
Senedd members demand action on nature loss in Wales
Leading a debate on May 7, the Plaid Cymru politician said it is difficult to reconcile the time frame with Welsh Government claims that addressing nature loss is a priority.
The committee's inquiry heard Wales is 'nowhere near' the key international '30 by 30' target of protecting 30 per cent of land and sea for nature by 2030.
Mr Gruffydd said: 'Work to scope out the targets started over two years ago. It seems inconceivable that it will take another four years.'
The Senedd's climate change committee called for a more ambitious timeframe in its report , a recommendation that was rejected by Welsh ministers.
'The Welsh Government said this would be simply impossible to do,' said Mr Gruffydd, pointing to similar UK and Scottish Government proposals taking around a year.
He warned the 2023 'State of Nature' report showed Wales' biodiversity, and wider environment, continuing to decline and degrade.
'That report details the devastating scale of nature loss across the country,' he said. 'Welsh wildlife has decreased on average by 20 per cent since 1994 and one in six Welsh species are under threat of extinction.'
Mr Gruffydd acknowledged the Welsh Government was quick to sign up to global biodiversity targets and declare nature loss as a priority.
'But, to use an old adage, actions speak louder than words,' he said.
Mr Gruffydd raised concerns about the Environment (Wales) Act 2016 having 'little material impact' on reversing the decline in biodiversity – a finding echoed by an Audit Wales report .
Plaid Cymru's Delyth Jewell warned: 'I'm concerned that our society and the world has become used to the destruction. That's the frightening reality.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Wales Online
13 minutes ago
- Wales Online
UK Government rules out giving something people in Wales want
UK Government rules out giving something people in Wales want The Welsh Government and all 22 councils want the Crown Estate to be devolved to Wales but the UK Government has said no The Crown Estate, the collection of marine and land assets and holdings that belong to the monarch, is a hot political topic The UK Government has said that the Crown Estate will not be devolved to Wales because it "would risk market fragmentation, complicate existing processes, and delay further development offshore". The Crown Estate is a collection of marine and land assets and holdings that belong to the monarch. It includes the seabed out to 12 nautical miles, which is around 65% of the Welsh foreshore and riverbed, and a number of ports and marinas. On land the Crown Estates owns 50,000 acres of common land in Wales. The value of the estate in Wales is more than £603m of land. It is a hot political topic, because since 2019 responsibility for management of the Crown Estate's assets in Scotland has been devolved but that is not the case in Wales. In 2024, the Independent Commission on the Constitutional Future of Wales – which you can read here – said that options for devolving the Crown Estate to Wales should be looked at. The Welsh Government want it too, with the First Minister making it clear Welsh Labour believe "the Crown Estate should be devolved". Plaid Cymru, which is doing better than Labour in polls ahead of a Senedd election in May 2026, is making it a central pledge of their election campaign. For our free daily briefing on the biggest issues facing the nation, sign up to the Wales Matters newsletter here On top of that, all 22 councils in Wales have now backed a transfer of the Crown Estate from the UK to Welsh Government However, the UK Government has ruled it out. In response to a letter sent by campaigners Yes Cymru to Prime Minister Keir Starmer, Welsh secretary Jo Stevens has said that is not the position of her party colleagues in London. In it, she writes: "It is this government's view that devolving the Crown Estate and introducing a new entity would risk market fragmentation, complicate existing processes, and delay further development offshore. "Furthermore, devolution would mean Wales losing access to Crown Estate investment that comes from its revenues in England. It would also risk undermining investment in floating offshore wind, which is needed to provide lower bills, cleaner energy, and better jobs. This government is focussed on delivering these objectives and so does not support the devolution of the Crown Estate in Wales," the Cardiff East MP says. "Even if devolution could be done without risking the revenues the Crown Estate generates, this would not automatically lead to an increase in the funding available to the Welsh Government. This is because any revenues retained by the Welsh Government in a devolved system would likely be offset through reductions to their block grant as is currently the case in Scotland. "Creating an artificial border through the Celtic Sea would also complicate crucially important work to develop the floating offshore wind industry, particularly as floating offshore wind lease areas straddle the Wales/England border." YesCymru has pledged to intensify the campaign in response to Westminster's refusal, which started with a protest at the Eisteddfod. Chair Phyl Griffiths said: "The Crown Estate proves that the practice of extraction is still alive in 21st century Wales and has resulted in all 22 authorities speaking with one voice, underlining the fact we're a nation. "The London government's response to our call to transfer control of the Crown Estate to Wales, however, only proves that they see us as nothing more than a region of the UK." Article continues below


Scotsman
26 minutes ago
- Scotsman
Scotland's schools under 'intolerable strain' due to overcrowding in classrooms
Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Scotland's schools are being placed under 'intolerable strain' by over-crowding pressures on classrooms, it has been claimed. Latest figures show more than one in seven secondary schools have a pupil roll greater than capacity, while one in ten primary schools have a pupil roll almost or at capacity. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Overcrowding in Scotland's classrooms is a major issue, argue the Scottish Conservatives. Picture: Jeff J Mitchell | Getty Images Local authorities said they have taken steps to mitigate pressures on school buildings, including re-purposing dining halls and adding modular extensions. However, the situation is placing 'unacceptable pressure' on teachers, Miles Briggs, the Scottish Conservative shadow education and skills secretary, said. Almost a quarter of secondary schools are operating at or near their limit, while almost 50 primaries are over capacity, and 10 per cent operating at or near their limit. Mr Briggs said: 'The SNP has put Scotland's schools under intolerable strain, disadvantaging students and imposing unacceptable pressure on hard-working teachers.