Badenoch's part in tacking biodiversity loss and climate change
Highland groups who want to influence biodiversity loss and help arrest climate change can apply for funds to help their campaigns.
The money has been made available for transformational projects to improve habitats, safeguard species and tackle the causes of biodiversity loss, as the Biodiversity Challenge Fund opens its latest round.
The Scottish Government committed £3 million for biodiversity, including a further round of the Biodiversity Challenge Fund, earlier this year in its latest programme for government.
The Biodiversity Challenge Fund adds to the many millions of pounds of funding delivered through the Scottish Rural Development Programme and other sources to support biodiversity and help to deliver Scotland’s Biodiversity Strategy.
It specifically encourages applicants with innovative projects that improve biodiversity and address the impact of climate change, by increasing the resilience of our most at-risk habitats and species and creating large areas of new or restored habitat.
To date the fund has supported over 30 ambitious, large scale projects with total funding now nearly £7m.
New applicants for the latest round are being encouraged to follow in the trailblazing footsteps of projects such as
the improvement of the pine hoverfly facility at Kincraig's Highland Wildlife Park in Badenoch, with 2020's pine hoverfly season the most successful to date for these rare invertebrates – over 170 larvae produced by the Cairngorms Nature Action Plan.
Environment and climate change secretary Roseanna Cunningham said: “Supporting a third year of Biodiversity Challenge Funding is crucial to tackling ecological decline and further emphasises the importance that we place on biodiversity loss.
"It is only part of the approximately £100 million investment we make in biodiversity across the Scottish Government each year.
“This includes £150 million to help deliver a 50 per cent increase in woodland creation by 2024 and an ambitious, 10-year, £250 million peatland restoration plan by 2025.
“This funding delivers multiple benefits, addressing particularly the twin crises of biodiversity loss and the climate emergency through support for innovative projects across Scotland.”
NatureScot chief executive Francesca Osowska added: “During lockdowns people around the world have valued the direct physical and wellbeing benefits of nature. More than ever before, people are starting to understand fully and support powerful arguments to put nature at the heart of our emergence from this crisis.
“Investing in nature through the Biodiversity Challenge Fund is one, crucial way of helping make our communities sustainable and more resilient, with a green recovery that puts nature, and nature-based solutions, at the heart of rebuilding our economy.”