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LINK welcomes publication of the Environment Strategy Monitoring Framework

February 25th, 2021 by

Scottish Environment LINK welcomes the Scottish Government’s Environment Strategy Monitoring Framework published yesterday (24 February). The framework sets out the initial range of indicators that will be used to assess progress on achieving key outcomes to improve Scotland’s environment, including protecting nature, tackling the climate emergency and re-using resources.

LINK members welcome the inclusion of indicators to monitor the health of our environment and impact of human activity in a number of areas including marine environmental quality, Scotland’s material footprint and people’s access to the outdoors.

Deborah Long, Chief Officer of Scottish Environment LINK, said:

“Scotland’s Environment Strategy is critical for driving long term improvements in our environment, from reducing our consumption and waste to improving the health of our soils and seabed. The monitoring framework published today is a welcome step in setting out the initial indicators that will be used to assess Scotland’s progress to addressing the interlinked nature and climate emergency over the coming decades. There is much to welcome in the Framework but we must continue to build on these initial indicators to include measuring progress on improving the quality and extent of habitats and significantly increasing the percentage of Scotland’s native woodland in the overall mix of woodland creation.”

Still Delivering the Goods: Scotland’s environmental charities working for nature and society.

February 24th, 2021 by

“Conservation is not a luxury, an optional extra we can afford when the economy picks up, but a vital necessity if our species are to have a long-term future.” Prof. Aubrey Manning, 1997

Scotland’s nature and natural landscapes are rich and diverse. While this diversity and richness is celebrated, all is not well. Scotland’s wildlife has declined considerably over the years and remains in danger. This is important to us all: at the most basic level, biodiversity is important because we all depend on it for our existence.

The importance of nature and the value it provides to us all through food, building materials, clean air and water, for example, is why protecting nature and restoring it for future generations is so important. As Environment Secretary, Roseanna Cunningham MSP, said, on 14 December 2020: “Dealing with the twin crises of climate change and biodiversity loss is one of the most important challenges of this generation.… As we begin to emerge from the pandemic,  nature-based solutions such as woodland creation, peatland restoration, urban green infrastructure, regeneration, and a great range of sustainable enterprises will not only help the environment but create jobs helping us build a greener, more inclusive economy.”

On 24 February 2021, Scottish Environment LINK publishes Still Delivering the Goods, which shows what Scotland’s environmental charities are doing to help. The 15 case studies in this report show the action that is being taken, and planned, for nature, for employment and skills training and for climate. These case studies, including completed, ongoing and planned future projects all demonstrate that Scotland’s environmental charities stand ready to increase delivery for and on behalf of Scotland’s people.

Despite the successes, however, this review also highlights several challenges, especially the difficulties associated with raising funds for such work. It further reveals the enormous reliance, by Government and public bodies, on the charities’ members and donors, and charitable funds they can access, to achieve their public policy goals.

The targets the world needs to meet on climate and biodiversity are steep, even in Scotland. We need to invest as a country in more and larger projects of the type illustrated in this report. Together, with investment of resources and human energy, progress towards the climate and nature emergencies can be made. With supportive policy mechanisms, and targets for nature as well as climate that focus effort, more of us can work together to achieve the scale of change needed.

This report and these 15 case studies show how Scotland’s environmental charities and civic society offer a key to success through their sustained action on the ground, working together at scale and over time.

Find the report here.

Scotland’s environment community urge Scottish Government to take a transformative approach to planning

February 22nd, 2021 by

Scotland’s new National Planning Framework (NPF4) needs to take us to net-zero and support nature’s recovery – but transformative change is lacking in the Scottish Government’s Position Statement

 

Scottish Environment LINK members are calling on the Scottish Government to develop a NPF4 that truly delivers the transformative change needed for Scotland to secure its role as a global-north climate leader ahead of COP26 in Glasgow and successfully contribute to a post-2020 global biodiversity framework.

