#StandUpForNature

Update August 2023:

Despite public action to share concern about the devastating impact of the Retained EU Law Bill on our environment; the Bill has now been made an Act of Parliament. Over 116 MPs were contacted by you to raise these issues and propose major changes to the Bill. Unfortunately, the amendments were withdrawn in the final Retained EU Law Bill debate in the House of Lords after the government made it clear that they would oppose them again.

This Act means that current and future governments will find it easier to reduce or even completely remove legislative protections for species, habitats and the wider environment with little consultation and without sufficient parliamentary scrutiny. We have already seen this affecting Britain’s rivers, with increased sewage being dumped into our waterways.

Legal protection for endangered species and their homes has been crucial in assisting many threatened species to begin to recover from major declines.

The Act WEAKENS species protection and has the potential to cause SIGNIFICANT HARM to our environment.

Ministers have promised, on several occasions that they “will not lower environmental protections or standards”

Now we need to make sure that these repeated promises by government ministers are kept.
We’re asking you to sign the Nature 2030 open letter calling on all political parties to adopt a five-point plan for wildlife in their manifestos for the next General Election, likely to take place in 2024.

Click the link to visit the Nature 2030 page on the Wildlife Trusts’ website.

#StandUpForNature and sign the open letter today.

SIGN THE OPEN LETTER


The Background

On The 10th of May 2023, the government announced that the approximate 4800 EU Laws up for scrap via the Retained EU Law Bill at the end of the year, has been reduced to 600. This is fantastic news! However, this is only one battle, and we must continue to put pressure on our government. An enormous 341 of the 600 EU Laws on the chopping block still relate to the environment. These include essential habitat regulations, air pollution transparency rules, as well as laws relating to water management and pesticides. Furthermore, Business Secretary Kemi Badenoch said the list is not “the limit of the government’s ambition”. This shows the government has retreated for now, but don’t be fooled, they are just waiting for the heat to die down. We can’t let it.

The laws at risk include habitat regulations, the purpose of which is to determine whether building development would have an adverse effect on European designated habitats and species, such as the Eurasian Otter.

Want to do more?

Below are guides for a selection of different steps you can take. Depending on your time and resources, you can carry out one, two or as many as you like. Remember, we are stronger together, and for us to have a collective voice we need you to share whatever actions you take on social media alongside our hashtag #StandUpForNature.