Valuing Nature Programme Coordination Team

Lead Research Organisation: UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology
Department Name: Directors and Science Coordinators

Abstract

The concepts behind Valuing Nature are coming of age, emerging from the Millennium Assessment, and in the UK the subsequent UK National Ecosystem Assessment and the Natural Environment & Water White Papers published in 2011. Valuing Nature necessitates the bringing together of a wide range of disciplines: including the natural and social sciences, economics and the humanities. It also requires engagement from a broad range of business and policy interests. This presents significant challenges in cross disciplinary working. Building on lessons learnt in the first phase of the Valuing Nature Network (and through our Programme Advisory Goard, the RELU and BESS programmes and the HOPE initiative), this proposal aims to provide an innovative set of activities that will extend beyond the more traditional conference formats to include a) interactive sessions that build a shared understanding of concepts and vocabularies; and b) themed activities in partnership with other major consortia and initiatives in this field (e.g. NW+) (WP 1). We will also engage with key business and policy stakeholders designing events using interactive formats such as a) surgery sessions; b) dialogue sessions and c) 'unconference' events. The emphasis here is on mutual information exchange and learning, and will again be delivered in partnership with such organisations as NCI, Eftec and the KTN (WP2). Finally, our last work package (WP3) provides the behind the scenes building blocks to deliver such an interdisciplinary programme, including programme management, communications, data management, web site, monitoring and evaluating programme activies, and establishing a longer term legacy for Valuing Nature.
The overarching aim of this programme is to provide the interdisciplinary science needed to put the value of nature at the core of the economy. This requires a truly integrated response to the research challenges posed involving the full range of constituents outlined in our proposal. If this is successfully implemented, then the impact of this research programme will be very significant in terms of the societal benefits it will bring.

Planned Impact

The concept of Natural Capital was given prominence in the Government's 2011 Natural Environment White Paper The Natural Choice. It was recognised that we need to better account for natural capital in the development of our economy and promote the sustainable use of the scarce resources on which we depend. Using physical and social sciences to understand and demonstrate the value of nature to human wellbeing is a key approach in this regard. Evidence is needed to reduce the fundamental conflict between the drive for economic growth and the health of the natural environment, and in addition to collating existing and creating new evidence, we also need to make that evidence more accessible to different users and stakeholder groups. This is the focus of the Valuing Nature Programme (VNP).
The Valuing Nature Network (VNN) laid the foundations for an interdisciplinary research community, with more than 1,200 members joining the network in its first two years from across a wide range of sectors. The VNP will build on these achievements through engagement, dialogue and communication with stakeholders and beneficiaries including, but not limited to:
1. Biodiversity: Ecosystems Knowledge Network (EKN), BESS research programme, Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES), NGO Biodiversity sector.
2. Economics: UK Network for Environmental Economists, Government Economic Service, Natural Capital Committee, The Prince's Accounting for Sustainability Project, World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD), GLOBE International.
3. Social Sciences, Arts & Humanities: Nexus Network Plus, Centre for Environmental Arts and Humanities.
4. Business: NC coalition (was TEEB4Business), EU Business @ Biodiversity Platform, Aldersgate Group, Ecosystem Markets Task Force (EMTF), Cambridge Programme for Sustainability Leadership (CPSL).
5. Policy & Government: Smith School, Natural Capital Initiative, Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) and its agencies, Scottish Forum on Natural Capital, Department for Energy and Climate Change (DECC), Department for Communities and Local Government (DCLG), Department of Health (DH), Department for Business, Innovation & Skills (BIS), Technology Strategy Board, devolved governments and their agencies, European Environment and Sustainable Development Advisory Councils (EEAC).
6. Health: Centre for Sustainable Healthcare, European Centre for Environment and Human Health (ECEHH), public health agencies in England and the devolved governments.
These groups represent stakeholders and users in the academic, business, government, and NGO sectors. They will benefit from the VNP through the development of a common language and goals for work involving natural capital, and through advances in methodologies and knowledge shared among different audiences. The VNP will foster interdisciplinary working resulting in successful research outcomes and the sharing of good practice in this area. It will lead to the strengthening of existing partnerships and the fostering of new ones. The programme will help to advance valuation analyses to allow the capture of the physical and social values associated with nature for both business and government. The VNP will inform policy development and decision-making, and illustrate how the ecosystem approach can be put into practice. These outcomes will allow the programme to contribute to changing the way we value nature in the UK, and enable us the share experience and innovation in this area across Europe and internationally. Ultimately the programme aims to benefit the general public through increases in the effectiveness of public services and policy, reduced environmental impact by more efficient use of nature by business and resulting increases in health and well-being.
 
