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Call for Scotland to be a Rewilding Nation

In February 2021 we supported the call for Scotland to declare itself the world鈥檚 first #RewildingNation. Here鈥檚 what happened on the day it all went live.

SRA film
 © The Scottish Rewilding Alliance

Published 05/03/2021

Last month, through our membership of the Scottish Rewilding Alliance, we joined the call for Scotland to be declared a rewilding nation. It was a call that reverberated far and wide.

More than 2,500 tuned into the livestream event on YouTube on 17th February. They came from all corners of Scotland, from Aberdeenshire, Wester Ross and Skye to Greenock, Edinburgh and Kirkcudbright. People tuned in from the Tees Valley and Yorkshire to Wales, Cornwall, Hastings and London. And there were hellos and comments from overseas including Ireland, Sweden, Ecuador, Spain, Portugal, Romania, El Salvador, Helsinki, Los Angeles and Seattle.

“Can Oxfordshire join Scotland?”

comment from live event

Can Oxfordshire join Scotland?鈥 asked one attendee, summing up the enthusiasm and feeling of solidarity for the call to rewild Scotland. Another from Cardiff said: Hopefully these types of discussions will help to accelerate rewilding outside of Scotland as well.鈥

Following an introduction from Alliance convener Steve Micklewright from Trees for Life, Peter Cairns, director of SCOTLAND: The Big Picture, kicked off a visual session with a presentation about the state of nature in Scotland today and how we might start to restore and rewild. Today, only 4% of Scotland is native woodland and 25% is severely nature-depleted and unable to support the natural forests, peatlands and river systems that it otherwise could. 

The screening of a new animation followed (view it below), narrated by TV presenter and wildlife cameraman, Gordon Buchanan. Quite simply, and without doubt, the best film I鈥檝e ever watched,鈥 enthused one viewer on the night. People were later encouraged to send the film to their MSP in Scotland to call for rewilding action.

A panel discussion then took place with Peter, Gordon, Nick Underdown from Open Seas, Tom Bowser from Argaty Red Kites and Rebecca Wrigley, our chief executive at 黑料正能量.

View the animation

SCOTLAND: The world鈥檚 first Rewilding Nation?

What is a rewilding nation?

The call for Scotland to be a rewilding nation is asking the Scottish Government to commit to working with nature and finding natural solutions to our problems. That might be allowing beavers to be relocated to other areas instead of shot or supporting the return of the lynx. It focuses on three key asks:

  1. To have 30% of Scotland rewilding in 10 years: by increasing the amount of peatland being restored, allowing natural woodlands to regenerate, rewilding rivers and designating genuine no-take zones in our seas.
  2. To make rewilding a third pillar of Scotland鈥檚 economic strategy, alongside increasing competitiveness and tackling inequality
  3. To rewild our communities from streets to parks and gardens to road verges so we can all reconnect with nature

It鈥檚 supported by a Survation poll finding that 76% of people in Scotland support rewilding with only 7% opposed.

The Scottish Government responded to the call just before the live event to say it鈥檚 already rewilding, stating that 37% of Scottish seas are now marine protected areas and the government has voluntarily committed to protect 30% of Scottish land by 2030.

Rebecca welcomed the actions that are already being taken but pointed out that much more needs to be done, and urgently.

Protecting areas without their recovery and restoration isn鈥檛 enough,鈥 she said. Globally, natural climate solutions can make a 30% contribution to climate mitigation but gets only 3% of the funding. We need regulations, the enforcement of these regulations and funding to make them happen.鈥

“At the turn of the 20th century we were sweeping 50% of the North Sea. At the turn of the 21st century, 20 years ago, that had increased to a massive 90%”

Problems at sea

Nick explained why marine protection is failing. It鈥檚 true that 37% is covered by some form of designation but if you look at what鈥檚 going on these protected areas are not actually protecting the life in our seas,鈥 he said.

We have really good legislation, and there鈥檚 a duty on the Scottish Government to enhance the health of Scotland鈥檚 marine area, but we鈥檙e just not doing it very fast.

If we do what we鈥檙e legally obliged to do, and what makes sense to do, we鈥檇 be in good shape. But as a quick example, only 5% of Scotland鈥檚 inshore waters are protected from bottom trawl fishing, which sweeps across the seabeds and damages marine habitats. That鈥檚 not what people expect from protected areas.鈥

He later pointed out that at the turn of the 20th century we were sweeping 50% of the North Sea. At the turn of the 21st century, 20 years ago, that had increased to a massive 90%. In addition, the decline of Scotland鈥檚 wild salmon and the environmental problems of farming salmon are urgent problems to be addressed.