 

LINK members have submitted a response to the Scottish Government’s Interim Consultation on the NPF4 Position Statement. The environment organisations welcome many of the positive signals in the Statement. However, the organisations are asking that these are accompanied by measures to ensure that the Plan can enable sustainable development and prevent those developments which are not consistent with the Government’s Climate Change Plan and aspirations for the next Biodiversity Strategy. We need a binding framework to address the twin challenges of nature loss and climate change and cannot rely on piecemeal amendments to business as usual.

 

The NPF4 will take Scotland through to 2050. As such, Scottish Environment LINK members are conscious that it needs to deliver on Scotland’s ambitious target of reaching net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2045 as well as supporting nature’s recovery by reversing biodiversity declines. When COP26 comes to Glasgow in November, the eyes of the world will be on Scotland as host destination and its action on climate and nature will be under scrutiny. The NPF4 will lay foundational building blocks in Scotland’s efforts towards tackling the twin crisis of nature loss and climate change; Scotland’s leading environment organizations believe it needs much greater ambition if it is to build on Scotland emission reduction targets and enable developments that deliver positive outcomes for nature. The LINK response to the consultation stress that ecosystem and biodiversity values must be incorporated into the planning system. In a year where the world is coming together to agree on a post-2020 global biodiversity framework, Scotland needs to significantly strengthen its environmental policies if it is to secure its role as a global-north leader.

 

Convener of the Scottish Environment LINK Planning Group, Clare Symonds, said:

“The Scottish Environment LINK community, which represent 40 of Scotland’s leading environmental organisations, have worked together to provide a comprehensive response to the Government’s consultation. We do this because we collectively recognise that this is an opportunity we simply cannot afford to miss. The NPF4 is an influential and wide-ranging plan, which has the potential to make a significant contribution to a better, greener Scotland. The Government has ambitious intentions, however unless there are fundamental changes to the way we approach planning, prioritise nature and limit developments which impact negatively on our planet, we will not achieve the necessary changes to overcome the serious challenges of the climate and nature emergencies.”

 

Bruce Wilson, Natural Capital Projects Manager at Scottish Wildlife trust, said:

“We are in a climate and nature crisis, and for the NPF4 to meet the scale of the challenge it must commit to applying a strategic approach to delivering nature-based solutions. Adoption of a Scottish Nature Network is the way to do this and holistically tackling the intertwined nature and climate crisis. This will deliver a whole host of other positive outcomes for our society and economy”.

 

Diarmid Hearns, Head of Public Policy at the National Trust for Scotland, said:

“The new National Planning Framework will determine what kind of Scotland we live in. We would like to see an ambitious framework that conserves our natural and cultural heritage, that supports the enjoyment of our heritage by residents and visitors, and that moves us to being environmentally sustainable. This opportunity will only come once, and we need to make the most of it.”

A Manifesto for Nature and Climate

February 9th, 2021 by

The 2021 Scottish Parliament election must place policies for nature and climate at its heart.

Environmental charities in Scotland have launched a call for the next Scottish Government to prioritise actions to tackle the nature and climate emergency ahead of Holyrood elections in May.

Scottish Environment LINK, a network of Scotland’s leading environmental charities, has published a new Manifesto for Nature and Climate setting out key steps that can be taken over the course of the next Scottish Parliament to secure Scotland’s role as a leader on climate change policy and kickstart nature’s recovery.

At a time when dramatic and widescale loss in wildlife and habitats is happening around the world, and in Scotland, and is exacerbated by climate change, Scotland’s decision makers must take bold action. At the same time, the Covid-19 pandemic has revealed the fundamental importance of treating nature with respect and its role in sustaining our wellbeing during difficult times. The LINK manifesto for a transformational green recovery from the pandemic, where investing in nature is part of the solution and where people’s wellbeing is improved while sustaining our environment for future generations.

Deborah Long, Chief Officer, said:

“We’re pleased to be launching Scottish Environment LINK’s manifesto at a critical moment for nature and climate.  There is an urgent need for action on and investment in the nature and climate emergency – Scotland’s green recovery needs to centre on protecting and promoting a healthy and resilient environment. If we fail to put Scotland on track to an environmentally sustainable society, not only will today’s generation continue to lose out but future generations will not forgive us for choosing short-term economic fixes over long-term wellbeing.”

