Vision for a Wilder Europe – revisited, March 2015

April 7, 2015

Eleven organisations from across Europe reconfirmed their ambition to make Europe a wilder place by signing the new edition of the “Vision for a Wilder Europe” in March 2015, which is just published.

European wolf interacting with European brown bear in Kuhmo, Finland.
European wolf interacting with European brown bear in Kuhmo, Finland.
Staffan Widstrand/ Wild Wonders of Europe

The goal of the ‘Vision for a Wilder Europe’ is ‘to build on the significant conservation achievements in Europe over the past decades and to launch and promote a new paradigm in management and view of wild nature in European conservation’. It was first launched in 2013 at Wild10, the World Wilderness Congress in Salamanca, Spain, where nine environmental leaders signed the document and presented it to senior representatives from the Council of Europe and the European Commission. Two new organisations have now joined the signatories of the vision: Rewilding Britain and the European Wilderness Society.

– “In the 15 months since WILD10 convened in Salamanca, the re-emergence of wild nature across Europe’s lands and seas has continued and accelerated,” says Vance Martin, Co-chair of Wild10 and President of the Wild Foundation. “But the threats continue apace. The opportunity remains ripe to show how wild nature and human society can reach a new and mutually beneficial relationship in the world’s most densely populated continent. We need to act NOW, because this window will not remain open for long”.

Rewilding Europe, Wildlands Research Institute, John Muir Trust, Zoological Society of London, Frankfurt Zoological Society, European Wilderness Society, Fundació Catalunya- La Pedrera, Rewilding Britain, Wilderness Foundation, Deutsche Umwelthilfe and Wild Wonders of Europe have worked for over a year on this vision. The organisations put emphasis on recognizing, restoring and allowing natural processes, which ultimately could create more robust ecosystems and more cost-effective conservation management systems, reduce the loss of biodiversity across the continent, provide scientific knowledge about natural developments without human interventions, give more people a closer relationship with nature in contrast to our highly technological worlds, increase resilience to the effects of climate change, and generate new economic opportunities and better services for society.

The ten action points the updated Vision calls upon all social change-makers and leaders from all European governments, businesses, communities and organisations, to adopt and work on:

  1. Existing wilderness: ensure full protection of all existing wilderness areas across the European Continent, both on land and at sea, as an immediate step;
  2. Natural processes: allow nature to take care of itself in wider land/seascapes;
  3. Large apex consumer species: recognize the underestimated ecological and economical value of wildlife and the importance of ensuring its continued comeback;
  4. Rewilding: support the rewilding of Europe;
  5. Business case for the Wild: invest in businesses linked to the values of wild nature and wildlife;
  6. New stewardship of land, water and sea: invite and inspire land owners, communities and managers of land/water/sea and natural resources to embrace “A Vision for a Wilder Europe”;
  7. Financial mechanisms: inspire and invite all funding institutions to support this vision;
  8. Public support: Reach out to large constituencies across Europe through communications and education programmes;
  9. Monitoring, research and compilation of existing knowledge: learn from existing knowledge, experiences and new research;
  10. Leadership& strategy: promote the new conservation vision vis-à-vis key constituencies and develop an action-oriented strategy.

Download the Vision by clicking on its cover page.

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