
Bog asphodel at Whitelee Moor. Image by Duncan Hutt.
Bog asphodel at Whitelee Moor. Image by Duncan Hutt.
It has been a bleak countdown to the international climate conference, COP27, which starts in Egypt on Sunday.
In the 12 months since COP26, the global and national mood has flipped from cautious optimism to fear and division. In the UK alone, we’ve seen the following since COP26:
We cannot address climate change without restoring nature. Natural habitats have a critical role to play in storing carbon and helping us adapt to the inevitable consequences of climate change. To have a global voice, the UK must ensure it is taking the right action at home - especially as we are one of the most nature-depleted countries in the world.
In this region, Northumberland Wildlife Trust continues to carry out work repairing peatland erosion on Whitelee Moor in North Northumberland to ensure the vital carbon store is more resilient during any (likely) future droughts
Duncan Hutt, Northumberland Wildlife Trust, Director of Conservation says:
“It’s vital that the Prime Minister shows climate leadership by championing nature’s recovery at COP27. The climate and nature crises are two sides of the same coin - we must restore nature because natural habitats have a critical role to play in storing carbon and helping us adapt to the inevitable consequences of climate change. At the same time, climate change is one of the biggest threats to nature at a time when it is already in freefall globally; the latest assessment reveals we have lost 70% of our biodiversity since 1970.
“The UK must do more than simply turn up to COP27. We need assurances that the Government will rapidly increase efforts to protect at least 30% of land and sea by 2030 and strengthen environmental protections at home. Government’s failure to publish nature recovery targets this week – breaking the Environment Act - does little to reassure us they are acting to address the magnitude of the challenge we face.
“How can we expect other countries to prioritise nature in tackling climate change if we aren’t doing the same ourselves?”
To read The Wildlife Trusts’ COP27 briefing visit: www.wildlifetrusts.org/sites/default/files/2022-11/The%20Wildlife%20Trusts'%20COP27%20briefing.pdf