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad He pointed to the abandonment of a flagship SNP promise to recruit an additional 3,500 teachers and classroom assistants by 2026. Miles Briggs MSP 'Instead, with teacher numbers actually falling, they said they would try to return them to 2023 levels,' he added. 'Meanwhile, hundreds of Scottish schools are operating above or near capacity – because hundreds of them have closed since the Nationalists came to power.' Glasgow City Council said it had taken a variety of steps to deal with increasing roll pressures. Parents at schools across the city have complained about classroom overcrowding, such as at Wallacewell Primary. While the school has capacity for 545 pupils and last year's roll was 440, it was not over its limit. However, parents complained about young people having to take split breaks because of a lack of space in the dining hall. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Some schools are re-configuring space to make room for all pupils, physically adapting an existing space to create new teaching rooms. At Springburn Academy, a council spokeswoman said, the dining hall was adapted to create a new mezzanine floor that now provides an additional classroom and breakout area for pupils. St Paul's High School, visited by Education Secretary Jenny Gilruth on Tuesday, has seen an extension built in recent years. The extension area now houses new classrooms. At other secondaries, such as Shawlands Academy, a new games hall was built in the playground while other schools such as at St Thomas Aquinas Secondary School, St Mungo's Academy, and St Andrew's RC Secondary School, pre-fabricated 'modular' style units were used to make space. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Data from the most recent School Estate Statistics show 52 secondary schools have a pupil roll greater than 100 per cent of the school capacity. There are 359 secondary schools in total, so 15 per cent of these have a pupil roll greater than capacity. Under a quarter of secondary schools have a pupil roll almost or at capacity. The figures show 82 secondary schools have a pupil roll of 90 to 100 per cent capacity - or 23 per cent of the total. The Edinburgh school roll has dropped each year for the past three years, but is expected to rise from 2029. Large housing sites on the outer edges of the city at Cammo, Maybury, New Brunstane, Gilmerton and Builyeon Road are all projected to place pressure on the school estate. The overall secondary roll at the time of the September 2024 census was 23,828 pupils - the highest since the 1980s. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Various projects to either build new schools or create extensions are underway or being considered, such as engagement in Craigmillar exploring how a new school could be used as a means of improving facilities and services in and around Hunter's Hall Park and the Jack Kane Centre. 'During their time in office, the SNP Government has reneged on its pledges on classroom sizes again and again,' Mr Briggs said, referring to historic pledges to limit class sizes to help improve teaching outcomes. 'There must now be urgent and long overdue action to reverse the damage that years of SNP neglect have inflicted on our schools – including during John Swinney's dismal stint as education secretary.'

The National
33 minutes ago
- The National
Nicola Sturgeon opens up about self-doubt 'superpower' ahead of memoir
Excerpts from the former first minister of Scotland's new memoir, Frankly, were published by The Times this week, ahead of the book's release on Thursday. The pieces discuss some of the hardest moments of her life and career, as well as conflicted feelings over motherhood and sexuality. Former first minister Nicola Sturgeon In an interview with The Sunday Times, Sturgeon described herself as a 'public introvert' as she told the paper: 'I am somebody who can come alive on a stage in front of thousands of people, but put me at a dinner table with four people and I will struggle much, much more.' When asked about the theme of self-doubt running throughout her memoir, she said: 'I spent the earlier part of my life thinking it was a great handicap. I actually came to think it was my secret superpower. 'It definitely drives you on. You work harder. So I wouldn't change it. I don't know that I'd have got as far in politics without it, actually.' READ MORE: Inside the Scottish demining charity working to secure a safer future for Ukrainians The interview also touched on the importance of emotional intelligence for politicians, with Sturgeon telling the paper: 'I think politics sucks it out of people. I also think people with very low emotional intelligence are probably disproportionately attracted to the status. 'I guess it kind of sits with narcissism. I've come across them all my life in politics, people who exude this kind of superiority complex.' When asked who she believed had the least emotional intelligence in politics, Sturgeon replied: "Probably Boris Johnson. Boris is literally the only person in his universe. I may be being horribly unfair to him, but you get the sense that everybody else is just furniture, or bit players in his drama." Former prime minister Boris Johnson Elsewhere, Sturgeon also spoke about seeking professional counselling in 2024. When asked why she had never done therapy before, she told the Sunday Times: "I'm from the west of Scotland. We don't do things like that! Working-class west of Scotland, Ayrshire, my God, I would never have. "And I suppose part of me would have worried that people would have thought, if I did, that I wasn't up to the job". She added: "It didn't cure everything, but it brought back my sense of perspective and equilibrium. It just gave me the ability to talk it through." READ MORE: Inside the growing movement to boycott Israel in communities across Scotland The former first minister also said she was excited about the next chapter in her life. 'I feel happier than I've possibly ever felt,' she told The Sunday Times. 'A future where I can go anywhere, live anywhere I want, form new relationships. I can meet new people, I can do new things, I can find out what it is I want to do with the rest of my life.' The former first minister hinted towards moving away from Scotland, telling the paper: "I've always loved London." In a fresh excerpt from her memoir, Sturgeon claimed Alex Salmond, her predecessor as first minister, may have leaked details about an investigation into allegations of sexual misconduct against him. The former first minister told the Sunday Times that while she wished Salmond could have read her memoir, she did not think it would have made "the blindest bit of difference to him". And in an extract published on Friday, Sturgeon discussed her arrest in 2023, describing it as 'mental torture' and that she thought about "disappearing into the North Sea". She opened up more about her experience with the Sunday Times, describing the period after her arrest as "the worst week of my life". Sturgeon served as Scotland's first minister between 2014 and 2023. Her memoir, Frankly, will be published on Thursday.