Priorities in the manifesto

The manifesto sets out 12 priorities that should be taken forward by the next Scottish Government to kickstart action to address the interlinked nature and climate emergency. The next government and parliament need to take us hallway to meeting Scotland’s ambitious 2030 climate target, as well as take effective steps to drive nature’s recovery. The next Scottish government must commit to delivering:

1. A Nature Network for Scotland.

2. An Environment Act setting legally binding nature recovery targets.

3. A plan for ocean recovery.

4. Sufficient funding to tackle the nature and climate emergency.

5. Legislation and policies to decarbonise and build a Circular Economy.

6. Future farming policy with nature at its heart.

7. Protections for our peatlands.

8. Regional Land Use Frameworks by 2023.

9. A new Deer (Scotland) Act.

10. At least 50% of all new woodland to be with native species.

11. An end to wildlife crime.

12. Protections for our freshwater habitats and species.

Click here to read the Manifesto for Nature and Climate.

Good news for Scotland’s biodiversity: action in the Decade for Ecosystem Restoration

December 17th, 2020 by

Scottish Environment LINK welcomes the Statement of Intent on Biodiversity, published 14 December, which clearly recognises the importance of addressing the nature crisis at a critical point for our ecosystems.  These are encouraging steps: it is vital that the plans to address the nature crisis are matched by ambitious actions and significant investment to deliver them.

 

As we enter the UN’s Decade of Ecosystem Restoration in 2021, action to reverse biodiversity declines in Scotland has never been more urgent. The State of Nature Scotland 2019 report found that 1 in 9 species are at risk of national extinction, while Covid-19 has brought to the fore the urgent necessity to treat our natural world with respect, highlighting the unequal access to nature across our society.

 

We welcome the announcement that Scotland will protect 30% of its land and sea for nature by 2030. This aligns Scotland with progress in the EU, and signals ambition to go further, ahead of the global CoP15 summit on biodiversity in autumn 2021. We note that the developing global target includes provision for 10% of land and seas to be ‘strictly protected’; what this means for Scotland will need to be considered and developed. As this commitment is combined with robust and positive management to enable recovery and support to ensure that protected areas deliver transformative positive change for biodiversity, this will be a major positive step.

 

Projects to restore nature and reverse biodiversity declines can make an important contribution to a green recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic, providing new opportunities for workforce training and skills developing and contributing to the drive for new green jobs. Environmental NGOs are important delivery partners here and the NatureScot commitment to the Species on the Edge project illustrates what can be achieved through such collaboration. LINK partners look forward to close engagement in developing Scotland’s next biodiversity strategy and delivery plan.

 

LINK members welcome the commitment to explore what more can be done for biodiversity through NPF4. Securing positive effects for biodiversity through our planning system can go a long way to make significant impact on people’s daily lives while strengthening the resilience of ecosystems, for example through a Scottish Nature Network.

 

Scottish Environment LINK also encourages the development of ambitious and specific new targets for nature recovery to drive future action on biodiversity. The Putting Scotland on a Path to Recovery report sets out how targets are an effective mechanism for focusing policy development and driving measurable change. Developing targets for nature’s recovery can aid the delivery of the ambition set out in the Statement of Intent.

 

LINK looks forward to working with Ministers and our partners in Scottish Government, helping to deliver the intent in this statement over 2021 and make it a reality through the Decade of Ecosystem Restoration. By coming together, we in Scotland can all play an important role in biodiversity restoration and community resilience.

Welcome improvements to Scotland’s EU exit laws, but bill must go further for nature

November 25th, 2020 by

Scottish Environment LINK, a coalition of Scotland’s leading environmental charities, has today welcomed initial improvements to the Scottish Government’s EU Continuity Bill, which delivers crucial post-Brexit environmental protections, including an environment watchdog.

From 1 January 2021, the EU’s world-renowned environmental protections will no longer apply to Scotland. The Scottish Government’s EU Continuity Bill seeks to establish a new environment watchdog to protect Scotland’s nature going forward, but campaigners have warned that major omissions mean the Bill must urgently be strengthened.

