Wildlife populations continue to decline and natural habitats face growing threats.
Conservation charity the National Trust has taken the unusual step of urging people throughout Northern Ireland to contact their MLA regarding the current state of the natural environment.
The Trust is appealing to the public to join a campaign designed to halt the ongoing decline of nature, while pressing the NI Executive to intensify efforts to restore wildlife and safeguard the natural environment.
New findings from the 2025 People In the Outdoors Survey in Northern Ireland (POMNI) highlight just how vital nature already is to people’s daily lives.
The survey found that 70 per cent of adults spend time outdoors every week with 134 million outdoor visits are made each year. 80 per cent of people want to spend even more time outdoors and 87 per cent of visits improve health and wellbeing
However, the data also exposes a significant inequality, with only 17 per cent of people having access to green space within a five-minute walk of their home.
Patrick Lynch, National Trust NI Restore Nature Lead, cautioned: “Nature is in freefall across Northern Ireland and these findings show the challenge is not a lack of motivation, but a lack of opportunity, reinforcing the urgent need to improve access to nature-rich spaces.
“Wildlife continues to decline, water quality is deteriorating, and people are increasingly cut off from the natural spaces that support health, well-being, and resilience.
“Some of our most precious places and species – from the Mournes and the Lakelands of Fermanagh to local woodlands, parks and coasts – are under threat. Once common species like curlew, skylark, and hedgehog in our gardens and skate in our coastal waters are in serious decline, reflecting a wider failure to protect habitats. And nowhere is the crisis clearer than at Lough Neagh, which has been repeatedly affected by toxic blue-green algae blooms and has become a symbol of environmental failure.”
The charity states that recent decisions and proposals indicate that nature is not being regarded as a priority by the Government here, with anxieties surrounding a lack of clear targets, investment and enforcement. They are encouraging people throughout Northern Ireland to contact their MLAs and demand stronger measures to restore nature.
Heather McLachan, Director for the National Trust in Northern Ireland, said: “We would never launch a campaign like this lightly. But it’s clear that current action does not match the scale of the crisis.
“People across Northern Ireland care deeply about nature. It shapes our identity, supports our wellbeing and underpins our economy, but that concern is not being matched by the urgency of government action.
“Without nature, there is no future. It’s time for leadership that restores nature and creates thriving places for people and wildlife alike.”
The charity cautions that without decisive intervention rivers, lakes and seas will remain polluted; Future generations will inherit a more degraded environment and food security will be put at risk
The Trust is urging the Executive to commit to three key actions:
1. Protect and restore nature now – Set legal targets that drive action in support of nature and fix the system that is meant to protect it. Give key landscapes and waterways, like the Mournes and Lough Neagh, protection as essential regional assets.
2. Invest in wildlife – Mobilise the funding, skills and evidence needed for nature to thrive. Create more spaces for nature and properly pay farmers to restore habitats, improve soil health, protect rivers and produce food sustainably.
3. Create resilient futures for communities – Ensure every community has access to nature-rich green spaces and design nature into every new housing development.
The Trust is calling on people throughout Northern Ireland to contact their MLAs and demand more robust action to revive and restore nature.
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