At times, it feels as though the world is shouting. Headlines are filled with crisis, conflict, and uncertainty loud enough to drown out almost everything else. But beneath that noise, something quieter is happening, something older and closer. While global events pull our focus outward, the land beneath our feet is telling its own story, one still full of hope, possibility, and renewal, if we choose to listen.
Wales is at a crossroads
Nature’s decline in Wales is real, with 1 in 5 species at risk of extinction. Yet just as real is the potential to turn this around. The landscape we see today reflects the choices of the past; the landscape our children inherit will reflect the choices we make now. But behind the noise, something deeply important is unfolding: the story of nature in Wales and the opportunity we still have to restore it. The Wildlife Trusts want to imagine a Wales where rivers run clear, where wildlife flourishes in fields and hedgerows, where farms are thriving, not merely surviving. This isn’t a fantasy; we think it's achievable, but it requires us to look at the future differently.
Nature’s story in Wales doesn’t have to be one of decline. It can be a story of renewal, resilience, and shared purpose. This is not a moment for despair; it is a moment for clarity and for action grounded in hope. Yes, political and social uncertainty can overshadow progress.
Climate and nature can feel like “later” problems in a world full of “right now” problems.
But ignoring them is already affecting our lives: homes flooded one month and facing drought the next, farming suffering the same fate, food prices rising whilst storms arrive back‑to‑back. We’ve solved big challenges before, so we can rise to meet this one, too. But we must shift our focus toward what makes Wales unique so that we can open possibilities right here in Wales.