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A week-long series of webinars ran throughout Churches Count on Nature, which is part of Love Your Burial Ground Week (8-16 June), where churches around the country discovered and recorded the wonderful nature in their churchyards and green spaces.
The crisis affecting nature is as great as the climate crisis. Caring for creation means looking after our land for the benefit of nature and people. General Synod recently approved a motion to promote biodiversity on Church of England land.
Hundreds of churches have already signed up to a week-long ‘nature count’ occurring this summer, which will encourage people to visit churchyards and record what they see.
The Church Commissioners for England has signed a tenancy agreement with Natural England to improve biodiversity across two fields of additional land at Wybunbury Moss, a National Nature Reserve (NNR) near Crewe, Cheshire.
Churches and cathedrals across the country are preparing for the annual Churches Count on Nature event.
On World Environment Day, Bishop Graham Usher writes about why the Church of England is backing the People's Plan for Nature, and why you should, too.
The Church Commissioners for England has signed a tenancy agreement to promote nature alongside sustainable agriculture on Hereford’s Bartonsham Meadows.
The Church Commissioners for England is working with the Wildfowl & Wetlands Trust (WWT) on a new initiative to help fight the climate, nature and wellbeing crisis by creating networks of healthy wetlands across the UK.
The Church Commissioners for England with a group of global investors is taking the lead in setting up Nature Action 100.
Parishes across England and Wales can now register to participate in Churches Count on Nature, an annual scheme where people visit churchyards and record the plant and animal species they encounter.