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Johnnie Walker and RSPB join forces for peat’s sake

Uwe Stoneman, Mairi McAllan and Ewan Andrew.
Uwe Stoneman, Mairi McAllan and Ewan Andrew.

Vital investment from Johnnie Walker means that a crucial area of peatland in Abernethy Nature Reserve can be preserved.

RSPB Scotland’s Abernethy Nature Reserve is home to the An Lurg North peatland area, which sits on the Cairngorm plateau.

The peatland is severely degraded and in need of preservation.

Thanks to funding from whisky brand Johnnie Walker, restoration and conservation of the area will now begin, ensuring it is a suitable environment for both the local community and wildlife.

Uwe Stoneman, senior site manager at RSPB Scotland, Mairi McAllan minister for environment, biodiversity & land reform and Ewan Andrew chief sustainability at Diageo.

The project was announced by by Mairi McAllan, minister for environment, biodiversity and land reform on July 6 on a visit to the area.

She said: “Restoring peatlands is a central part of our response to the twin crises of climate change and biodiversity loss in Scotland.

“We hope this partnership encourages further private investment in peatland restoration and Scotland’s natural capital to support biodiversity, create green job opportunities and help deliver our world leading emission reduction targets.”

The works will focus on 88 hectares of peatland. In total, an area the equivalent of around 224 football pitches on the plateau will be conserved.

Preparatory work has already been done on the reserve, which is in the Cairngorm National Park.

Benefits of the restoration

Ewan Andrew, chief sustainability officer for Johnnie Walker’s parent company Diageo said it will even impact the whisky industry as its Cardhu distillery is just downstream.

He said: “The area is also part of the water catchment for the River Spey, the greatest whisky river in the world, and preserving the peatland will enhance and protect water quality in the future.”

Abernethy Nature Reserve is part of Cairngorms Connect, which brings together neighbouring land managers to enhance ecological processes across the Cairngorms.

The trio all share the goal to protect an ‘invaluable’ resource.

The reserve is home to a wide variety of wildlife and plant species that will also benefit from the funding.

Currently, the sundew plant, Britain’s only carnivorous plant, and hen harriers are at risk if the levels of carbon in the peatland that they rely on decrease.

Delivery manager at Cairngorms Connect, Steve Blow, said: “Peatland restoration is one of the landscape scale habitat restoration objectives shared by all of the Cairngorms Connect Partners (RSPB, Wildland, FLS and NatureScot).

“Both on the plateau and down in the forests, these bogs support endangered wildlife, lock up carbon from the atmosphere and can help reduce flooding, so are an invaluable resource.”

If kept in a good condition, peatland can get rid of around four times more CO2 than an area of forest the same size.

Peatlands store more than 30% of the world’s carbon, and the vast majority of the UK’s three million hectares of it is in Scotland.