Thanks for the feedback so far - most appreciated. You will hear much more from me and BASC on all of this in due course and I will take on board all comments as regards messaging and target audiences.
As explained in the article linked from the OP shooters are already doing the species management and habitat work in many of the areas that the local nature recovery strategies are mapping out. One of the targets is creating 140,000 hectares of restored or new nature-rich habitat by 2028. People who shoot carry out habitat management and conservation on 7.6 million hectares. So clearly shooting should be key to the success of every local nature recovery strategy.
When the local nature recovery habitat maps go live next year I think there is a golden opportunity for us all to engage with our local authorities on the projects, so that everyone involved knows and understands that shooting is a solution and not a problem. Early engagement from some of us during the public consultations would also help. BASC is responding to every consultation.
A few more stats...
Shooting in England invests £450 million of voluntary conservation work into nature recovery every year. That is the time people give to increasing the size and quality of habitats, as well as the time spent managing species that cause problems.
The carbon saved through woodland managed for shooting is worth £135 million a year, deer and grey squirrel management being a highly important component of that. The average game shoot is 15% wooded compared with just 10.5 per cent wooded elsewhere. The government has a legal target of reaching 16.5 per cent woodland and tree cover (so any tree anywhere) by 2050. Shooting is leading the charge for trees.
Shooting also contributes to England’s food security by harvesting wild game, notably venison and gamebirds, worth £25 million annually. Furthermore, shooting helps limit crop damage and forestry impacts, saving English farmers and the forestry sector an estimated £37 million and £4 million annually, respectively.
One of the more overlooked benefits of shooting is its positive impact on health and wellbeing. Individuals who participate in shooting are more likely to be physically active and experience reduced levels of loneliness compared to the general public. The resulting positive effects on mental and physical health save the NHS and local authorities £21 million annually. Highlighting this contribution supports the case for shooting as a public good that helps reduce healthcare costs while fostering community cohesion.
As regards funding for the nature recovery projects, £14 million has been allocated to produce the plans by March 2025; and billions are involved ahead interlinked with agri-environmental schemes.
An inter-related article here:
Defra has updated its position on protecting 30 per cent of land for nature in England by 2030, and it turns out, they need shooting.
basc.org.uk
See also this article:
Ian Danby outlines the opportunities - and potential threats - for shooting presented by Natural England's State of Natural Capital Report.
basc.org.uk