A call for a reset on nature

A call for a reset on nature

The Wildlife Trusts

I have joined more than 35 environmental leaders from across the UK in signing a letter calling on the Government to fundamentally reset environmental policy and urgently address the accelerating crisis facing nature.

The letter highlights a stark reality: decades of decline have pushed many of the ecosystems we all depend on to breaking point. Nature underpins clean water, food production, public health, and economic resilience, yet wildlife continues to disappear at an alarming rate. Without decisive action, a crisis risks becoming a catastrophe. 

We and fellow signatories are clear that strong environmental protections are not a barrier to progress. There is no credible evidence that safeguarding nature holds back growth, housing, or infrastructure. Instead, investing in nature recovery creates skilled jobs, supports farming and rural economies, improves health and wellbeing, and builds stronger, more resilient communities. 

The public appetite for change is strong. Repeated surveys show overwhelming support for protecting and restoring nature, with people wanting more action – not less – to safeguard wildlife and the places we care about.

At a pivotal moment for environmental policy, the letter urges the Government to show leadership by committing to clear Red Lines for Nature, including: 

  • No further weakening of environmental protections
  • No cuts to funding for environmental bodies
  • Fully funded, credible plans to halt and reverse biodiversity loss 

This call comes as political attention on nature grows. On Wednesday 15 April, MPs gathered in Parliament following a House of Lords debate on the damaging impacts of bottomtrawling on marine wildlife. MPs used the moment to press for faster, stronger action to restore nature on land and at sea. 

The Government now has a rare opportunity not just to halt the decline of nature, but to become the first administration in decades to leave the environment in a better state than it was found.

At Staffordshire Wildlife Trust, we know that nature is not an obstacle to progress. It is a measure of it, and restoring wildlife must sit at the heart of decisions about our future.