Defend Nature

No Nature. No Future.

Wildlife needs your voice. 

A healthy and safe natural world brings huge benefits to people, as well as to wildlife.  But so many wildlife and wild spaces are under pressure. Political action - including providing public funding for recovery schemes and delivering on policy commitments for nature - has been lacking for a long time. When we act together, we can encourage MPs and other decision-makers to #DefendNature. 

You defended nature from policy changes...

Thousands of passionate campaigners took action to shape the Retained EU Law (REUL) Act, which is now law. The Act gave Ministers sweeping powers to remove or replace thousands of environmental laws, without public consultation or scrutiny by Parliament. 

We campaigned against this because we feared that the consequences could be more rivers poisoned, more wild places at risk of damage and even more species facing extinction.  Those fears were realised - even after very strong public reassurances that the natural world would be safe from harm once the Act was passed, the former UK Government continued to break its promises for nature. 

With a new UK Government settling in, nature's needs must be taken seriously. 

We hold onto the fact that Ministers are now on the record at every turn with promises not to weaken environmental protections, and will challenge them to keep to these promises.
Joan Edwards, OBE
Director of Policy & Public Affairs, The Wildlife Trusts

How you can help: step-by-step

Swan postcard
STEP ONE

Send your MP a postcard

Ask your MP to #DefendNature by sending a postcard that will be posted to their office. 

 

Choose your postcard

 

 

A person writing a letter
STEP TWO

Write to your MP

  1. Find your MP here
  2. Send your letter by post or email to your MP
Further guidance here

 

 

Atlantic puffin (Fratercula arctica) summer adult in flight. Isle of Lunga. July 2011. - Chris Gomersall/2020VISION

STEP THREE

Send a 'letter to the Editor'

Using our simple form, you will be matched up with your nearest local newspaper Editor and can send your letter direct.

Send your letter to the Editor
I pledge to

Campaign updates

Campaign update: 27th June 2023

Despite the best efforts of the Lords and some robust debate, the Westminster Government rejected the two amendments on the interlinked issues of strengthening parliamentary scrutiny and preventing the regression of environmental protection.

This was the fourth round of ping-pong – the transit of the Bill between the House of Commons and the House of Lords – and the debate had become somewhat political, with concerns that the Government was not following the usual process of making concessions. But neither Lord Anderson nor Lord Krebs pushed their amendment to a vote. The Bill will therefore now receive royal assent without those additional environmental safeguards.

However, the Lords were given some extra verbal assurances. These include:

  • the Environment Act setting the context for the REUL powers
  • recognition that the process should have due regard to the Environmental Principles Policy Statement
  • a commitment to public consultation on all REUL.

We have worked with the Greener UK coalition to galvanise public pressure to influence the outcomes for the REUL Bill, and can count the deletion of the sunset clause as a significant win.

Despite this, our concerns remain that the refusal to offer proper parliamentary scrutiny will make it easier for future governments to weaken environmental protection, water quality standards and other EU-derived protections. But we hold onto the fact that Ministers are now on the record at every turn with promises not to weaken environmental protections, and will challenge them to keep to these promises.

Campaign update: 25th May 2023

A crucial vote is took place on Wednesday 24th May that could have serious ramifications for nature. Thousands of Wildlife Trust supporters acted fast to convince MPs to vote for amendments to the Bill in order to ensure Parliament isn't left out of key decisions in future and that the laws that protect nature are not weakened.

Disappointingly, despite almost 10,000 of you contacting MPs, the UK Government and Conservative MPs voted down this amendment. The Bill will now be voted on in the House of Lords on 6th June, where we hope an amendment will be reinserted to ensure our environmental protections are not watered down.

Campaign update: 15th May 2023

The UK Government had been forging forward with a ‘sunset clause’ on the Retained EU Law Bill that would bulldoze hundreds of important laws that protect nature and people at the end of the year (2023).

On the 15th May 2023, UK Government announced that it had scrapped the ‘sunset clause’, which means many vital environmental laws will remain in place in 2024. Your passionate postcards, emails and tweets to MPs raised the alarm.  Thank you for your support. However, the fight is not yet over. Please read our response below for more information.

Read our reaction

Craig Bennett, chief executive of The Wildlife Trusts, says:

“We won’t be congratulating UK Government for its decision to stop doing something it should never have even thought about in the first place. The UK Government’s Retained EU Law bill has been a shambles from the very beginning. Now it has ditched the ‘sunset clause’, which threatened to dismantle most Retained EU Law at the end of this year and posed an immediate threat to vital laws that protect nature and people. However, the huge problem posed by the bill still remains because it will allow future governments to revoke important laws at whim, whenever they want to.  

“Ministers should never be given carte blanche to pick and choose which laws should be kept or binned without public consultation or scrutiny – that is fundamentally undemocratic. The uncertainty created by UK Government over Retained EU Law has caused huge problems for business, as well as organisations working to protect nature. Ministers must stop seeing environmental law as a burden because it helps stop more sewage entering our rives and ensures food is safe to eat. Given the urgent need to address the nature and climate crisis, they should be strengthening protections, not ripping them apart.”