Nature’s solution to climate change
How our nature reserves and local wild places are playing their part in the race against climate change.
How our nature reserves and local wild places are playing their part in the race against climate change.
As the threat of climate change looms large, what could the consequences be for some of our most sensitive freshwater habitats?
Hampshire & Isle of Wight Wildlife Trust welcomes the Education Secretary Nadhim Zahawi’s announcement at COP26 that aims to put climate change into the heart of education by 2023. Now we…
Since 2016, a silent revolution has been spreading through the streets of Portsmouth. Thanks to the work of Charles Dickens Community Orchard, fruiting trees are popping up on the roadsides and in…
The Environment Agency has published a major long-term strategy to tackle flooding and coastal change. This new plan sets out the potential devastating impacts of accelerating climate change and…
Are the local elections important? Policy & Public Affairs Officer David Allwright tells us why he thinks we should put on our wellies to vote for nature.
There are plenty of ways you can take action against climate change in your own backyard or local greenspace.
Today Hampshire & Isle of Wight Wildlife Trust launched an exciting new partnership with Boskalis Westminster Ltd to undertake a seagrass restoration project within the Solent, starting with…
On Wednesday 26th June, thousands of people from across the country visited Westminster for face-to-face meetings with their MP