First plan for the West Midlands natural environment launched

The first plan for the region’s natural environment has been officially launched on the banks of the River Stour.

The Natural Environment Plan sets out the actions the West Midlands Combined Authority and its partners will take over the next five years to enhance the region’s biodiversity, protect endangered species, and improve access to green spaces and waterways for residents.
 
The plan is split into four themes:

  • access to green space
  • tree and hedgerow planting
  • wildlife corridors
  • and supporting financing to make these proposed changes happen.

The plan also highlights the benefits of nature for our health and wellbeing, recognising the impact of the Covid pandemic on urban areas with little access to green space.
 
The official launch was led by Andy Street, Mayor of the West Midlands and chair of the WMCA, and Councillor Ian Courts, WMCA portfolio lead for Environment and Energy and leader of Solihull Council The Mayor said:

“During lockdown we all realised the importance of green spaces and how these areas, including our waterways, are key to our natural environment whilst also really benefitting our physical and mental wellbeing.

"That’s why we’ve drawn up our Natural Environment Plan, which sets out how we’re going to improve and maintain these critical spaces across the West Midlands.

“The plan also recognises how the West Midlands’ natural environment holds huge potential to mitigate the effects of climate change, from reducing the risk of flooding to directly removing carbon dioxide from our atmosphere.

"Decades of polluting industry and expansive development on our greenbelt has forced wildlife out, but this plan aims to put a stop to the damage by protecting, restoring, and enhancing the region’s biodiversity for everyone’s benefit.”
 
The West Midlands Natural Environment Plan follows this year’s #WM2041 Five Year Plan, which sets out how to keep the region on track for reaching net zero by 2041. It aims to deliver a series of long-term outcomes, one of which is for everybody to have access to high quality green space within a 300-metre walk of their home.

The Plan aims to pave the way for the Government’s landmark Environment Bill and Nature Recovery Networks, expected to outline a series of targets on biodiversity and access to green space later this year. Jobs are also a key focus, with an ambition to support the creation of 200 jobs in natural capital by 2026.
 
The Plan is underpinned by ongoing work to create a £750,000 programme of Community Green Grants, drive tree planting with our Virtual Forest initiative, and support the creation of a West Midlands National Park.
 
New major projects are outlined, such as establishing a new national walking trail, transforming the Digbeth viaduct into a public green walkway, securing funding for the Black Country UNESCO Geopark and exploring setting up a regional tree nursery to increase the supply of native saplings. The plan also sets out a commitment to explore how the region’s biodiversity can be improved across new transport infrastructure and other developments funded by the WMCA. 

During their visit both Cllr Courts and the Mayor spoke to colleagues from The Wildlife Trust for Birmingham and the Black Country about their 'Love Your River Stour' project, which is featured as a case study in the Natural Environment Plan.

The project, which has been awarded just under a quarter of a million pounds from the government, will help to transform the River Stour’s banks in Stourbridge and Wolverhampton into wildlife-rich areas and will create jobs and provide training for local people. Delia Garratt, Chief Executive of The Wildlife Trust for Birmingham and the Black Country added:

“We are pleased to see that the West Midlands Combined Authority recognise and support the need to invest in the natural world and we welcome the launch of the Natural Environment Plan.

"Two of our landscape-scale urban nature conservation projects are included in the plan as case studies of how working with nature can to tackle the Ecological and Climate crises and improve the health and wellbeing of local communities.”

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