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£5.5m For Moors For The Future

Euro money will help restore more than 2,000 acres of damaged peat moorland.


Posted: 17 September 2009
by Jon

It's good news for eroding moorland in the Peak District and South Pennines with a £5.5 million EU funding boost for the Moors for the Future Partnership aimed at restoring more than 2,000 acres of damaged land by 2010.

Bleaklow Moors

The Bleaklow moors looking suitably bleak - PEK

Edale-based Moors for the Future will be using the funding to launch its five-year Moorlife project, one of the biggest moorland restoration programmes in Europe. Essentially it aims to restore vegetation on what, at present, is bare, eroding peat, which has been damaged by centuries of air-borne industrial pollution and wildfires.

Rare blanket bog will be repopulated with highly-absorbent plants such as sphagnum moss which will help to reduce flood risk to nearby towns. Specialist upland plants such as heather, cottongrass, bilberry, crowberry and cloudberry will also be re-introduced.

The project is due to start in April 2010 and will cover  large expanses of Peak District and Pennine moor between Manchester and Sheffield, including Bleaklow, Shelf Moor, Sykes Moor, Alport Moor, Black Hill, Rishworth Common, Higher House Moor and Turley Holes.

Much of the land is owned by Yorkshire Water and United Utilities and serves as catchment areas for water supplies while the rest is owned by the National Trust and  private landowners.

All good news. Geoff Nickolds, chair of the Moors for the Future Partnership, said: “We’re delighted to have secured this vital backing for the Moorlife project which will restore habitats of European significance.

“It will have important benefits for communities on both sides of the Pennines in terms of lower flood-risks and improved water supplies, and we expect it to create up to 40 seasonal jobs and six full-time posts for its five-year duration.

“It will also restore these wild, biologically-important landscapes to a state where they can be enjoyed rather than endured by walkers, with benefits for health and well-being. And we hope it will once again support a wide diversity of upland birds, plants, mammals and insects that specialise in this distinctive habitat."

Moors for the Future was launched in 2002. More about the project at www.moorsforthefuture.org.uk

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Discuss this story

This region was originally woodlands, no?  Why not restore it to a woodland rather than a moor?


Posted: 18/09/2009 at 17:27

I notice there are a few 'private' land-owning partners in this initiative Arthur.

Grouse don't like forests.


Posted: 18/09/2009 at 17:34

Virtually the whole of Britain was wooded, shall we restore all of that, too?!

Or what about a nice thick ice sheet over most of the landscape, shall we get that back, eh? eh?

Or, us moorland lovers could just keep our moors for a bit...


Posted: 19/09/2009 at 02:02

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