Published date: 18 August 2023
Closed opportunity - This means that the contract is currently closed. The buying department may be considering suppliers that have already applied, or no suitable offers were made.
Contract summary
Industry
Environmental services - 90700000
Location of contract
SW1P 3JR
Value of contract
£0 to £1
Procurement reference
CF-0119100D8d000003VQwdEAG
Published date
18 August 2023
Closing date
22 September 2023
Closing time
12pm
Contract start date
23 October 2023
Contract end date
31 October 2024
Contract type
Service contract
Procedure type
Open procedure (below threshold)
Any interested supplier may submit a tender in response to an opportunity notice.
This procedure can be used for procurements below the relevant contract value threshold.
Contract is suitable for SMEs?
Yes
Contract is suitable for VCSEs?
No
Description
Climate change does and will increasingly impact protected sites for biodiversity. The changing distribution and abundance of species and the timing of ecological events are resulting in changes to the structure and function of communities. Our protected site network and future Protected Site Strategies need to take this increasing dynamism into account.
Natural England has implemented a SSSI Future Reforms (SSSIFR) project to investigate whether the statutory framework for Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSIs) supports the natural world's increasing dynamism as it responds to climate change, or if the legal framework needs to evolve to better protect habitats and species during rapid ecological change. Natural England's Action Plan for 2022/23 commits to investing in the reform of some of our statutory duties, including the way that we designate SSSIs.
To support adaptation, a key SSSIFR aim is to understand how SSSIs fit within and contribute to resilient, functioning landscapes and the Nature Recovery Network (NRN). This is supported by Defra's 25 Year Environment Plan which highlights six key objectives, one being that 'we will achieve a growing and resilient network of land, water and sea that is richer in plants and wildlife' (Defra 2018).
The aim of this project is to test the SCP approach on the terrestrial SSSI designation programme at a national scale. Also to consider potential use of the SCP approach as applied to SSSI designation for prioritisation of future locally-based Protected Site Strategies which address a variety of pressures on Protected Sites (link to NE blogpost). The SSSI designation programme is concerned with land identified for inclusion in the terrestrial SSSI designation programme by Natural England for inclusion in the SSSI series, based on its opinion that the land may be of 'special interest' by reason of its wildlife (habitats and species) geology, and/or geomorphology. This project will explore SCP's utility to assess how well the current SSSI series, and the currently proposed and potential future SSSI designations support the series ecological coherence and adaptation to climate change through strategic prioritisation, based on 1 a-e (the criteria for ensuring climate change resilience of protected sites, pages 20-21) and current and future climate projections. The current SSSI designation programme includes proposals for coastal, alkaline fen, woodland & parkland, lowland grassland and heathland habitats, plus bird, bat, vascular plant and waxcap fungi species.
If you wish to view the documents in full, please log onto the Authority's e-sourcing system (atamis). Link is below.
https://atamis-9529.my.site.com/s/Welcome
About the buyer
Contact name
Harjinder Grewal
Address
Nobel House
London
SW1P 3JR
GB
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Closing: 22 September 2023, 12pm