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Biodiversity Loss

15 May 2024

Lead MP

Caroline Lucas
Brighton, Pavilion
Green

Responding Minister

Rebecca Pow

Tags

ClimateAgriculture & Rural Affairs
Word Count: 14207
Other Contributors: 16

At a Glance

Caroline Lucas raised concerns about biodiversity loss in Westminster Hall. A government minister responded.

Key Requests to Government:

Will the Minister publish a bold, co-ordinated and well-resourced plan with concrete steps ahead of COP16 in Colombia? Will she bring the global commitment to reverse nature loss by 2030 into UK law through a new climate and nature Bill?

How the Debate Unfolded

MPs spoke in turn to share their views and ask questions. Here's what each person said:

Lead Contributor

Brighton, Pavilion
Opened the debate
Raw sewage continues to pour into waterways for over 4 million hours last year. Neonicotinoids, a harmful pesticide, have been repeatedly approved under emergency measures. The Government is considering backtracking on a peat ban. 'State of Nature' report highlights that the UK has lost nearly 20% of species abundance since the speaker's lifetime began. The natural world is falling silent due to acoustic fossils.

Government Response

Rebecca Pow
Government Response
It is a pleasure to see you in the Chair, Ms Rees. You are keeping everyone to time—excellent. I thank the hon. Member for Brighton, Pavilion (Caroline Lucas) for securing this debate. We have an impassioned debate on biodiversity in Westminster Hall yesterday and it was very full. Like this debate, we all sing from the same hymn sheet of loving nature and knowing that it is intrinsically part of how we live. We know we cannot deal with the climate crisis and climate adaptation without tackling biodiversity and nature. That is a given, and it is something I have worked on since I have been in Parliament. We have made enormous progress on that agenda in the past decade at home and on the international stage—one cannot do one without the other. The critical thing is that the Government have done more than any other Government to set the framework that we must have, including introducing the Environment Act. We have passed legislation to protect our environment with four legally binding biodiversity targets, tree targets, and targets in a number of other areas such as water and air. We are working closely with the Office for Environmental Protection (OEP) to ensure it has the right data and evidence so that it can see the trajectory to the targets. A huge amount of work is going on; we have launched a new £25 million fund for nature-based solution projects, and farmers are moving with us and being paid to do it. We also have peatland restoration funds, species survival funds, local nature recovery strategies, biodiversity net gain legislations, swift bricks, and other measures. We publish the official statistic covering 670 species used as indicators of how we are doing on our targets last Friday. The UK was at the forefront of the international efforts to agree the Kunming-Montreal global biodiversity framework to halt and reverse biodiversity loss. We have also legislated to halt and reverse biodiversity loss in this country and we are putting our money where our mouth is with a green finance strategy across Government and already committed £11 billion in our climate finance commitment.
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About Westminster Hall Debates

Westminster Hall debates are a chance for MPs to raise important issues affecting their constituents and get a response from a government minister. Unlike Prime Minister's Questions, these debates are more in-depth and collaborative. The MP who secured the debate speaks first, other MPs can contribute, and a minister responds with the government's position.