Drone view of agricultural field - a tractor is baling hay next to woodland

Study of farmer preferences shows that turning whole areas of farmland into habitats comes with half the price tag of integrating nature into productive farmland, if biodiversity and carbon targets are to be met.

Semi-natural habitats deliver far more biodiversity and climate mitigation per unit area

Lydia Collas

Incentivising farmers to restore some land as habitats for nature could deliver UK climate and biodiversity targets at half the taxpayer cost of integrating nature into land managed for food production, according to a new study published today in the .

探花直播research, led by the universities of Cambridge, Leeds and Glasgow, provides the first evidence for the taxpayer savings offered by focusing food production in certain areas to allow the creation of new woods, wetland and scrub habitats on some of the land currently used for farming.

探花直播study suggests that this 'land sparing' approach would cost just 48% of the funds required to achieve the same outcomes for biodiversity and the climate through an approach known as 'land sharing', where conservation measures get mixed into farming by adding hedgerows to fields, reducing pesticides, and so on 鈥 all of which lowers food yield.

Additionally, researchers say that trying to share land with nature through making farming more wildlife-friendly would see the UK lose 30% more of its food production capacity than if farmers are encouraged to spare portions of land entirely for creating semi-natural habitats.

探花直播UK Government has legally binding commitments to reverse nature declines by 2030 and reach net-zero carbon by 2050. Sparing land for habitats could hit these targets at half the cost of trying to farm on land shared with nature, say researchers.

鈥淐urrently, only a fraction of the 拢3.2 billion of public money annually paid to farmers goes on biodiversity and climate mitigation, some 拢600m a year,鈥 said Lydia Collas, who led the study as part of her PhD at Cambridge 探花直播鈥檚 Department of Zoology.

鈥淎lmost all this fraction of funding supports land-sharing approaches that may do little to benefit species or sequester carbon, but do typically reduce food yields. Until now there has been no research on whether this is the most cost-effective solution to delivering environmental targets.鈥

Cambridge鈥檚 Prof Andrew Balmford, senior author of the study, said: 鈥淕reater incentives for farmers to create woodlands and wetlands will deliver for wild species and climate mitigation at half the cost to the taxpayer of the land-sharing approach that currently receives ten times more public funding.鈥

探花直播researchers say their findings 鈥 presented at the British Ecological Society鈥檚 annual meeting by study co-author Prof Nick Hanley, an environmental economist from the 探花直播 of Glasgow 鈥 should inform the current Brexit-prompted rethink of England鈥檚 new Environmental Land Management Scheme (ELMs).

探花直播Landscape Recovery strand of the ELM is set to receive under 1% of the overall budget next year 鈥 a dramatic underspend considering the economic, environmental and food security benefits of a habitat creation approach, argue the scientists.

They say that the revamped Countryside Stewardship Scheme would also deliver far better value for money if it supports farmers to create habitats for nature instead of repeating the largely 'wildlife-friendly' approach of the scheme in its current form.听

鈥淚f a two-fold cost saving was identified in other government policy areas, such as health, there would be an outcry,鈥 said Collas, 鈥減articularly in the face of the worst recession in a generation.鈥

探花直播researchers conducted a choice experiment study with 118 farmers responsible for 1.7% of all England鈥檚 arable land, asking them to estimate the payments they would require to implement land-sharing practices or habitat-creating 'sparing' approaches on their land.

Farmers chose from a variety of agricultural approaches, nature interventions and, crucially, payment rates. 探花直播study also considered the government's costs of administering and monitoring these schemes.

探花直播team used three bird species 鈥 yellowhammers, bullfinches and lapwings 鈥 as a proxy for effects on biodiversity, as well a range of ways farmers could help slow climate change, such as woodland and hedgerow creation.

On average, farmers in the experiment accepted lower payments per hectare for land sharing practices. However, habitat creation schemes deliver far greater environmental outcomes per hectare, so creating woodlands, wetlands and scrublands would deliver the same overall biodiversity and climate mitigation benefits at half the cost to the taxpayer.

鈥淲e found that enough farmers are willing to substantially change their business to benefit from payments for public goods in the form of habitats, provided the government rewards them properly for doing so,鈥 said Balmford.

Collas, now a Policy Analyst at Green Alliance, added: 鈥淓xisting evidence already shows that semi-natural habitats deliver far more biodiversity and climate mitigation per unit area, and creating them has far less impact on food production than meeting targets through land sharing.

鈥淭his evidence is dismissed when thinking about agricultural policy in the UK because of an untested assumption that farmers are unwilling to create natural habitat. We now have evidence showing this assumption is wrong.鈥



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