Very few people will have heard of the Aggregates Levy Sustainability Fund - but it is a victim of government cuts.

The Aggregates Levy is a levy on industries who dig minerals out of the ground which has essentially been hypothecated to be spent on local environmental projects. 

And, yes, the RSPB benefitted from some of this money (because we sent in good bids for it) over the years. In fact we benefitted to the tune of a few million pounds over the last few years for projects on several of our nature reserves and on giving land owners advice on hethland restoration and creation.  Pond Conservation's excellent Million Ponds Project and Buglife's work on saving white-clawed crayfish has also benefitted from funding through this route.

In the new era, the levy continues but the money is not hypothecated and goes straight to the Treasury where it will be spent on 'general purposes'.  This, therefore, represents a move away from localism, a move away from Big Society and a move away from 'greenest government ever'.   

What next?  The Landfill Communities Fund?

A love of the natural world demonstrates that a person is a cultured inhabitant of planet Earth.

  • Sad news, I hope landfill funding isn't cut or redirected too - I feel that such a move could seriously limit small(er) charities' ability to implement practical conservation projects.

  • Seems RSPB will not get together with N E and give Dorset Sea Eagles so today one came without their funding.Well done youngster we will do all we can to keep you here while hoping one of opposite sex turns up.

    How about some funding Mark.

    Understand Poole Harbour now has largest numbers of wintering Avocets in UK replacing Axe estuary,we saw several hundred when at Arne RSPB which is part of Poole Harbour and I am even more impressed by Paul and Rob there how lucky we are in this area to have them and RSPB to have them as employees.

  • Sooty - see my blog tomorrow for some stuff on bustards but you really shouldn't listen to word on the street.  See my blog of 2 June 2009 (that seems a long time ago - I was a relatively new blogger then) where I state that we were a bit sniffy about the great bustard project in the early days.  We were.  But we have been helping behind the scenes including providing funding (which I can tell you needed a certain ingenuity on my part) for several years.  And what better help could we give than lead a funding bid to the EU using our resources, and not in anyway guaranteed to succeed, which delivers a large amount of funding to a project of which we are just junior partners?  I don't think you'll find many close to the project complaining about that.

    A love of the natural world demonstrates that a person is a cultured inhabitant of planet Earth.

  • Gayna, redkite and nightjar - you all mention 'greenest government ever'.  This is clearly a decision that Defra would have to defend but looks very much like a Treasury decision.  Greenest Treasury ever?

    Bob - well, up to a point, but the removal of the money is by the UK Treasuury (acting in England) and the provision of money is from the EU.  So tyhe two are hardly linked very closely.  See my blog tomorrow for bustard talk.

    A love of the natural world demonstrates that a person is a cultured inhabitant of planet Earth.

  • As usual words of wisdom from B P above,word on the street is that RSPB wouldn't have anything to do with the Bustard project until they heard substantial amount of money being pumped into it in the future.Rumoured it was left to individuals and local groups to manage in early days but do not know how true this is and Mark will surely tell us but there seems resentment on shop floor so to speak.