Nature Emergency UK

Isle of Anglesey County Council

Council type
Unitary Authority (Single Tier)
Nation
Wales
Rural/Urban profile
Rural
Deprivation quintile
3rd IMD quintile (average)

Nature commitments

Nature emergency

Isle of Anglesey County Council has not declared a nature emergency.

Evidence-based action plan

Isle of Anglesey County Council has not committed to develop an evidence-based action plan for pushing nature into recovery.

Embedded in strategy

Isle of Anglesey County Council has not committed to embed nature’s recovery into all strategic plans and policy areas.

30 by 30

Isle of Anglesey County Council has not committed to protect and manage 30% of council landholdings for nature recovery by 2030.

Next steps

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How does this council compare?

Here 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
Isle of Anglesey County Council This council No No No
Gwynedd Council 81.9% No No No
Pembrokeshire County Council 81.1% No No No
Dumfries and Galloway Council 78.4% No No No
Argyll and Bute Council 76.1% No No No
Shropshire Council 74.5% No No No
Cumberland Council 73.6% No No No
Carmarthenshire County Council 73.5% No No No
East Ayrshire 72.0% No No No
Denbighshire County Council 71.3% 2019 Yes No No
Scottish Borders Council 71.0% 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.

Nature Emergency UK has been developed by the Woodland Trust in association with mySociety and Climate Emergency UK.

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