Title Art is not an Island 
Description 'Art is not an Island' was created as part of the preparations for the project's scoping workshop. The film aims to stimulate discussion and debate about the role of the arts in the re-peopling agenda in Scotland, focusing in particular on the relationship between the arts and landscape values. 
Type Of Art Film/Video/Animation 
Year Produced 2020 
Impact 77 views as newly added to Vimeo 
URL https://vimeo.com/508595048
 
Description The programme achieved several outcomes from the activities it delivered. Four activity types were adopted, including broad engagement, skills development, building interdisciplinary understanding and linking users and researchers, with supporting the seven VN projects to disseminate outputs and achieve outcomes as a fifth activity

1. Enabling wider discussions across disciplines and sectors. This included promoting involvement of businesses in natural capital, developing and disseminating research and community resources on the links between nature, health, and wellbeing, and exploring and promoting the importance of arts on the valuing nature conversation. In addition, the programme provided the space for different groups of people to meet - e.g. researchers with government policy people; artists and social scientists with natural scientists and economists, as well as enabling those who have engaged before to have time to re-engage or strengthen their engagement. This was accomplished through workshops (either VN-led or co-hosted with strategic partners) and the VN Annual Conferences, which were free to attend, as well as attending and having presence at public events. The VN Annual Conferences audience had, on average, at least 40% representation from practitioners and business.

2. Developing a suite of accessible, user-focussed, but comprehensive and evidence-based resources for the wider community. These include the Demystifying Series comprising of nine accessible documents written by experts in the areas (from researchers and academics to practitioners). The series authors were tasked with lowering the barriers between disciplines and sectors, by using simple explanations of concepts and ideas, and how they influence, impact, and integrate into Valuing Nature. These reports are available online and were distributed at all events that the VNPCT organised and attended. Having a strong visual brand for the programme helped people to identify programme outputs quickly and provided confidence in their value as a resource.

3. Contributing to the growth of the VN Network via an active Twitter following (5.8k followers) and strong 1800+ membership, to enable both the programme and VN community to share relevant information, opportunities, and resources with one another.
Exploitation Route The programme was built around a strongly interdisciplinary and cross-sectoral governance structure to entrench this thinking in the way in which the programme was run. Such thinking is required, and hence recommended, to coordinate future research and engagement programmes focussed on complex social, economic, and environmental challenges. Thankfully, many of the challenges we faced may not require much more evidence, but rather a different way of thinking about how the evidence is used, considered, and/or embedded. Additionally, interdisciplinary working needs to become the norm - and by this it means working across academia, as well as business, industry, NGO, government, public, etc. We need to move beyond valuing something economically or non-economically, but rather holistically, and this has been made clear in the recently published and well received Dasgupta Review.
Sectors Education,Energy,Environment,Financial Services, and Management Consultancy,Government, Democracy and Justice,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections,Transport

URL https://valuing-nature.net/sites/default/files/documents/Reports/VNP28-Valuing_Nature_through_multiple_lenses-A4-96pp_final.pdf
 
