Source · Select Committees · Environmental Audit Committee
Recommendation 6
6
Accepted
Taxpayer purchase of ecosystem services alone is insufficient for required scale of nature recovery.
Conclusion
Taxpayer purchase of ecosystem services alone is no longer a sufficient mechanism to deliver the overall improvement in ecosystem services necessary for the scale of nature recovery required. (Conclusion, Paragraph 49)
Government Response Summary
The government agrees more private investment is needed for nature recovery, outlining a strategy for multifunctional land use and confirming over £2.7 billion in annual investment for farming and nature recovery, with ELMS funding increasing to £2 billion by 2028/29.
Government Response
Accepted
HM Government
Accepted
The Land Use Consultation set out the importance of more land becoming multifunctional, delivering both food production and increased nature and climate benefits. The scale of action needed to deliver our climate and nature objectives means that more private investment in land use change will be needed. We know that healthy ecosystems provide many private as well as public benefits, and the private sector can contribute to protecting and improving natural capital assets. The Government will support farmers and land managers to help restore nature, which is vital to safeguard our long-term food security, support productivity and build resilience to climate change. This means continuing the transition away from area-based payments and towards payments to deliver public goods for the environment. As announced by the Chancellor on 11th June 2025, we are investing more than £2.7bn a year in farming and nature recovery, providing tens of thousands of farmers with income streams for environmental delivery and capital investment that benefits productivity, nature, innovation and growth in the agri-tech sector. This includes funding for our Environmental Land Management Schemes. Funds paid to farmers through these schemes will increase by 150% from £800m in 23/24 to £2bn by 28/29. Overall farmers and land managers will benefit from an average of £2.3bn a year through the Farming and Countryside Programme, and up to £400m from additional nature schemes, including those for tree planting and our peatlands. This investment is delivering sustainable food production and nature’s recovery for today and the years ahead, while putting money into farmers’ pockets.