Natural England. Nature recovery in England: why, what and how.

Tony Juniper

  • Start  Friday 11 Nov 2022 4:15pm
  • Finish    Friday 11 Nov 2022 5:30pm
a river winds through the phot grassy banks are on either side with a tree in the foregrond
Nature recovery in England: why, what and how.

During recent years the discourse in efforts to protect the natural world have moved from conservation and into a frame more characterised by Nature recovery.

This talk will consider why this has been the case and look at the policy mix which might deliver against some of the official new goals adopted by the UK Government, for example to ensure 30 per cent of the country managed for Nature by 2030 and the England goal to halt species decline by 2030.

The possible pathways to meeting such goals will be discussed, including in relation to the government’s plans for economic growth.

Speaker bio:
Tony Juniper CBE is Chair of the official nature conservation agency Natural England. Before taking up this role in April 2019 he was the Executive Director for Advocacy and Campaigns at WWF-UK, a Fellow with the University of Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership and President of the Wildlife Trusts. Until January 2018 he was an independent sustainability and environment advisor, including as Special Advisor with The Prince of Wales’s International Sustainability Unit.

Juniper speaks and writes widely on conservation and sustainability themes and is the author of many books, including the multi-award winning bestseller ‘What has Nature ever done for us?’ published in 2013. Tony began his career as an ornithologist, working with Birdlife International. From 1990 he worked at Friends of the Earth, initially leading the campaign for the tropical rainforests, and from 2003–2008 was the organisation’s executive director. From 2000–2008 was Vice Chair of Friends of the Earth International.

He was the first recipient of the Charles and Miriam Rothschild medal (2009) and was awarded honorary Doctor of Science degrees from the Universities of Bristol and Plymouth (2013). The Ladybird guide to climate change, co-authored with HRH The Prince of Wales and Emily Shuckburgh, was published in January 2017. In 2017 he was appointed a Commander of the British Empire (CBE).

This in-person event is followed by a drinks reception and everyone is welcome

 

 

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