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22 Biodiversity Strategy Mid-term review (2022 - 2025) and Action Plan (2026 - 2031)
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Additional documents:
Minutes:
The Cabinet Member
for Nature, Open Space and City Services introduced the report.
The report referred
to the revised Strategy incorporated consultation feedback while retaining the
supported vision, themes, and objectives. It added new actions and projects to
reflect the statutory Biodiversity Reporting Duty, the Urban Forest Strategy,
the emerging Cambridgeshire & Peterborough Local Nature Recovery Strategy,
the BIG Chalk partnership, and the ambition to work with communities toward
future Nature City Accreditation.
In response to
questions from Cabinet Members and those Councillors present, the Cabinet
Member for Nature, Open Space and City Services said:
i.
Targeted community support had been provided
through several programmes, including Nature City Accreditation to help
residents, businesses, and institutions improve local spaces; promotion of the
Parks Biodiversity Toolkit to enable communities to enhance nearby parks with
planting, ponds, or wildlife corridors; and the Nature Recovery From the Ground
Up programme, supported ward‑based Local Nature Recovery
Strategy (LNRS) delivery over four
years, focused on areas with the poorest access to greenspace.
ii.
Additional support had been offered for Friends
Groups, volunteering, swift boxes, neighbourhood canopy projects, and community
nurseries for elms and black poplars, which provided practical opportunities
for community participation regardless of neighbourhood constraints.
iii.
The 2026 consultation showed strong support for
publicly sharing progress on the Council’s biodiversity ambitions. Annual
reporting would continue through an online Biodiversity Strategy Progress
Report, outlining project delivery, habitat condition changes, and progress
against Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) such as biodiversity net gain.
iv.
Regular biodiversity updates would continue in
the Council’s monthly newsletter, Cambridge Matters, alongside a bi‑monthly
online chalk streams newsletter for Councillors and communities.
v.
The Council would work with the Combined
Authority and partners to develop shared performance monitoring for LNRS
delivery. Together, these tools would provide a clear year‑on‑year
picture of improvements and areas needing further focus.
vi.
Residents should expect clear, place‑based
improvements across the city, such as the expanded wetlands at Logan’s Meadow, new diverse habitats were
already attracting water voles, otters, and kingfishers. More species‑rich
grasslands and wildflower areas would replace closely‑mown
turf in parks and on commons, while the Urban Forest Strategy would deliver
additional shade trees and climate‑resilient planting on
streets and estates, creating greener, cooler neighbourhoods and better
habitats for wildlife.
vii.
Chalk streams one of Cambridge’s most
distinctive habitats, making improvements especially significant. The Council’s
wider streams project used restoration, monitoring and citizen‑science
to support long‑term recovery in watercourses such as Cherry
Hinton Brook and Hobson’s
Brook. The outcomes were intended to be visible to the public through clearer,
healthier and more natural streams that better support wildlife and are easier
for residents to value.
viii.
Practical improvements would also be seen in
parks through enhanced meadows, wetlands and pollinator habitats, and in short
streams through more natural banks, cleaner gravels, improved flow and stronger
aquatic vegetation, demonstrating measurable biodiversity net gain on the
ground.
ix.
Noted the comments made by the Chair of the
Services, Climate and Communities Overview and Scrutiny Committee:
·
The Committee expressed broad approval for the
policy.
·
Members noted that the definition of measurable
net gain needed strengthening, as it appeared vague.
·
Highlighted the importance of joint working with
external partners and effective communication with the public and community
groups.
·
A discussion took place regarding the impact of
dog fouling on soil composition and biodiversity, illustrating some of the
practical challenges in delivering the strategy.
·
Overall, the Committee was supportive of the
strategy.
Cabinet unanimously resolved to:
i.
Note the outcome of the midterm Biodiversity
Strategy review, public consultation and recommendations of the Services,
Climate and Communities Overview and Scrutiny Committee.
ii.
Approve the content of the midterm review of the
Cambridge City Council Biodiversity Strategy (2022 – 2031) for corporate design
and publication.