MSPs voted for several key amendments to the Bill this week (Tuesday 24 November and Wednesday 25 November) to increase the independence of Scotland’s new environment watchdog, Environmental Standards Scotland (ESS). The legislation now requires members of the watchdog’s Board to have environmental expertise and Ministers have also agreed to discuss further changes that ensure that ESS has sufficient funding, and that this sufficiency is subject to Parliamentary scrutiny ahead of the final vote on legislation in December. These changes will increase the watchdog’s independence from Scottish Ministers, heeding the concerns raised by thousands of supporters of the Fight for Scotland’s Nature campaign.

MSPs also secured commitments from the Scottish Government to discuss and seek to agree new measures in December to ensure Scotland’s process of maintaining alignment with the EU (the so-called ‘keeping pace’ power) secures high environmental standards. The Fight for Scotland’s Nature campaign has said that these new measures will be vital for ensuring that Scotland can be a progressive leader on environment in the future and that there will be no backsliding in protections for nature.

However, Scottish Environment LINK has expressed concern that vital amendments to empower the watchdog to take enforcement action on individual complaints about environmental damage raised by citizens have not received government support. Without these changes to the draft legislation, people in Scotland are at risk of losing access to environmental justice once the UK leaves the EU at the end of 2020.

Vhairi Tollan, Advocacy Manager at Scottish Environment LINK, said:

“As part of our EU membership, Scottish citizens have enjoyed rights to raise complaints about cases of environmental damage and have the EU watchdog investigate and take steps to enforce changes. However, similar powers are not included in the Scottish Government’s proposal for a new Scottish watchdog. Environmental Standards Scotland would be unable to take enforcement action on individual complaints, raising concern that we will lose this crucial means of accessing environmental justice at the end of 2020. At a time when 1 in 9 Scottish species is at risk of extinction in Scotland, key changes to the Continuity Bill must be made ahead of MSPs’ final vote in December to ensure Scotland’s new watchdog is a credible and robust enforcer of environmental protections.”

 

Statement on deer control in support of Forestry and Land Scotland

September 4th, 2020 by

A statement from Scottish Environment LINK’s Deer Group on control of deer populations:

“As environmental land managers we fully recognise the need for ongoing control of deer populations, and to address the climate and biodiversity crises. Natural predators of deer are extinct in Scotland. Deer numbers are far higher than is sustainable for nature to thrive. Without reductions in deer population, we will not meet native woodland expansion, peatland protection, and therefore carbon sequestration targets.

“Forestry and Land Scotland (FLS) delivers first class deer management across Scotland’s national forests and land, allowing deer and trees to co-exist. FLS also delivers high environmental and animal welfare standards, for example showing leadership in the sector with a decision to phase out the use of lead ammunition. This cull extension is necessary. We fully support FLS and have every confidence that the work will be carried out to the highest standards.”

Scottish Environment LINK Welcomes Government’s Drive for a Greener Scotland

September 1st, 2020 by

Scottish Environment LINK, a coalition of Scotland’s leading environmental charities today welcomed Scottish government’s announcement to create new, green jobs to tackle the multiple crises the country is facing relating to climate change, rapid nature decline and the coronavirus. This comes after strong sector-wide and public support for actions to drive a green recovery from the pandemic.

A recent survey for Scottish Environment LINK showed that three-quarters of people in Scotland would prioritise measures for a green recovery including restoring Scotland’s landscapes and reducing our plastic waste [1].

The Programme for Government set out by the First Minister today (1 September) provided more detail on the government’s next steps to deliver an environmentally sustainable, green economic recovery [3]. This includes the creation of a Green Workforce and Skills Development package, alongside a £100m Green Jobs Fund.

This will allow Scotland’s environment agencies to provide essential training for young people in wide-ranging green skills, including environmental management and low carbon farming.

The coalition has published a series of recommendations for how the Scottish government could deliver this essential training and new green jobs with support of environmental NGOs [4]. These support projects throughout Scotland, which protect nature and reduce carbon emissions, examples of which include restoring Argyll’s Atlantic Rainforest and vital habitat reinstatement through the Cairngorms Connect project.

