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Inverness
Monday, April 15, 2024

Council Leader Says New Highland National Park Would Provide Boost in Fight Against Climate ChangeĀ 

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Highland Council Leader Cllr Raymond Bremner said he would welcome an opportunity for a new national park in Highland after the Scottish Governmentā€™s Biodiversity Minister Lorna Slater opened a debate on the issue this week.

The recently appointed new Leader of Highland Council believes the region is home to some of Scotlandā€™s most unique and breath-taking landscape, which would benefit greatly from national park status.

Cllr Bremner said:

ā€œPreserving and protecting the environment in Highland is more important now than ever, due to the threat posed by climate change.

“It is important that we halt and reverse biodiversity loss by restoring nature and thereby address climate change.

ā€œWe have several areas here in Highland, which if better protected through national park status, could help us promote biodiversity, restore nature and become another vehicle with which to address the climate and ecological emergency, formally announced by the Council in 2019.ā€

He added:

ā€œAreas like Ben Nevis, Ardnamurchan, South Skye, Glen Affric and Wester Ross would all be prime candidates for national park status due to their rich biodiversity and the many ways in which their unique ecology could assist in reducing the negative effects of climate change.ā€

Communities, groups and individuals are currently being invited to share their views in the consultation on the creation of Scotlandā€™s first new National Parks in almost 20 years.

Ministers have promised “at least one new national park in Scotland by the end of this parliamentary session in 2026”, with 10 areas in the running.

In the 1940s, Sir Douglas Ramsay launched an investigation into which areas could be considered for national park status.

That conversation produced five proposed areas: in addition to Loch Lomond and the Trossachs and the Cairngorms, he suggested the mountain landscapes of Glen Coe and Ben Nevis, Wester Ross and the inland glens around Glen Affric.

Opening the debate on Scotlandā€™s national parks this week, Scottish Government Biodiversity Minister Lorna Slater, said:

ā€œOur National Parks are part of a global National Park movement, valuing and protecting nature around the world.

“This brings opportunities to showcase globally what Scotland is doing for nature restoration, addressing climate change, visitor management and a range of other issues.

ā€œIt also gives us the opportunity to learn what approaches are being taken elsewhere and adapt and improve them for our own Scottish needs.ā€

She added:

ā€œOur Parks are more important now than ever before.

“We are in the midst of the interlinked crises of climate change and biodiversity loss which require urgent action to keep our planet habitable.

“To keep our crops growing, our climate bearable, our ecosystems alive.ā€

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