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EU to co-fund Ireland's raised bog restoration project |
19 Nov 2015: posted by the editor - European Union, Ireland | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The European Commission has approved a new project worth over €5.4 million for the restoration of Active Raised Bog in Ireland's Special Area of Conservation (SAC) Network and is to provide almost 75% of the funding. The project will operate from 2016 to 2020 and seeks to improve the conservation status in Ireland of active raised bog, a priority habitat under the Habitats Directive, using best practice conservation actions. The project will support the restoration of active raised bog in 12 SAC project sites throughout Ireland. A project team is being recruited to implement this project and will be consulting with local communities in the relevant areas. Speaking today, Minister Humphreys said: “This project will provide a significant financial injection for the conservation of Ireland’s protected raised bogs, will provide benefits to rural communities and also create employment opportunities. “The project will also be a very positive step forward in efforts to reverse the decline of active raised bog in Ireland and will support the measures of the National Peatlands Strategy and the National Raised Bog SAC Management Plan. “This project will be undertaken with the consultation and involvement of local communities. I am hopeful that this project will raise awareness of the importance and uniqueness of Ireland’s raised bogs and will help address the urgent need for conservation and restoration measures.” In 2014, an application was made by the National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) of the Department of Arts, Heritage and the Gaeltacht to the EU LIFE programme to provide funding support for this project. The European Commission has now agreed to provide almost 75% co-funding (€4.056m) for this €5.4 million project which is being undertaken by the Department. Ireland’s Raised Bog SACs The Natura 2000 network comprises the network of SACs and SPAs (Special Protection Areas for birds) throughout the EU. Between 1997 and 2002, Ireland nominated a total of 53 raised bog sites for designation as Special Areas of Conservation (SACs). These areas were selected primarily for the presence of a habitat listed for priority protection under the Habitats Directive. This active raised bog habitat is in danger of disappearance within the EU and within Ireland. Raised bogs are extremely rare in global and European terms. Ireland’s SACs contain the last functioning remnants of the great bogs that once covered much of Ireland’s midlands. The SACs are different from the vast majority of Ireland’s raised bogs, because they still have areas of active raised bog, where the conditions are right for peat to continue to form, and where species of plants and animals typical to bogs can thrive. Damaging activities such as land reclamation, drainage and peat extraction over time have left Ireland with less than one% of the area of active raised bog we once had.These bogs also contain large tracts of degraded raised bog, which is the area of high, uncut bog which has been damaged by human activities but which could be transformed into active raised bog again through restoration measures. Ireland, through successive Governments, has decided that for the benefit of all its citizens, and in the light of global concerns about loss of bio-diversity, a proportion of our remaining raised bogs should be protected. Ireland signed up to do this through the 1992 EU Habitats Directive which commits Ireland to the achievement of favourable conservation status for this and other endangered habitats. The key mechanisms to achieve this are the designation, protection, management and restoration of the Raised Bog SACs. Ireland’s Raised Bog SACs are faced with a number of pressures which need to be addressed if they are to be effectively protected and restored, in line with the requirements of the Habitats Directive. There has been a significant decrease (circa 37%) in the area of active raised bog at these sites and the permanent loss of smaller areas of degraded raised bog that is capable of restoration. National Raised Bog SAC Management Plan Restoring Active Raised Bog LIFE Project The 12 SAC sites which will be part of the Restoring Active Raised Bog LIFE project are:
A project team will be recruited shortly to implement this project and will be located in a headquarters in proximity to the project sites. National Peatlands Strategy The Strategy provides a long-term framework within which all of the peatlands within the State can be managed responsibly in order to optimise their social, environmental and economic contribution to the well-being of this and future generations. EU Life Programme Tags: Raised Bog conservation |
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