However, while the programme sets out positive next steps on boosting green employment and building a circular economy, there is less detail on plans to support climate-friendly farming in the long-term. Ambitions to increase access to urban greenspace through ‘20 minute neighbourhoods’ must also link in to promoting biodiversity in our towns and cities.

Vhairi Tollan, Advocacy Manager, Scottish Environment LINK said, “Throughout the coronavirus crisis we have all come to realise how much we rely on nature for our physical and mental wellbeing. But even before the pandemic nature itself was in crisis. Our polling shows that the public places a high importance on economic recovery measures that can lead us to a fairer, greener Scotland. The Programme for Government today includes a welcome focus on creating green jobs and training opportunities to transition us to a more sustainable society and restates the government’s commitment to address the twin climate and biodiversity crises.

Ahead of the Scottish Parliament election next May, it is now vital that political parties set out long-term plans to place nature and climate at the heart of the economic recovery agenda.”

Ends

[1] Scottish Environment LINK is the forum for Scotland’s voluntary environment community, with 39 member bodies representing a broad spectrum of environmental interests with the common goal of contributing to a more environmentally sustainable society www.scotlink.org

[2] https://www.scotlink.org/most-people-living-in-scotland-want-a-green-recovery-from-the-covid-19-pandemic/ Polling data is available upon request.

[3] SG Economic Recovery Implementation Plan https://www.gov.scot/publications/economic-recovery-implementation-plan-scottish-government-response-to-the-advisory-group-on-economic-recovery/

[4] https://www.scotlink.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/LINK-Green-Recovery-1-land-sea-v6.pdf

 

UK internal market could seriously harm Scotland’s environment

August 13th, 2020 by

Scottish Environment LINK, a coalition of Scotland’s leading environment charities, has warned the UK government that its plan to create a UK internal market could seriously harm Scotland’s natural environment by dragging down standards.

The plan unveiled by the UK government last month appears to be aimed at both removing regulation and forcing all four nations of the UK to adopt the same standards irrespective of each nation’s environmental context or needs, say members of Scottish Environment LINK. They believe the plan could create a race to the bottom, forcing Scotland to revoke or water down legislation protecting its environment to mirror any lowering of standards in the rest of the UK.

Internationally prized and iconic wildlife including otters, bottlenose dolphins, puffins, bats, Golden eagles and osprey could be at risk along with Scotland’s drinking water, beaches and food standards. At present 80 percent of Scotland’s environmental protections come from EU membership, but the UK will no longer be bound by EU law after 31 December 2020 when the Brexit transition period ends. In response, Scottish Environment LINK launched a campaign, Fight for Scotland’s Nature to help prevent environmental protections for Scotland’s nature from being weakened post-Brexit.

The Scottish government has since committed to ‘maintain or exceed’ current EU environment standards, and published an EU Continuity Bill in June setting out how it plans to replace EU protections.

Scottish Environment LINK is urging the Scottish Parliament to strengthen the Continuity Bill to give greater powers and independence to Scotland’s new environment watchdog, and to enshrine in law the commitment to maintain or exceed standards, requiring Scottish Ministers to keep pace with developments in EU environmental law.

But the charities fear that the UK government’s internal market proposals could instead force Scotland to follow the lowest common denominator, especially where countries negotiating bilateral trade deals with the UK demand lower standards, seriously undermining efforts to combat climate change and biodiversity decline.

Charles Dundas, chair of Scottish Environment LINK, said today:

Scotland’s world-renowned natural environment is central to all our lives, and we must not allow arrangements for a UK internal market to put it in jeopardy by dragging standards down. At the same time, the Scottish government’s commitment to maintain or exceed present EU standards should be enshrined in law and is something we have been pushing for.

High standards of environmental protection are essential if we are to achieve a green recovery from the coronavirus pandemic and tackle the joint crises of alarming nature loss and climate breakdown, the greatest challenges of our time.

