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UK | Soils
UK invests on lowland peat soils improving projects The UK government has announced the recipients of awards to improve lowland peat soils, including over £1.3m to projects across the North. 2/8/2024
Peatlands are our largest terrestrial carbon store, however, as a result of centuries of drainage for agriculture, just 1% of England’s lowland peatlands remain in a near-natural state, and these drained peatlands account for 88% of all greenhouse gas emissions from England’s peat. The projects will use government funding to improve the management of water on lowland peat and enhance understanding of climate change impacts and flood risk. The projects in the North are:
Philip Duffy, Chief Executive of the Environment Agency, said: "I was incredibly encouraged by the number of exciting applications to the Lowland Agriculture Peat - Water Discovery Pilot. They represent a diverse array of applicants, from across the breadth of the lowland peat areas. Over the coming year, evidence from these local collaboration pilots will be the first step in understanding costs, benefits and risks from changing water management within lowland agriculture peat soils. The pilots will produce costed water-management plans, which will help us to balance our aims to reduce climate change impacts and flood risk, improve biodiversity and support sustainable agriculture". Helen Earnshaw, Peat Project Officer at Lancashire Wildlife Trust, added: "We are really excited to have been awarded this funding which will help us expand our work looking at wetter farming practices on lowland agricultural peat. We know that many conventional farming practices need to change, but the farming community need to know what will and won’t work before they can make the shift to more sustainable farming techniques. This funding will allow us to undertake a farm-scale wetter farming trial, on a real working farm, providing vital data and evidence for both farmers and policymakers".
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