Our Biodiversity Strategy for Basingstoke and Deane 2023 to 2029 was adopted in March 2024. It covers how we are supporting nature recovery in the borough through our work as a council and with partners, after councillors called to declare an ecological emergency in October 2021.
The strategy outlines the importance of biodiversity and its status in the borough, why it is important and its relevant legislation and policy. We collaborated with communities and partners to create it, and we continue to work with them to take forward its actions.
Our partnership working with Natural Basingstoke is particularly notable, as we coordinate nature conservation groups across the borough and care for hundreds of hectares of parks, meadows and other green spaces to benefit nature.
Below is a fully accessible PDF version of the Biodiversity Strategy for Basingstoke and Deane 2023 to 2029:
Biodiversity Strategy for Basingstoke and Deane 2023 to 2029 (accessible)(PDF) [2 Mb]
Below is a printable version of the Biodiversity Strategy for Basingstoke and Deane 2023 to 2029 which is not fully accessible:
Biodiversity Strategy for Basingstoke and Deane 2023 to 2029(PDF) [4 Mb]
Part 3 - the Action Plan: updated annually, this action plan sets out how the council is turning words into actions.
Biodiversity Strategy for Basingstoke and Deane Action Plan(PDF) [691 kb]
The Environment Act 2021 introduced a strengthened ‘biodiversity duty’ which requires all public authorities in England to consider what they can do to conserve and enhance biodiversity. How we deliver and report on this can be found on the Strengthened Biodiversity Duty webpage.
The button below links to our first report, covering the period from 1 January 2024 to 31 December 2025. Further reports will be published at least every five years.
Biodiversity report for January 2024 to December 2025
To guide our nature recovery efforts, we previously commissioned the Hampshire and Isle of Wight Wildlife Trust to produce a biodiversity audit of the borough. Its findings are summarised below:
The message is clear – we have some fantastic biodiversity features of real importance but we need to do more for our heathlands and wetlands and all their associated species. We are right in declaring an ecological emergency, and we hope this strategy sets the tone moving forward.
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