Description This is hard to monitor post project but worth mentioning here. The governance of the programme has provided a good example of the positive effect an interdisciplinary and cross-sectoral PCT and a stakeholder-led advisory group (in this case the BIG) can have on a programme. The programme design appears to be replicated in a past call from the ESRC (Social Science Interdisciplinary Team), and other NERC programmes like Landscape Decisions. The substantial investment by UKRI, business, and academia, in the Natural Assets R&I Agenda in Support of Business and Policy, was important. The series of Business Round Tables (e.g. Valuing and measuring natural assets for insurance / financial services) , policy consultations, Business Impact Conference (Feb 2020) and the subsequent case to NERC, produced a strong basis for a major (£100m) UKRI proposal. A case to NERC was submitted as COVID-19 struck, and was somewhat overtaken by the demands of the pandemic. But the case for a major UKRI investment in such a Natural Assets R&I Agenda remains strong, not least in the wake of the Dasgupta Review, the ongoing decline of natural assets, and given the increasing recognition of the role of natural assets in strengthening resilience to climate change.
First Year Of Impact 2020
Sector Environment,Financial Services, and Management Consultancy,Government, Democracy and Justice
Impact Types Policy & public services

 
Description NERC Science Budget - Review of the Role for Environmental Science in Mental Health Research
Amount £50,000 (GBP)
Funding ID NE/M005410/2 
Organisation Natural Environment Research Council 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 04/2020 
End 03/2021
 
Description Valuing Nature Graphics Guide - Open Access publication
Amount £6,000 (GBP)
Funding ID NE/M005410/2 
Organisation Natural Environment Research Council 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 04/2020 
End 03/2021
 
Description International Summit 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact The Valuing Nature Programme held a series of online events in the spring of 2021 for researchers and PhD students who wish to develop their international profile and impact. The International Summit was kicked-off by a half-day webinar on 23rd March, which was followed on subsequent days by a series of shorter workshops focussing on regional capacity building. Participants and international experts shared knowledge of existing projects and initiatives and identified opportunities to support international research collaboration at the three regional workshops 1. Europe 2. Global South 3. North America.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
URL https://valuing-nature.net/valuing-nature-international-summit
 
Description Joint Symposium: Multiple Values of Nature 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact "A Joint Meeting of the British Ecological Society Journal, People and Nature, and the Valuing Nature Programme. The meeting was an international, broad-scope, interdisciplinary event reflecting the ethos of both People and Nature and the Valuing Nature Programme. It covered many aspects of the multiple values of nature and will broadly fall under three themes as outlined below. The meeting aims to foster cross-disciplinary research collaborations and inform the agenda in this growing and fast-moving research area.
Balancing Multiple Values: Opportunities and challenges
Values in action: Exploring processes of change and transformation
Beyond the Usual Suspects: Finding Diverse Support for Nature Protection"
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020
URL https://valuing-nature.net/joint-symposium-multiple-values-nature
 
Description The good, the bad and the unexpected of interdisciplinary endeavour: Demystifying interdisciplinary working 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact "This webinar shared the Valuing Nature Programme experience, including the why, what, and how of interdisciplinary working, exploring the benefits, frustrations, barriers, solutions and challenges. Specific examples were detailed including unique research findings, interdisciplinary processes used, lessons learned, top tips and recommendations or the future.

Whilst a range of 'CoastWeb activities were drawn upon, the VNP funded CoastWEB project provided a focus for this seminar, as a project which brought together 8 different disciplines, coupled with a varied stakeholder network, to research the values and wellbeing benefits of saltmarshes, with an aim of providing tangible and useful outcomes.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020
URL https://valuing-nature.net/webinar-interdisciplinary
 
Description Webinar: Introducing Wetland Mosquito Survey Handbook 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact How can wetland creation, management and expansion be achieved while limiting perceived or actual public health impacts from mosquitoes? To help answer this question, authors from across the wetlandLIFE team have produced the Wetland Mosquito Survey Handbook. Written by Frances Hawkes, Jolyon Medlock, Alexander Vaux, Robert Cheke and Gabriella Gibson, with contributions from Peter Coates, Tim Acott and Adriana Ford, this open access book gives an interdisciplinary perspective, with views from ecology, biology, public health, social science and history, on the place of mosquitoes in the wetlands of the UK.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020
URL https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W7SU3aSJyXQ
 
Description envecon 2020 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact envecon is UKNEE's annual Environmental Economics conference. The Valuing Nature programme had three presentations: WetlandLIFE, CoastWEB and Interdisciplinary.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020
URL https://www.uknee.org.uk/envecon-2020