Landscape scale nature restoration - Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
What is landscape scale nature restoration?
By landscape scale we mean the larger, collaborative nature restoration projects being delivered across multiple land holdings and taking many years to deliver restoration. We have not included projects being delivered on a single estate, or nature reserve or single land holding in our dataset at this stage. Nor have we included short term interventions – we’ve focussed on the larger, longer term, habitat restoration projects that will take decades to deliver. We may include a wider range of projects in future.
In this context, nature restoration means actively restoring habitats such as peatland, woodland or water courses. Other forms of work to support biodiversity are being supported and prioritised through different parts of the Scottish Biodiversity Strategy Delivery Plan (see FAQ on invasive non natives and other species below).
For more information on landscape scale approaches in general, including the outputs from earlier work, see this page: Landscape scale nature restoration on SE Web.
Why do we need to restore nature?
We are in a nature climate crisis. The Scottish Biodiversity Strategy describes the loss of nature as an emergency, and calls on Scotland to accelerate and scale up nature restoration. Nature restoration not only supports biodiversity, it can help us mitigate climate change (by reducing carbon emissions) and adapt to climate change (by restoring healthy ecosystems that reduce flood risk and protect water quality).
These are ‘nature based solutions’ and can help deliver the aims of the Climate Change Plan and the Scottish National Adaptation Plan.
What are the 'exemplars'?
The Scottish Biodiversity Strategy seeks 6 ‘exemplar’ projects at landscape scale, with significant woodland components. The purpose of the exemplars is to demonstrate how landscape scale approaches can accelerate and scale up restoration; attract private investment and deliver climate adaptation. The exemplars will have no specific status, or funding, they will be ‘lighthouse’ projects where we will work with partners to demonstrate best practice in nature restoration, across a range of land uses and habitats. They are not designations or ‘zones’ and have no statutory basis.
We will recommend a list of exemplars to Ministers later in 2025, following stakeholder engagement in summer 2025. We have included some peatland projects as candidates because of the importance of peatland restoration to both climate change adaptation and mitigation.
What if my project doesn’t want to be an exemplar?
We will only propose exemplars to Ministers once we have discussed and agreed this with the projects.
When will you engage with stakeholders and communities?
We will engage with a wide range of stakeholders to discuss priorities and how we can accelerate / scale up nature restoration in summer 2025.
The individual landscape scale projects will engage with communities at the local level. Indeed, many of the existing projects such as Cairngorms Connect, Living Landscapes, Rainforest restoration projects and Climate Forests have been engaging with communities for several years. And several of the projects in our dataset are community led (such as Tarras Valley, Glenkens, Appin and Glen Creran). We will encourage the highest standards of community engagement across all projects and will apply reflexive learning to improve the process as we go.
What about other types of land use, like farming and forestry?
In many cases nature restoration can be delivered alongside existing land use, including farming, forestry, sporting use and recreation. Landscape scale restoration is not about ‘rewilding’ the whole of Scotland or stopping existing land use. Its about reducing the pressures on nature (such as grazing, invasive non natives) and creating healthy ecosystems alongside food production and other forms of land use. See these case studies for some examples.
Is this about rewilding?
Some of the landscape scale projects in Scotland, which are being led by other partners, are adopting elements of a ‘rewilding’ approach, but the majority are restoring nature alongside existing land use. We support a balanced approach that restores nature but maintains food production, forestry, sporting and recreational uses – the integrated land use approach set out in the Land use Strategy which can deliver multiple benefits from the same piece of land.
Why do we need to work at landscape scale?
The best way to reduce the pressures on nature is to address these at landscape scale. For example, deer and both invasive species and plants move across land holdings. One land manager can tackle these pressures, but will find it more difficult to restore nature if deer or invasive species come on to their land from neighbouring land holdings. Equally, restoring rivers to reduce flood risk is best planned across a whole catchment, across multiple land holdings. To ensure successful outcomes and to reduce the costs of delivery we need to work collaboratively, across public, private, NGO and community land holdings to restore nature.
What are the benefits of a landscape scale approach?
The benefits of a landscape scale approach include:
- Economies of scale, such as for procurement, wildlife management, planning and survey work
- Efficiencies for agencies – its more cost effective to assess, engage in and fund restoration over a larger area than to work with individual land managers in a fragmented way
- Opportunities to attract nature finance, by aggregating smaller projects to a scale that is more likely to attract investment, such as from the Nature Investment Partnership and other initiatives
- Better ability to manage deer densities, invasive species and other pressures on nature such as diffuse pollution
- Opportunities to create nature networks and restore ecosystems at their functional scale (eg a whole catchment, a contiguous area of peatland, a strath)
- Benefits such as reduced flood risk can be maximised by designing restoration across larger areas, and risks can be managed across whole catchments.
Why is NatureScot prioritising landscape scale projects?
