The ecosystem challenge will assess the links and feedbacks between the natural environment, ecosystem services and human well‐being; how these might continue to develop within environmental limits in the face of major environmental change; and how decision‐making and local and national planning can take account of these links and feedbacks to help in the development of new social, environmental and economic opportunities.
The ecosystem challenge steering group:
The steering group will ensure that the UK gets the tools, knowledge and foresight needed to address the ecosystem challenge. The group is chaired by Pamela Kempton from the Natural Environment Research Council.
The group will
Ecosystem roadmapping
The UK needs to have a robust understanding of environmental knowledge needs so that investment can be prioritised effectively.
On 11 March 2011, the ecosystem challenge group held a roadmapping workshop. This is the first step towards a strategic framework to help the UK deliver against the objectives defined by the Ecosystem Challenge. The workshop involved business leaders, policy‐makers, regulators, research managers and non-governmental organisations. Workshop documents below are available to download.
What does this challenge mean for business?
The issue
We depend on key ecosystem services, but only some are assigned economic value. The cost to society of damage to ecosystems is high.
Business threats
Business opportunities
Read documents related to the ecosystem challenge:
| Attachment | Size |
|---|---|
| Ecosystems strategic framework brief.pdf | 170.56 KB |
| Business threats and opportunities_ecosystems challenge.pdf | 70.39 KB |
| Ecosystems workshop report FINAL.pdf | 643.1 KB |
Living With Environmental Change commissioned the Pilot Reviews to help identify priority policy areas, reflect on the current baseline of evidence and to expose gaps in the knowledge and design of programmes.
The reviews were to:
These include the assessment of links and feedbacks between the natural environment, ecosystem services and human well-being; how these might continue to develop within environmental limits in the face of major environmental change; and how decision-making and local and national planning can take account of these links and feedbacks to help in the development of new social, environmental and economic opportunities.
Summary of activity
The Department for Environment Food & Rural Affairs and the Natural Environment Research Council requested applications to conduct pilot reviews to better understand existing data and highlight trends and gaps in our knowledge of managing ecosystems for human well-being and how to protect the natural environment as the environment changes.
The Pilot Review Scheme requested applications for up to £15,000 for each review. The awards were conducted from the period of 2nd March 2009 until the end 30th April 2009.
The pilot reviews were assessed by the LWEC Partners’ Board and those most relevant were considered for full Systematic Review. There was one full Systematic Review awarded by Defra: ‘Resilience of ecosystems to environmental change’.
Read the reviews here
LWEC Objective B Ecosystems Challenge.