Back to All Events

Nature Finance – Public or Private?

title of the event on a background of a painting of a blue tree with yellow circles on its branches

This online event, organised by SEDA Land, part of the Scottish Ecological Design
Association, will explore where the money to finance nature recovery should come from,
and how rural communities can thrive as Scotland’s natural environment is improved.


Should we rely on the public sector to step up to the challenge of reaching Net Zero and
bring socio-economic benefits? If so, how do we raise the taxes to pay for that in a fair and
equitable way, for example on the "polluter pays" principle, through a carbon land tax or
through other property taxes? Which specific tax reforms are most likely to hasten nature
recovery in Scotland? Are Regional Land Use Partnerships (RLUPs) an appropriate
vehicle to coordinate public and private investment to deliver landscape and catchment
scale collaboration? Is luring in more private finance the way forward? Maybe it is a
combination of the two?


The debate will be in the context of Scotland, with its limited devolved powers and wide
regional differences. The panel will look in broad terms at at ways of addressing climate
change and improving the environment – carbon sequestration, reversing biodiversity loss,
flood management – and the benefits this can bring in terms of employment, strengthened
communities, recreation, education, and health & wellbeing.


Without finance, achieving these goals is nigh on impossible, so it comes down to the ageold question: Where does the money come from?


Chair: Nick Drainey, freelance writer.
David Fleetwood, director of policy, John Muir Trust
Graeme McCormick, director, Business for Scotland.
Henry Leveson-Gower, founder & CEO, Promoting Economic Pluralism
Howard Reed, founder & director, Landman Economics
Lewis Ryder-Jones, advocacy adviser, Oxfam Scotland
Rachel Skene, manager, Regional Land Use Partnership NW2045

Previous
Previous
28 April

Feedback on Heating Edinburgh in 2030s

Next
Next
2 May

(Not so) Glorious Failure: how do we make change better? (Day 1)