The new Welsh Government takes office at a defining moment for Wales. Communities are under pressure from the cost of living, overstretched public services, more frequent climate shocks and a growing sense that decisions made in Cardiff Bay are too distant from everyday life. At the same time, the natural systems that protect our homes, feed our communities and support our health are being pushed to breaking point.
Nature recovery cannot be treated as a pleasant add-on for better times. It is one of the most urgent tests facing the new Government. If Wales is serious about stronger communities, climate resilience and a fairer future, then restoring nature must move from the margins of policy to the centre of government.
Nature loss is already affecting Welsh communities
Wales is in a nature emergency; we are one of the most nature-depleated countries in the world with one in six species at risk of extinction, and the warning signs are no longer possible to ignore. Rivers are polluted, soils are depleted, species are disappearing, and too many communities lack good access to healthy green space. This is not an abstract environmental problem. It is a community problem, a health problem, an economic problem and a climate problem.
When wetlands are drained, floods hit harder. When peatlands are damaged, carbon is released, and water quality suffers. When local green spaces are neglected, people lose places to exercise, meet, relax and belong.