£100,000 grant awarded to protect and restore Derbyshire’s peatlands

£100,000 grant awarded to protect and restore Derbyshire’s peatlands

(C) Mark Hamblin/2020VISION

Derbyshire Wildlife Trust has been awarded a £100,000 Discovery Grant by Natural England to identify the mechanisms needed to protect and restore the county’s peatlands and develop a Lowland Derbyshire Peatland Restoration Plan. 

The Government’s Nature for Climate Peatland Grant Scheme (NCPGS) aims to reduce emissions from peatlands and establish processes to restore degraded peat. The scheme will also provide wider benefits such as improved ecosystems and biodiversity, better water quality, natural flood management, and connecting people with nature.  

Through the grant, Derbyshire Wildlife Trust will identify mechanisms to restore the region’s peatlands to a healthy, functioning habitat so they can start to absorb carbon as they build up more peat and keep carbon locked up in the ground. Developing a coherent restoration plan will also support the Local Nature Recovery Strategy for the county and build on the natural capital work of Derbyshire County Council.  

While many of Derbyshire’s peatlands are already subject to restoration activities, there are significant areas that are not covered by such programmes, from peatlands within the Pennines, to lowland peatlands in the Trent Valley.  

These peatlands represent important carbon stores in the region’s fight against climate change. However, when damaged, the peat becomes dried and exposed to the elements, and instead of storing and taking up carbon, emits it back into the atmosphere as CO2. 

Matt Buckler, Head of Wilder Landscapes at Derbyshire Wildlife Trust, said: “There are approximately 1,300 hectares of known peatland in the county, outside the Peak District National Park, across a range of habitat types. These are critically important from a nature recovery network point of view, forming significantly along wetland corridors, such as the Trent, Derwent and Erewash valleys.  

“Many of the sites have been damaged through past land management, such as drainage or increased nutrient run off from a range of sources (e.g. agriculture, roads, housing) which causes the degradation of peat and the conversion from sites of carbon sequestration to high levels of carbon emission.  

“We are delighted to have been awarded this vital funding from Natural England to allow us to investigate plans for the restoration of these sites, which give so many benefits to society, ensuring that we deliver the needs of the different landowners, and work with partners to identify ways to fund the work.” 

Natural England logo png

Steve Clarke, Scheme Manager for NCPGS at Natural England added: “The projects in the Scheme are set to make a significant reduction in the amount of carbon being lost from England’s degrading peat beds, as well as producing a host of other benefits for landscape, water and biodiversity’.” 

Read more about peatland restoration on the Derbyshire Wildlife Trust website.