restoring and rewetting peatlands

Restore peatlands

25 Big Local Actions

Inspiration read

Carbon farming initiative

Winmarleigh Moss

The Winmarleigh carbon farm in Wyre district is a pioneering project working to restore the carbon storage capacity of lowland agricultural peatlands. It’s a collaboration between Lancashire Wildlife Trust, Manchester Metropolitan University and sphagnum producer, BeadaMoss. Together, the carbon farm is piloting a different way of managing lowland peat soils – re-wetting the land and growing a permanent cover crop of peat-forming sphagnum moss – to keep the soil carbon locked up in the ground whilst keeping the land financially viable for farmers and landowners.

Carbon farming

Carbon farming is a new way of considering ‘productive land use’ and of managing land to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and sequester and store further carbon. The crop from the land is the carbon that is saved from the atmosphere, counted in terms of the carbon dioxide equivalents of all the different types of greenhouse gases that are locked into the ground and not emitted (referred to simply as ‘carbon’). The crop of carbon saved by restoring the peatland is then ‘sold’ with funds coming from government subsidies or payments from organisations looking to offset unavoidable carbon emissions.

A richer way forward

The degradation of peatlands has a negative impact on soil health that affects the long-term viability of agriculture in these areas. This is compounded by the fact that peatlands are naturally low in nutrients and sites that have been drained to support pasture or the production of arable crops require significant amounts of artificial fertilisers. By managing the land as a carbon farm, the area of Winmarleigh Moss should require very little maintenance and the project is working on an evidence-based economic case for this carbon farming model that demonstrates a similar or higher financial yield than traditional farming.

  • Inspiration listen

    Do Something Bigger 

    What would inspire you to do something bigger for climate and nature? In this, the first episode of the Carbon Copy Podcast series, Do Something Bigger, we introduce our year-long campaign: 25…

What if?

What if we restored half of the peatlands in the UK? Which of these benefits could we achieve? 

Prevent peatland emissions by 2050 equivalent to the entire transport sector. 

✓ True

Protect over one-third of the UK’s entire drinking water resources. 

✓ True

Keep safe the UK’s only species of carnivorous plant. 

Even bigger!

Rewet peatlands so they continue to store carbon, filter water, reduce flood risk and provide habitats for nature.
Re-wet peatlands
Peat-free compost
Peat-free compost
Reed cutting in Norfolk
Reed cutting in Norfolk

With special thanks
to our partners
: