Climate change – adaptation and mitigation across all four themes

Image by Ian Medcalf

Since the Area Statements were published in March 2020 they have naturally evolved to reflect post-pandemic priorities for our environment across Mid Wales.

There has been a focus towards enabling and empowering communities to develop their own resilience, with support, to help tackle the climate and nature emergencies at the local scale.

Climate Change


The Mid Wales Area Statement consists of four main themes, which are:

Rather than creating a fifth theme focusing solely on climate change, Natural Resources Wales (NRW) want to ensure that everything delivered through the Area Statement takes account of the climate emergency, forming part of our response to it.

From shifting weather patterns threatening food production to rising sea levels and the prospect of catastrophic flooding, the impact of climate change is global in scope and unprecedented in scale. Immediate, effective action needs to be taken. Trying to adapt in the future will not only be more difficult and costly but also potentially too late.

Human influence on the climate system is clear. Emissions of greenhouse gases stemming from human activity (sometimes referred to as anthropogenic emissions) are the highest in history. Recent climatic events have had a widespread impact on human and natural systems. Current worst-case scenario models predict a greater than 4 degree global temperature rise by 2100, if current emissions continue.

Adapting to change is going to require action across all levels of society. Here in Mid Wales, organisations and individuals need to alter their behaviour to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and to become more resilient to the impacts of climate change.

The climate emergency challenge we all face will encompass everything that we do to achieve the sustainable management of natural resources. We need to work in a way that promotes action which mitigates against the effects of climate change. We must support our natural environment and build resilient communities that are adaptable and fit for the future.

The effects of climate change are already well underway in Wales. Coastal areas are facing an ever-increasing threat from rising sea levels. In the near future we can all expect to see more intense rainfall together with an increased frequency of both fluvial (river) and coastal flooding. Our summers are likely to become hotter and drier. Projections also foresee more extremely warm days, milder and wetter winters, less snowfall and frost, as well as lower groundwater and river levels. The impact on Wales’ natural environment is likely to be significant and irreversible. We need to act now to protect what we have. 

Looking ahead, we need to talk more about climate change if we are to build a greater understanding of the local issues. We want to have a conversation that people can relate to. It needs to be a new kind of conversation, one that involves people from as many backgrounds as possible and adds a community perspective to the climate emergency debate. We want to encourage communities to develop innovative ideas for their own community wellbeing initiatives.

NRW are working as part of the Ceredigion and Powys PSBs to deliver the wellbeing objectives at the community level.

The PSBs have undertaken a Wellbeing Assessment to understand the specific issues and priorities within their local communities.  They produced a Wellbeing Plan with definitive Wellbeing Objectives, set out to improve the well-being of communities.  The current wellbeing plans & objectives run from 2018-2023.

Decarbonisation and the climate emergency features throughout the work of the PSBs, and in Ceredigion forms one of the main deliverables, with an established group tackling ‘Decarbonisation in Aberystwyth’.

Further information on the Ceredigion PSB and Powys PSB can be found by clicking on the link.

In developing the Mid Wales Area Statement with stakeholders, NRW is looking for opportunities under the area themes to adopt appropriate measures that will take account of and reduce the impacts of the climate emergency that we are facing.

This will not always be an easy task, but by presenting the climate emergency in this way it will help us all to think differently, consider the impact of our actions, and respond to evidence in planning. It will also help us embed the reality of the climate emergency across the breadth of the work we do.

The 2022 review of the Mid Area Statement is designed to update this core text to reflect the natural development of the Area Statement over the first two years.  The changes since initial publication demonstrate how the area statement process has naturally evolved, based on ever-improving evidence from both NRW’s work and stakeholder input. Our engagement will continue as the Area Statement matures, develops and evolves.

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