The heads of Campaign for Better Transport, Friends of the Earth, Greenpeace and The Wildlife Trusts joined senior colleagues from RSPB and Campaign to Protect Rural England (CPRE) to see first-hand the area threatened by the planned road and the impact contractors' works have already caused.
They met protestors taking part in the high profile campaign against its construction and highlighted the impacts and threats from the Government's forthcoming roads strategy.
Stephanie Hilborne OBE, Chief Executive, The Wildlife Trusts, said:
“How can The Treasury condone the nation spending £86m on this road scheme? The Department of Transport’s own cost benefit analysis questions the value for money, even without counting the impact on nature.
“It is a stark irony that Treasury thriftiness saved nature from a number of destructive road schemes proposed by the DoT in the past. Yet now a reluctant DoT is being pressurised by the Treasury to erode our natural capital with schemes such as this. The plan to drive a road through the wildlife-rich Combe Haven Valley was successfully opposed by Sussex Wildlife Trust and others in 2001. The Hastings Link Road will further fragment habitats at the very time we should be joining them up - an intention expressed in the 2011 Natural Environment White Paper.
"The cost is almost five times the annual cost of the Public Forest Estate. The annual benefits of the PFE is over £400m a year and is vital to the health and well-being of the nation as well as the natural environment. An imminent test of the Government’s commitment to anything other than concrete will come when it announces its response to the Forestry Panel later this month.
“Although the Treasury apparently values concrete more than it does the wildlife, ecosystems, and landscape of this country, The Wildlife Trusts believe this is short-termism at its worst.”