The SBS vision is to restore nature across Scotland by 2045. But we can’t restore nature everywhere at the same time. Neither the agencies involved, the fundings schemes that support restoration, nor the supply chain can support restoration everywhere.
We therefore need to prioritise our efforts and build a roadpmap of restoration out to 2045. We intend to focus our efforts now on existing projects and the exemplars, where we can test and demonstrate the best ways to restore nature and then replicate these in other landscapes. We also intend to focus on those landscapes which can best support climate adaptation first. We will then move through the roadmap, supporting a wider range of projects across Scotland towards 2045. This is about the sequence in which we restore nature, not where we do and don’t. The roadmap we develop will be flexible and respond to feedback, new policies and delivery on the ground.
Why isn’t my project on the list?
We have gathered data on all of the landscape scale projects which NatureScot is funding, is involved in or is aware of. We have not included:
- Smaller, short term projects
- Projects on single land holdings
- Projects in the very early stages of development
- Projects in which we have had no or very limited involvement
If you think your project should be in our dataset, or you are developing a new project, please email details of the project, including a map and list of partners to landscapescalerestoration@nature.scot
Can I still get funding for my nature restoration project if it’s not on the list?
Yes. Both NatureScot and other agencies will continue to fund projects elsewhere where they meet the criteria for the grants schemes and where budgets allow.
Why aren’t there many projects on the islands?
Most of the nature conservation projects on the Scottish islands are controlling invasive non native species, such as the Orkney Native Wildlife Project, Hebridean Mink Project and Uist Wader Project. These are being prioritised through a separate process linked to the development of the Scottish INNS plan. The emerging Shetland Peatland Partnership is in the dataset, as is Skye Connect.
What about other types of conservation projects?
Invasive non native species projects are important and are being prioritised through a separate process linked to the Scottish INNS plan, under development.
Single species conservation projects such as Saving Wildcats, the South of Scotland Golden Eagle Project, Saving Scotland’s Red Squirrels and Species on the Edge are important and are also being prioritised by different teams and different actions in the SBS Delivery Plan.
This project is focussed on landscape scale projects which are actively restoring habitats, rivers and ecosystems – not just targeting one species or pressure.
Will this force land managers to restore nature, or constrain how they manage their land?
No. These are voluntary projects where local partnerships are working in a collaboration with land managers. Landscape scale restoration projects are not designations or ‘zones’ and do not force the participation of land managers. Nor do they constrain land use. They are co designed and collaborative. See these case studies for existing, successful collaborations.
Will NatureScot and other agencies provide funding for all of these projects?
No. We have limited budgets for nature restoration and must prioritise where we spend these. We will support as many projects as we can, but will rely on other sources of funding such as Landscape Connections , the Environmental Funders Network, philanthropy, nature finance; Landscape Enterprise Networks and the amazing work of the environmental NGOs to fund nature restoration in Scotland. An of course some land owners are financing this work themselves as part of initiatives such as Wildlife Estates Scotland and Farm Clusters or because they want to restore nature for other reasons. This is a team effort.
Will NatureScot stop engaging in other projects?
No. We will continue to offer advice where we can and will continue to discharge our statutory role on protected areas, species and licensing. But we will focus our efforts on the exemplars and those projects where multiple agencies have an interest in the outcome and/or where they can best support climate adaptation. Our engagement in projects led by others will be lower. This is part of our commitment to delivering Public Service Reform.
How are we going to pay for all of this?
One of the main benefits of this project as that we can better align the resources (people and £s) of agencies behind the most important projects, making public funding go further. This is a key aim of Public Service Reform. NatureScot is working with Scottish Government, Scottish Forestry, Forestry and Land Scotland, the Scottish Environment Protection Agency and Scottish Water to prioritise landscape scale projects and align our resources.
NatureScot is also working with other agencies to build a new market for nature finance in Scotland, to support the aims of Ministers set out in the Natural Capital Markets Framework, published in November 2024. See the Facility for Investment Ready Nature in Scotland and Nature Investment Partnership websites for more detail on what we are doing to attract nature finance to Scotland.
We hope to attract an increasing amount of investment to nature restoration, alongside the existing public grants and other sources, helping us to scale up delivery on the ground. We will be developing an Investment Prospectus to help do this later in 2025 as set out the Biodiversity Investment Plan.
How can we find out which projects are being prioritised?
We will publish a list of landscape scale projects on our website soon and update this annually.
We will add to the list as new projects emerge. Priorities may change as a result of changes in policy, feedback from stakeholders and changes in both agency and project resources. We will support as many projects as we can with the resources we have available.
How have the projects been assessed and prioritised?
NatureScot has built a new spatial dataset and we have used GIS data to quantify the restoration potential of each project. This has been combined with our knowledge of the project and what it is delivering; local plans and strategies and then discussed with SEPA, Scottish Water and Forestry and Land Scotland to prioritise the projects collectively. We’ve used an objective scoring system to assess the projects in a fair and consistent manner. But the priorities are not set in stone and we will review them annually.