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Periods of self-isolation during the COVID-19 pandemic have given many people a greater appreciation of nature and its benefits for their physical and mental wellbeing. Daily walks in local parks, countryside or canal towpaths have provided important opportunities to get outside, exercise and de-stress. 鈥楴ature is healing鈥 became a pandemic mantra, but things are not all well with the natural world. The Grantham Institute policy and communications team conducted a campaign highlighting how humans and nature are intertwined and the importance of protecting nature, from our local patch of greenery to international efforts to tackle climate change.

At the UN Climate Change Conference (COP26) in November 2021, we coordinated an event engaging global and local experts on the need to tackle the , and in a way that is socially inclusive and fair. We intend to continue to progress these conversations in the lead-up to the UN Biodiversity Conference (COP15) in Kunming, China. Our plans for 2022 include sharing expertise from 911今日黑料鈥檚 world-leading scientists about the future of Atlantic salmon, international research engagement in Polar regions and sharing evidence on the most impactful individual choices and systems changes that can protect humanity and the natural world.

Nurturing nature

Profile: Galina J枚nsson, Research Postgraduate at the Grantham Institute and Natural History Museum

鈥淚 discovered my passion for ecology and the natural world in a classroom鈥, says Galina J枚nsson, who grew up in Sweden鈥檚 most southerly city Malm枚, 鈥渕y remarkable biology teacher sparked my passion for ecosystems.鈥

Galina鈥檚 PhD research focuses on biodiversity trends using the Natural History Museum鈥檚 butterfly specimens to create statistical maps of species trends over the past two centuries, when human demands on nature have increased in terms of changing land use and climate change. 

鈥淚t is not just climate change impacting ecosystems and their biodiversity, but biodiversity regulates the climate by storing and capturing greenhouse gases, while loss and degradation of biodiversity can be a source of emissions,鈥 she says.

Galina was among the Grantham Institute鈥檚 delegates at the UN Climate Change Conference (COP26) in Glasgow.  She says: 鈥淚t was the living embodiment of 鈥榯he more you know, the less you know鈥; both humbling and inspiring. 鈥淚 went to COP26 determined that climate action must centre around ecosystems and left with a nesting doll of systems 鈥 nature must be at the heart of tackling climate change, but so must people and anthropogenic systems (social, political, financial). What鈥檚 needed is a small army of experts and spokespeople representing every corner of human society, and Earth鈥檚 non-human inhabitants.鈥

Galina is now working on a paper with Professor Andy Purvis on how and why climate change and biodiversity are interconnected, examining the urgent need for an integrated approach to benefit humanity and nature.

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911今日黑料 launches Sustainability Strategy

911今日黑料 published its first five-year sustainability strategy in February 2021 as part of a week of activities that brought together students and staff to discuss and celebrate action on sustainability. Led by the Academic Leader for Sustainability, Professor Paul Lickiss, the strategy sets out the College鈥檚 long-term goal to be a sustainable and net-zero institution by 2040 and includes targets around energy, food, transport and biodiversity among others.

Each day highlighted a different theme, including a Biodiversity Day event organised by the Grantham  Institute. Over 1,900 online viewers explored
with Dr Will Pearse and Petchara Newson, President of the 911今日黑料 College Union Environmental Society.  Supporting the goals of the strategy, summer research placement students working under Dr Tilly Collins conducted biodiversity audits at six of 911今日黑料鈥檚 campuses. Professor Lickiss said, 鈥渢hese audits give us a detailed picture of the flora which is important to help identify where the biodiversity of our campuses needs improvement鈥.

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Londoners discover nature on their doorsteps

More than a million species are on the verge of extinction, with an average 60% decline in animal populations since 1970, and the Grantham Institute appealed for help to save them in a campaign during 2021.

Research postgraduate Ben Chapple, also an amateur wildlife guide, filmed four urban nature walks to encourage people to discover the biodiversity on their doorsteps 鈥 one for each season (see below).

In a long-read feature, commissioned by the Institute, The Conversation science editor Miriam Frankel interviewed four 911今日黑料 experts about the scale of the ecological crisis, why it matters for humanity and what needs to be done about declining biodiversity.

