Coronavirus: Charity backs green economic recovery for NI

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Bee on plant
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The RSPB says the economy and wider society depend on a flourishing natural environment

Investing in Northern Ireland's natural environment is a vital part of the economic recovery from Covid-19, a leading conservation charity has said.

The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) said the pandemic was a reminder the economy and wider society depend on the natural environment.

It has drawn up a five-point plan to achieve that and says it can deliver jobs.

Proposals include legislation on climate change and biodiversity loss.

There is also a commitment to a so-called "green recovery" by the NI Executive.

The charity said it had a series of shovel-ready projects which could help restore nature and create jobs.

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Proposals include legislation on climate change and biodiversity loss

These included things such as climate change mitigation, species recovery and habitat restoration.

"We need to seize this opportunity to deliver a green recovery and build a more resilient economy, with healthy communities and a thriving natural world at its heart," said RSPB NI chief executive Joanne Sherwood.

"Decisions taken now will have a major impact for many years to come, so we must embrace the idea of a green recovery and lay the foundations for the greater prosperity and improved well-being of Northern Ireland and our future generations."

The charity wants the executive to develop a so-called green recovery fund to allow conservation charities to work on landscape-scale nature projects.

It believes that could ultimately deliver 2,000 jobs, help store carbon worth £1bn and provide widespread economic benefits.