Solent Seascape Project, the first seascape-scale marine restoration project in the UK, receives international recognition from United Nations

Solent Seascape Project, the first seascape-scale marine restoration project in the UK, receives international recognition from United Nations

The Solent Seascape Project is working to restore, protect and connect nature within the Solent. In July 2024, the project was endorsed as an official United Nations Decade Action since it is an initiative that contributes towards international goals for the protection and restoration of marine biodiversity.

Project Coordinator Rosalie Wright of Blue Marine Foundation said, “We are immensely proud that the Solent Seascape Project has been recognised internationally by such a prestigious institution. As a UN Ocean Decade Action, we look forward to working alongside and learning from this network to collectively achieve change for our ocean, at a local and global scale.”  

The Solent Seascape Project is the first seascape-scale marine restoration project in the UK and, as such, it has been recognised as a Decade Action, joining other worldwide initiatives endorsed by the United Nations (UN) that seek to bridge gaps in important areas of ocean science and to connect people to the ocean in a sustainable way.   

The project´s uniqueness lies in its recognition of the critical role of connectivity across key habitats -salt marshes, seagrass beds, oyster reefs and seabird sites- due to the collective benefits they provide for people and nature.  

The Solent Seascape Project is working to scientifically monitor the benefits of seascape-scale restoration, including measuring the carbon storage potential of restored habitats such as saltmarsh and seagrass, and ensuring that local people and sea-users co-design the project, thereby becoming more connected and engaged with their own marine environment. The restoration of all four key habitats included in the project has already started with seven seabird sites, four trial sites for seagrass, 0.25 ha for salt marsh and 0.25 ha for oysters.   

The inclusion of the Solent Seascape Project as part of the Ocean Decade reflects its international importance, global standard work and allows it to connect with, and learn from, multiple other Decade Actions, ensuring the project is at the cutting edge of marine research and restoration. This will help to create a more resilient coastline by increasing carbon stores, reducing the impact of climate change, protecting coastal homes from erosion and sea level rise, improving water quality and providing areas for people to explore their natural environment.  

Spanning 66 countries, the UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development (2021-2030) includes ten Ocean Decade Challenges that aim to use science for the benefit of the ocean. The Solent Seascape Project actively addresses three of these challenges: to protect and restore ecosystems, unlock ocean-based solutions to climate change, and promote positive behaviour change, improving humanity’s relationship with the ocean. As part of the Ocean Decade, the UN is aiming to create a clean, healthy and resilient ocean, that is productive, predicted, safe, accessible, inspiring and engaging.   

“Since the start of the Decade, we have built a strong awareness of the need for action within our community. Now, we are channelling this determination into concrete efforts to get the best results,” said Vidar Helgesen, Executive Secretary of UNESCO’s Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (UNESCO-IOC).  

The Solent Seascape Project is a partnership of ten influential organisations working together to protect and restore important habitats within the Solent, a diverse estuarine system between the Isle of Wight and mainland England. These habitats include oyster reefs, saltmarsh, seagrass meadows and seabird nesting sites. Working collectively with local stakeholders and communities, the project aims to codevelop an ambitious recovery plan for the Solent, as well as actively restoring and reconnecting critical coastal habitats to create a thriving, functioning seascape for all.   

Project partners include Blue Marine Foundation, RSPB, Hampshire and Isle of Wight Wildlife Trust, Project Seagrass, Natural England, Environment Agency, Coastal Partners, Isle of Wight Estuaries Project, Chichester Harbour Protection and Recovery of Nature (CHaPRoN) and the University of Portsmouth.   

East Head Impact and the Endangered Landscapes & Seascapes Programme (ELSP), managed by the Cambridge Conservation Initiative and funded by Arcadia, support the Solent Seascape Project.  

You can find out more about the project and sign up for their newsletter here: www.solentseascape.com.