A major search has begun to find new spaces for nature in the South Downs National Park.

With the UN Climate Change Conference (COP26) drawing to a close on Friday, the urgent need to save nature has never been clearer.

In response, the National Park’s #ReNature campaign aims to raise £100m by 2031 to create an extra 13,000 hectares of habitat where plants and animals can thrive.

To help find the land needed, farmers, land managers, communities and conservation groups are invited to put forward possible sites where new wildlife habitat could be created.

Proposals of any size or scale will be considered and could include, for example, creating wildflower meadows, new hedgerows, more natural rivers, planting trees, creating heathland or installing dew ponds. Village greens, road verges and allotments may also have potential.

National Park Authority spokesman Andrew Lee said: "This appeal is a key element of our #ReNature campaign as we need to identify possible sites where wildlife can flourish once again.

"We have big ambitions. This is about taking places not currently managed for wildlife and specifically managing them for the benefit of nature.

"We want to see what ideas come forward, and we expect the initiative to adapt and evolve over the next decade, with more appeals for sites likely in the future."

The National Park Authority is not looking to acquire land as part of this process. Instead, it will work with landowners and communities, offering its specialist guidance to develop projects and connect with available funding opportunities. One possible mechanism, for instance, could be carbon offsetting, where a landowner "renatures" a parcel of land to help capture carbon.

The natural environment can play a vital role in tackling the climate crisis, since healthy ecosystems store a significant amount of carbon in soils, sediments, vegetation and trees.

Mr Lee added: "I hope this appeal will be the first big step towards nature recovery across the national park and beyond.

"We’re testing the water to see how many renature sites might be out there.

"We’re not asking anyone to make any formal commitments at this stage, just trying to identify potential projects at varying scales, ranging from well-developed projects which need extra support, through to expressions of interest to explore further."

The South Downs National Park currently has 25 per cent of the land managed for nature, such as nature reserves, woods, heaths, ponds and flower-rich road verges.

The additional 13,000 hectares would bring this to 33 per cent of land managed for nature - going beyond current UN-backed conservation targets of ’30 per cent by 2030’ (30 for 30).

#ReNature is being spearheaded by the South Downs National Park Authority and the independent charity the South Downs National Park Trust, working with a range of partners.

To find out more about the call for nature sites and download a form to make an expression of interest, visit the website at www.southdowns.gov.uk/CallForNatureSites by January 17.

A major search has begun to find new spaces for nature in the South Downs National Park.

With the recent UN Climate Change Conference (COP26) in Glasgow, the urgent need to save nature has never been clearer.

In response, the National Park’s #ReNature campaign aims to raise £100m by 2031 to create an extra 13,000 hectares of habitat where plants and animals can thrive.

To help find the land needed, farmers, land managers, communities and conservation groups are invited to put forward possible sites where new wildlife habitat could be created.

Proposals of any size or scale will be considered and could include, for example, creating wildflower meadows, new hedgerows, more natural rivers, planting trees, creating heathland or installing dew ponds. Village greens, road verges and allotments may also have potential.

National Park Authority spokesman Andrew Lee said: "This appeal is a key element of our #ReNature campaign as we need to identify possible sites where wildlife can flourish once again.

"We have big ambitions. This is about taking places not currently managed for wildlife and specifically managing them for the benefit of nature.

"We want to see what ideas come forward, and we expect the initiative to adapt and evolve over the next decade, with more appeals for sites likely in the future."

The National Park Authority is not looking to acquire land as part of this process. Instead, it will work with landowners and communities, offering its specialist guidance to develop projects and connect with available funding opportunities. One possible mechanism, for instance, could be carbon offsetting, where a landowner "renatures" a parcel of land to help capture carbon.

The natural environment can play a vital role in tackling the climate crisis, since healthy ecosystems store a significant amount of carbon in soils, sediments, vegetation and trees.

Mr Lee added: "I hope this appeal will be the first big step towards nature recovery across the national park and beyond.

"We’re testing the water to see how many renature sites might be out there.

"We’re not asking anyone to make any formal commitments at this stage, just trying to identify potential projects at varying scales, ranging from well-developed projects which need extra support, through to expressions of interest to explore further."

The South Downs National Park currently has 25 per cent of the land managed for nature, such as nature reserves, woods, heaths, ponds and flower-rich road verges.

The additional 13,000 hectares would bring this to 33 per cent of land managed for nature - going beyond current UN-backed conservation targets of ’30 per cent by 2030’ (30 for 30).

#ReNature is being spearheaded by the South Downs National Park Authority and the independent charity the South Downs National Park Trust, working with a range of partners.

To find out more about the call for nature sites and download a form to make an expression of interest, visit the website at www.southdowns.gov.uk/CallForNatureSites by January 17.