East Staffordshire District Council declared a nature emergency in 2022.
Council meeting on 28 February 2022 adjourned and continued on 7 March 2022 (meeting minutes in the ones from February meeting, from pp.21 ff., relevant motion on p.30)"200/22 NOTICE OF MOTION Councillor D Goodfellow had put forward the following motion, in accordance with Rule 14, which had been duly seconded: "Nature is in long term decline. With 41 per cent of wild species in decline nationally, and 15 per cent facing extinction. The requirement to take action to reverse this is urgent. We recognise that: A) Nature provides us with vital support systems ['ecosystem services'], and severe declines in biodiversity are undermining nature's productivity and adaptability, posing excessive uncertainty for our economies and wellbeing; B) A thriving natural environment underpins a healthy, happy, prosperous society; C) The impacts of climate change are driving nature's decline, while restoring and protection of natural habitat provides a wide variety of cost-effective benefits to mitigate and adapt to the impacts of climate change. D) Many areas of work of local authorities across the county of Staffordshire have an impact on nature, and we have responsibilities to make decisions to protect and enhance it. In order to support the recovery of nature across Staffordshire, and in recognition of new obligations under the Environment Act 2021 , this council commits to: 1 . work with partners and stakeholders to develop and deliver a Local Nature Recovery Strategy (LNRS) that sits within the national Nature Recovery Network and underpins planning, development and land management decisions. As part of this, we will: a) improve and protect the landscape and flora and fauna's resilience to climate change, providing natural solutions to reduce carbon and manage flood risk, and sustaining vital ecosystems; b) prioritise the restoration of peatland habitats and other high quality natural habitats, and adopt a peat-free policy wherever possible for all council contracts and supplies; c) formulate a tree policy and strategy which is underpinned by Nature Recovery Network mapping across the local authority area, pursuing a "right tree, right place" approach; d) after satisfying safety and visibility priorities and the Highway Code, develop verge cutting regimes that maximise potential for carbon storage, sequestration and biodiversity; e) seek to manage council-owned land for the benefit of wildlife by 2030 (in line with UK Government's national and international commitments); f) meet the Environment Act requirement of 10% biodiversity net-gain commitment across all council-owned land, aspiring to increase this wherever possible; g) carry out a carbon audit of our key landholdings to establish how carbon storage/sequestration could be improved. 2. Embed nature's recovery into all strategic plans and policy areas, not just those directly related to the environment. Ensure the LNRS is well understood across the authority and complements other relevant plans and strategies. 3. Working with partners, demonstrate leadership by supporting and engaging with businesses, communities and the wider public to take action to put nature into recovery. 4. Build tackling the nature crisis into Cabinet's environmental portfolio to provide a designated lead. 5. The Council designates a lead officer to coordinate the council operations in relation to the ecological emergency. 6. Integrate the targets, objectives and outcomes of this motion with those outlined in the existing Climate Emergency Declaration to ensure measures to tackle climate issues do not contravene the principles of enhancing biodiversity. 7. Where appropriate, the council will invest in nature-based solutions to climate change in order to tackle the nature crisis and climate emergency together. 8. Through the LNRS, develop an evidence-based action plan including short and long-term targets for putting nature into recovery by 2030. Areas of focus will include: Land management; Biodiversity; Roads and highways; Planning and development; Air quality; Transforming urban spaces; Health and wellbeing; People and communities; Education and awareness. 9. That the relevant Overview and Scrutiny Committee monitor the LNRS and ESBC's action to support biodiversity and nature recovery on an annual basis. 10. Work closely with councils across Staffordshire via the recently formed Staffordshire Sustainability Board and other partners to promote Local Nature Recovery." Public Minutes of Council 28 Feb 2022 PDFhttps://www.eaststaffsbc.gov.uk/sites/default/files/docs/cmis/meetings/Public%20Minutes%20of%20Council%2028%20Feb%202022.pdf
— Council (Source)
East Staffordshire District Council has committed to develop an evidence-based action plan for pushing nature into recovery.
East Staffordshire District Council has committed to embed nature’s recovery into all strategic plans and policy areas.
East Staffordshire District Council has committed to protect and manage 30% of council landholdings for nature recovery by 2030.
We’re happy to share policy ideas and insights with local authorities.
If your local authority is looking for guidance on tree and nature policies, email governmentaffairs@woodlandtrust.org.uk.
Nature is in decline, but local action can make the difference. Find out how to get involved.
Take action in your communityHere are the 10 most similar councils, based on a combination of distance, urban/rural split, emissions profile, and deprivation.
Council | Similarity | Nature emergency | Evidence-based action plan | Embedded in strategy | 30 by 30 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
East Staffordshire District Council | This council | 2022 | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Nottinghamshire County Council | 87.6% | No | No | No | |
Newcastle-Under-Lyme Borough Council | 85.6% | 2021 | Yes | Yes | No |
Staffordshire County Council | 84.9% | 2022 | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Cheshire West and Chester Council | 83.3% | No | No | No | |
Amber Valley Borough Council | 82.3% | No | No | No | |
Wyre Forest District Council | 82.2% | No | No | No | |
Derbyshire County Council | 82.0% | 2022 | No | No | No |
Suffolk County Council | 81.0% | No | No | No | |
Lancashire County Council | 80.6% | No | No | No | |
Bedford Borough Council | 80.5% | No | No | No |
Something not right? We have made every effort to ensure the accuracy of this information. However, if you have any corrections, please contact governmentaffairs@woodlandtrust.org.uk.