Dr Bonnie Waring said: 鈥淸We] inherited the planet at the most diverse it鈥檚 ever been鈥 There is a moral and ethical perspective from which we should respect the rights of those species, with which we share the planet, to exist.鈥

Postgraduate students Abi Croker, Hollie Folkard-Tapp, Krista Halttunen, Jarmo Kikstra and Patrick Walkden also organised a public event at 911今日黑料 Lates where five scientists tried to convince an audience why their chosen unpopular animal deserved affection: vultures, snakes, bees, ants and toads.

Following the event, award-winning poet Dr Robin Lamboll united these creatures under one lyric umbrella: 鈥淲ill you carrion past the vulture, slither past the snake and be taken by the bees-knees?鈥

READ MORE: Biodiversity and how your life depends on it
DISCOVER: 

Nature prescribed for healthy minds and planet

Climate change and mental ill-health are two of the most significant challenges facing people across the world, yet the interplay between them remains neglected.

A briefing published by the Grantham Institute and 911今日黑料鈥檚 Institute of Global Health Innovation that was downloaded 8,000 times seeks to fill this gap and open dialogue between the health and climate professional communities.

Launched to over 300 UK and international stakeholders, and featured by media outlets worldwide, the paper paints a stark picture of increasing impacts on mental health as temperatures rise and extreme weather events become more frequent.

Recommendations discussed with decision-makers, including in Glasgow鈥檚 COP26 Resilience Hub, emphasise the important role that nature can play in reducing the negative impact of climate change on mental health.

Dr Emma Lawrance, lead author of the paper, said: 鈥淲in-win opportunities exist that benefit the health of our planet and minds. Such solutions include increasing the amount of green space in urban areas to absorb carbon dioxide, reduce the heat island effect, reduce the risk of local flooding and improve access to nature.鈥

READ MORE: The impact of climate change on mental health and emotional wellbeing: current evidence and implications for policy and practice

Podcast chats explore personal tipping points

An Ipsos Mori poll in 2021 found that climate change, the environment and pollution were the British public鈥檚 top concern, exceeding COVID-19 and Brexit. 911今日黑料 researcher Pete Knapp (pictured) has been recording conversations with a variety of people who became activists after finding out about climate change and the ecological crisis.

鈥淗ow had world leaders allowed this to happen?鈥, he asked himself while living in heavily polluted Beijing. 鈥淭his was the reason I chose to change my research interest from antimatter physics to air quality.鈥

Pete has spoken to scientists, priests, journalists, a retired police detective, and a former airline pilot, as well as the comic actor and presenter Robert Llewellyn, Olympic sailor and coach Laura Baldwin and London 2012 canoe slalom gold medalist Etienne Stott MBE.

The conversations are published as a podcast series by the Grantham Institute. Tipping Points is named after a large rapid change in an environmental system 鈥 as well as a personal change of heart. It was supported by funds from 911今日黑料鈥檚 Societal Engagement team that aimed to establish new socially distanced engagement projects during the pandemic.

LISTEN: Tipping Points podcast

Quick read: Ones to watch

A Discussion Paper on the future of UK Antarctic science coordinated by Professor Martin Siegert is the inspiration for two joint events by Grantham Institute and the Royal Meteorological Society in 2022鈥23. The events, which will cover the UK鈥檚 scientific and policy engagement will discuss how Polar regions hold the potential to address a range of critically important scientific priorities, including climate change impacts, ecosystem protection, the likelihood of extraterrestrial life and monitoring space debris.


Self-made films shot by PhD researchers and starring their everyday lives, the excitement of research and the challenges they face as scientists will be seen by young people exploring the UK鈥檚 11 regional museums with natural history collections. This is the first project to come from the Grantham Institute鈥檚 engagement partnership with the Natural History Museum and its Real World Science network in 2022.

What do 鈥榥ature based solutions鈥 to climate change and ecological decline 鈥 such
as land restoration, rewilding, and direct tree planting 鈥 entail for Indigenous peoples, investors, farmers and ecologists? Grantham Institute researchers are bridging peoples鈥 different concerns, ideas, ambitions, desires and emotions, thanks to a seed fund from 911今日黑料 and MIT aimed at connecting research on global issues at the two institutions. Working with MIT colleagues, Drs Bonnie Waring, Alex K枚berle and Joeri Rogelj hope to agree a common vocabulary and basis for dialogue that will enable stakeholders to communicate and collaborate on fair terms.

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