programme for Blue Carbon (GO-BC), a new research programme
within the UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable
Development. GO-BC It is looking to build blue carbon scientific
capability (in part through launching its global graduate scheme)
and exploring potential blue carbon research projects it will
endorse (one such project where there could be future
opportunities for collaboration is the Convex Seascape
Survey).
Glasgow
legacy
- The Glasgow Leaders Declaration on Forests and Land Use is
part of the ambitious legacy from COP26. Led by the United
Kingdom, 145 countries – representing over 90% of the world’s
forests – signed a pledge to halt deforestation and land
degradation by 2030 while delivering sustainable development and
rural transformation. This commitment will deliver resilient and
inclusive growth and accelerate efforts to limit global
warming. Countries
now need to deliver on their Glasgow commitments and the Forests
and Climate Leaders’ Partnership – launched earlier this week –
will play a critical part in driving this through providing
accountability and space for enhanced cooperation. The
declaration was signed by 145 countries at COP26. For more
information visit: Glasgow Leaders’ Declaration on Forests
and Land Use - UN Climate Change Conference (COP26) at the SEC
– Glasgow 2021 (ukcop26.org)
- COP26 also gave much greater prominence to the ocean’s role
in climate action. Since Glasgow, the United Kingdom has
increased support to developing countries through the flagship
£500m Blue Planet Fund to support adaptation to climate change
and build sustainable, prosperous coastal communities. The United
Kingdom will build on this ambition at COP15, seeking agreement
of an ambitious Global Biodiversity Framework to halt and reverse
biodiversity loss by 2030.
-
The 10 Point Plan is a political
blueprint that defines a clear pathway for bridging the global
nature finance gap and to manage the significant risks of
biodiversity loss to the global economy and public health. It
was launched at the UN General Assembly (UNGA 77) on 20
September 2022. 17 countries have signed up to the 10 Point
Plan, led by Ecuador, Gabon, Maldives and the UK. The plan
demonstrates the role that all sources of finance have to play,
including domestic, international, public and private. It has a
particular focus on how international, public finance can
support developing countries to accelerate the transition to
become nature positive. The 10 Point Plan for financing
biodiversity - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)
Ocean Risk and
Resilience Action Alliance:
- ORRAA is a multi-sector collaboration connecting the
international finance and insurance sectors, governments,
non-profits, and stakeholders from the Global South to pioneer
finance products that incentivise investment into coastal and
ocean Nature-based Solutions. The Alliance’s goal, by 2030, is to
activate at least $500 million of investment into this space, and
in so doing, help build the resilience of at least 250 million
climate vulnerable coastal people Homepage - ORRAA
(oceanriskalliance.org)