Two years ago, in his speech at Labour Party Conference 2023, Keir Starmer relayed a conversation he had recently had with a woman about the cost of living. She had told him she was living on ‘survival mode - I can’t think oh let’s do something nice’. This prompted the Labour leader to reflect in his speech on the importance of ‘the little things we love…days out, meals out, holidays’ and to warn against policy decisions that ‘whittle away at our joy’.
Two years on, another Labour Conference looms, with very different mood music. Commitments to boost economic growth fill every Government announcement, with Ministers repeatedly pledging that growth is ‘the Government’s foremost priority’. Every Ministerial decision is viewed through the prism of growth; policies thought capable of increasing GDP are backed, whatever the wider costs may be.
A particular weight is being placed on unrestricted building as an engine of growth, with Housing Secretary Steve Reed pledging this week to ‘tear down all the barriers to development’. Rumours swirl about what this might mean. Given that the Chancellor, Rachel Reeves, has accused snails, bats and newts as being ‘blockers’ and wanted the already nature-damaging Planning and Infrastructure Bill to go further, speculation is rife that these potentially-soon-to-be-torn down barriers could include the laws that protect wildlife.
Aside from being a colossal environmental mistake, such a step would mark a final break with the sentiments Keir Starmer expressed just two years ago. Environmental regulations don’t just protect wildlife; they safeguard people’s enjoyment of it.
The Habitats Regulations, our most effective and value for money nature laws, provide a good example. The regulations have protected some of our most precious and threatened wildlife for decades.
Walking amidst the butterflies in Epping Forest, spotting seals on Norfolk beaches, catching the flash of a kingfisher in the Fens – all these experiences, and so many more, are enjoyed because the Habitats Regulations are there. These and other environmental regulations are the guarantors of little, wild joys that enrich the lives of millions every day.
The public are crystal clear about how much they cherish these wild joys:
- Research by Wildlife and Countryside Link and eftec has suggested that when people are asked to put a monetary value on the benefits provided by the Habitats Regulations, it comes to over £1 billion.
- The Wildlife Trusts’ work shows rising public interest in the health aspect of these benefits, in how time spent in wildlife-rich places boosts mental and physical wellbeing.
- Polling by More in Common for Climate Outreach, published this month, aligns with this, finding that 83% of those polled said they always found beauty in nature with similar numbers saying that nature made them very happy. These high numbers were shared across the political spectrum; in an age of division, our appreciation of nature brings people together.
A hacking down of nature regulations would loosen the ties that bind us and cut into our shared budget for joy.
Such a move would be all the more tragic for also being futile...