Farmer-led rural revitalization wins major funding to restore biodiversity, mitigate climate change and boost quality of life

On July 23, 2020, it was announced that £5.7 million of National Lottery funding will help reverse the decline of some of Britain’s most important natural landscapes in the north of England.

The Tees-Swale: Naturally Connected project’s collaborative approach will bring together farmers, landowners, conservation organisations, communities, volunteers and partner organisations. Its aim is to revitalize the region by restoring biodiversity, mitigate climate change and enhance people’s well-being.

View in Swaledale. Photo courtesy of Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority.

Over five years, the “ambitious and forward-thinking” Tees-Swale project will improve over 829km² of treasured upland landscapes across Upper Teesdale in the North Pennines and Upper Swaledale in the Yorkshire Dales National Park.

The landscapes include blanket bog – an important habitat and carbon store – and a large percentage of the UK’s remaining uplands hay meadows, home to wading birds including lapwing, redshank, snipe and curlew.

The program will support farming methods which value and work in harmony with nature. It will also restore threatened natural heritage, connect priority habitats and help to reverse the decline in biodiversity, through:

  • restoration of hay meadows;
  • restoration of peatland;
  • looking after the rivers; and
  • creation of wetland and woodland.

Sharing learning and ideas

Dr Ruth Starr-Keddle, botanist and Land Management Facilitator carrying out a meadow survey in Upper Swaledale, in the Yorkshire Dales National Park. Photo courtesy of North Pennines AONB Partnership.

Key to the Tees-Swale project will be sharing learning and ideas between farmers and conservation organisations. It aims to work with all 300 farmers in the area over the five years of the project.

Schools and community groups, including from nearby urban areas, will be able to explore the dales, taking part in activities to help them better understand and appreciate the wildlife, landscapes and lives of the people who live and work there – and boost their own well-being too.

René Olivieri, Chair of The National Lottery Heritage Fund, said “Never before has the need to aid nature’s recovery, particularly in the face of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, been more urgent.

Ambitious and forward-thinking programmes like this align firmly with our key priorities in ensuring that our National Lottery funding supports bigger, better-connected and more resilient habitats for nature, as well as conservation at a landscape scale that will increase people’s understanding of the cultural value of the nature around them,” she added.

Investment in nature

The £5.7 million grant is one of the largest National Lottery Heritage Fund grants awarded to a nature project in our 25-year history. It goes towards total project funding of £8.5m.

Tees-Swale is being led by the North Pennines Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) Partnership and the Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority.

Featured photo of farmer and his dogs on Hill Gill Farm is courtesy of Natural England.

This article originally appeared on the website of the National Lottery’s Heritage Fund.
Reprinted here by permission.

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