The Fens to benefit from Government funding to kickstart the restoration of peatlands

The Fens to benefit from Government funding to kickstart the restoration of peatlands

Ross Hoddinott/2020VISION

The Fens East Peat Partnership (FEPP) are excited to announce they have been awarded a substantial “Discovery Grant” by Government as part of their progressive Nature for Climate Peatland Grant Scheme.

The Fens East Peat Partnership has been awarded £815,877 to explore the feasibility of restoring peatlands in the Fens. The government's Nature for Climate Peatland Grant Scheme “Discovery Grant” will enable the partnership to investigate the state of peat on 20 sites and neighbouring areas across Cambridgeshire, Lincolnshire, Norfolk and Suffolk. The aim will be to develop site restoration plans for those peatland sites.

Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust are leading the project on behalf of The National Trust, Natural England, Norfolk Wildlife Trust, RSPB and the Wildlife Trust for Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire & Northamptonshire. These organisations have been working together across the Fens for many years through the Fens for the Future partnership.

if managed correctly, peatlands can help us address the two environmental crises, climate change and biodiversity loss
Tammy Smalley
Head of Conservation, Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust

Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust, Head of Conservation, Tammy Marie Smalley, says,
“These are very exciting times, as peatlands are now in the spotlight as a habitat, that if managed correctly can help us address the two environmental crises, climate change and biodiversity loss. The Fens are incredibly important area for an array of threatened species, but also as the bread basket of our nation’s food production. We want to work with our partners and neighbours to ensure that water resource management delivers for peatland restoration and much more besides.” 

Peatlands are Earth’s largest terrestrial carbon store, holding more than twice the amount of carbon in all the world’s forests. They cover 10.9% of England’s land area. Unfortunately, 87% of our peatlands are degraded. In this state, they do not capture and store carbon but emit an estimated 10 million tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent every year.

The Government’s Nature for Climate Peatland Grant Scheme aims to capture this carbon by setting 35,000 ha of degraded peatland on a path to restoration by 2025. This will help deliver the UK’s Net Zero target. It will contribute to the Nature Recovery Network with wider benefits to biodiversity, water quality and natural flood management.

The Fens East Peat Partnership project is one of 10 projects from across the country that have been awarded Nature for Climate Peatland Discovery Grants. The grants will help groups develop new projects seeking to restore peatland systems to a natural and healthy state at a landscape scale. The funding will be delivered by Natural England and will help unlock barriers to peatland restoration, enabling projects that would struggle to gain funding to be in a position to apply for future rounds of peat restoration funding.

Logos of the Fens East Peat Partnership