Notes to Editors

 

Most people living in Scotland want a green recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic

August 7th, 2020 by

A new poll shows people in Scotland believe the Government should prioritise economic recovery measures that tackle climate change and enhance nature

A new poll released today shows three-quarters of people living in Scotland believe the Scottish Government should prioritise measures for a green recovery from the coronavirus pandemic.
The poll shows strong public support for measures that improve our quality of life, tackle climate change and enhance nature [1]. It also reveals that 76% of people in Scotland have become more aware of nature in their everyday life during the recent lockdown [2].

Scottish Environment LINK, a coalition of leading environmental charities, has welcomed the results which demonstrate strong support for green projects, including enhancement of Scotland’s nature through woodland expansion and restoration, peatland restoration and new high quality and accessible green spaces [3].

The poll results also highlight strong public support for initiatives to deliver nature-friendly farming and enhanced re-use and recycling enterprises [4], reflecting concerns about access to food and higher levels of plastic pollution that have been raised during lockdown.

Last year, the First Minister declared a climate emergency and recognised the equal importance of tackling the threats to nature [5].

As the coronavirus pandemic reached its peak in April, Scottish Ministers signalled their intention that the economic recovery from the pandemic should deliver positive outcomes for nature and climate change.

The charities are now calling for investment in ‘ready-to-go’ environmental projects to deliver these much-needed improvements to Scotland’s environment while creating new jobs and opportunities for traineeships.

Deborah Long, Chief Officer of Scottish Environment LINK said: “The poll results highlight how important nature has been for the wellbeing of many of us during the recent lockdown, with people spending more time in their local environment. It also shows the great importance the public is placing on an economic recovery to the pandemic to lead us to a fairer, greener Scotland, with greater levels of support for an economic recovery that prioritises green projects. At Scottish Environment LINK we have been working with members to gather information about where rapid investment in on-the-ground projects could lead to better environmental outcomes benefitting us all.”

Some of the projects proposed, where the charities believe rapid investment could lead to vital environmental benefits, include peatland restoration, woodland restoration, new urban green spaces, improving access to healthy food and tackling plastic pollution.

Aedan Smith, Head of Policy and Advocacy for RSPB Scotland, said: “Scotland is home to globally important peatland habitats ranging from shallow blanket bogs to raised mires to the deep peats of Caithness and Sutherland – the largest area of blanket bog in Europe. A healthy peatland is an important carbon store and can also continually accumulate more stored carbon as well as providing homes for internationally important species of plants and wildlife. A damaged peatland by contrast emits carbon, supports fewer species and is unable to deliver key benefits like water management. Investing in peatland restoration brings all those environmental benefits, supports local communities, and is a natural way to help tackle the climate and nature emergencies.”

Pete Ritchie, Executive Director of Nourish Scotland said: “The impact of Covid-19 has brought home the value of accessing nature in urban environments and has highlighted an increased demand for space to grow food. Along with more space for walking and cycling, we must reimagine our towns and cities as places in nature, with community supported food growing spaces threaded through our urban landscapes. Access to nature in everyday life should be there for everyone.”

Sarah Duley, Head of Food at Soil Association Scotland, said: “The impact of Covid-19 has highlighted more than ever the importance of a resilient food system. Consumers have shown that they value access to healthy, locally produced food. Scotland’s public sector now has an opportunity to lead the way in a green recovery that builds on this public appetite for change. Our work with local authorities through the Food for Life Scotland programme has shown us that serving fresh, sustainable school dinners is good for pupils’ health, good for local business, and good for the planet. By putting local, healthy food on the table in our schools, hospitals, and care homes, Scotland’s public sector can provide a stable market for Scottish food businesses, protect skilled jobs in the local area, and build lasting resilience into our food supply chains.”

Alistair Whyte, Head of Plantlife Scotland, said: “The Alliance for Scotland’s Rainforest is developing a suite of collaborative, landscape-scale projects that restore and protect Scotland’s rainforests, an internationally important, yet often unknown habitat, unique to Scotland’s west coast. Restoring and expanding this habitat, which rivals tropical rainforest in terms of its species diversity and richness, is a fundamental step to increasing the potential of these woodlands to contribute to carbon sequestration; enhance its rich wildlife and cultural value; while at the same time providing welcome economic benefits to rural economies.”