Rewilding the land

Answering the question of whether the whole of the Cairngorms National Park should be rewilded, Gordon acknowledged that large areas of the park are almost devoid of life鈥 but he believes, there鈥檚 an opportunity, or should be an opportunity, to make it the jewel in the crown of Scotland鈥檚 wild places鈥o create a truly wild ecosystem that could lead the way and show what can be done, what can be restored.鈥

He added: So many people in the UK will sign petitions and cry out about the loss of habitats around the world but we should be as passionate about restoring what we鈥檝e lost.鈥

On the question of reintroducing predators such as the lynx he said: We shouldn鈥檛 forget that this is about restoring the balance in nature, restoring these natural mechanisms. Predators are just one part of that鈥ut we shouldn鈥檛 be foisting predators on people. It has to be done through dialogue and discussion and with long-term aims in sight.鈥

He noted that when he was growing up on Mull in the 1980s most farmers would have been opposed to bringing back sea eagles. Now you鈥檇 struggle to find a farmer who doesn鈥檛 think it鈥檚 been a good thing for them and their communities.

Rewild Nation bear
 © 黑料正能量

Building trust and ambition

Pete suggested that, we would recoil in horror if we thought India was going to eradicate its tigers or Africa its lions yet here we are in Britain being one of the only European countries refusing to live with large predators.鈥

Tom agreed but as a farmer he recognised there鈥檚 still work to be done to build trust with people working the land. He also urged a focus on how we make reintroductions work. We know the why, we have to focus on the how,鈥 he said. 

He was asked if he agreed we should have wild areas close to cities where most people live. Yes, I agree. I think the last year has shown that people really need wild places. There are lots of good examples of urban rewilding when you look around the world鈥

But we also have to be realistic that although every win at the moment is a big win, and we should try to rewild as much as we can, including urban places, the big challenge for Scotland, and the big battle to be won and lost over the environment, is in the countryside鈥 Only 17% of people live in rural areas, 80% of our land mass is farmland. To me, it鈥檚 farmland and the marine environment that we really need to improve.鈥

“The big challenge for Scotland, and the big battle to be won and lost over the environment, is in the countryside”

Tom Bowser

Argaty Red Kites

Support in Scottish Parliament

Gail Ross, SNP MSP for Caithness, Sutherland and Ross constituency, and deputy convenor of the Rural Affairs and Connectivity Committee, put forward a motion to the Scottish Parliament on the same day as the event titled Scotland鈥檚 Potential to be a Rewilding Nation鈥, which asked:

That the Parliament notes the recent polling which indicates that the public, by a factor of more than 10 to one, supports the concept of rewilding, an approach to large-scale conservation which aims to reintroduce locally extinct species and restore ecosystems; believes that with community support, projects of this sort can bring benefits for climate adaptation and mitigation, biodiversity, wellbeing, and local employment, and recognises that Scotland has the potential to be a rewilding nation, where social, economic and environmental opportunities are available much more widely across the country, including in towns and cities as well as in rural and coastal communities.

At the time of writing, 20 MSPs have supported the motion. If you live in Scotland, you can urge your MSP to join them.

So what now?

Nick Underdown from Open Seas was asked the question: What steps do we need to take to ensure our oceans are rewilded?鈥 It鈥檚 a huge, complex question that relates equally to rewilding the land and rewilding the seas.

Bringing people on board is a first step,鈥 he said. We need to talk with each other. We need to get the facts out about what rewilding means, and this is why we鈥檙e here just now doing this鈥

We need to share the information and the scientific knowledge that we鈥檙e gathering around this rewilding agenda so that people can make decisions within their own communities about the kind of steps they need to take as a society. I can鈥檛 overstate that. I would entreat everyone to talk to each other. Get outside of your bubble and talk and share information.鈥

Last word

There鈥檚 still much work to be done and at 黑料正能量 we鈥檙e looking at the obstacles and the challenges to see how we can progress rewilding. Our recent launch of the Rewilding Network is helping to connect landowners and share knowledge and experiences of rewilding. But how can we ensure that everyone has access to wild nature and abundant wildlife? That鈥檚 something we鈥檙e looking to explore in more detail.

In the meantime, we hope Scotland will serve as inspiration for the other nations of the UK to aspire to be a #RewildingNation.

Note The Scottish Rewilding Alliance is a broad and growing coalition of organisations, which includes Trees for Life, Borders Forest Trust, Open Seas, RSPB Scotland, Scotland: The Big Picture, Scottish Raptor Study group, and Mountaineering Scotland.

Rewilding Nation: further info

Child showing oyster as part of Seawilding's oyster reintroduction

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