Dr Maddy Berg, Project Manager for Fidra, said: “Fidra’s projects focus on tackling plastic and chemical pollution. Our Great Nurdle Hunt demonstrates the widespread nature of plastic pollution from the vast and expanding global plastics industry, with 87% beaches surveyed this year finding these plastic pellets. Our work on packaging shows everyday items like popcorn packets and polystyrene present risks to people and wildlife. Scotland’s seas are vital for people’s physical and mental wellbeing and a healthy planet, which is why we must stop using them as dumping grounds. Developing a circular economy is key to reducing waste, maximising reuse and plugging unnecessary leaks of plastic pollution such as nurdles, to protect these wild places for future generations.”

ENDS

For further information or to arrange interviews, please contact:
Kirsty Nutt, Communications Manager, on 07711 385595 or kirsty.nutt@rspb.org.uk
or
Vhairi Tollan, Advocacy Manager for Scottish Environment LINK, on 07512 828004 or vhairi@scotlink.org

 

Notes
1. 76% of respondents agreed with the statement that ‘Government should prioritise economic recovery measures that improve our quality of life and tackle climate change and enhance nature.’

2. 76% of respondents said they had become more aware of nature during lockdown. 38% a lot more aware and only 4% not aware at all.

3. ‘Enhancement to Scotland’s nature through, for example, tree planting, peatland restoration, green spaces which are good for nature’ was ranked as ‘Very important’; half of respondents (49%) prioritised this as of ‘utmost importance’.

4. The importance of ‘Support for nature friendly farming’ was scored 4.07/5 and the importance of ‘Support for re-use and recycling enterprises’ was scored 4.22/5.

5. In 2019, the First Minister declared a “climate emergency” and recognised the equal importance of tackling the interlinked threats to nature. (FM letter to Scottish Environment LINK).

6. The poll was undertaken by ScotPulse in July 2020. The full results are summarised below.

• 76% of respondents said they had become more aware of nature during lockdown. 38% a lot more aware and only 4% not aware at all.
• 76% of respondents agreed with the statement that ‘Government should prioritise economic recovery measures that improve our quality of life and tackle climate change and enhance nature.’ When looking at 16-34-year olds this was 83%. Only 8% disagreed.
• 76% agreed with the statement “If Government provides support for sectors that contribute to causing climate change or damage nature, this should be dependent on those sectors and businesses rapidly changing their practices so that they no longer cause environmental harm”.
• 80% of respondents agreed that Environmental regulations should not be relaxed or undermined as part of the Recovery. Almost 50% strongly agreed. When looking at 16-34-year olds 84% agreed.
• Q3 was about measures that could be part of the Government’s recovery plans and respondents were asked to indicate importance on a scale of 1-5 (with 1 being not important, 2 of some importance, 3 quite important, 5 utmost importance)
o From highest to lowest those ranking as very important were
 Support for community food production and local food businesses (4.26/5). 50% said of utmost importance, 27% very important.
 Support for re-use and recycling enterprises (4.22/5). 47% utmost and 34% very.
 Renewable energy projects (4.17/5). 50% utmost and 29% very.
 Enhancement to Scotland’s nature through for example, tree planting, peatland restoration, green spaces which are good for nature (4.15/5). 49% utmost and 27% very.
 Upgrades to our homes and buildings so they are well insulated and fit for the future (4.15/5). 33% utmost and 45% very
 Support for nature friendly farming (4.07/5). 42% utmost and 32% very.
o Quite important overall were
 Support for training and research to help us tackle climate change and reduce waste (3.98/5).
 More space for pedestrians/cyclists (3.53/5). Despite ranking lowest of defined answers, 55% still believe this is very important or of utmost importance.
 Something else (3.4/5) Answers included: planting wildflowers for bees; cut down in travel; awareness of littering; electric cars; better public transport; reduce packaging and single use plastics; support tourism; solar energy; conservation of local wildlife

7. Scottish Environment LINK is the forum for Scotland’s voluntary environment community, with 40 member bodies representing >0.5 million people in Scotland who support a broad spectrum of environmental interests with the common goal of contributing to a more environmentally sustainable society.