
New funding to restore habitats around Dover Castle
Kent Wildlife Trust has received £50,000 in funding to help restore natural habitats, insects and other wildlife around Dover Castle.
Kent Wildlife Trust has received £50,000 in funding to help restore natural habitats, insects and other wildlife around Dover Castle.
Kent Wildlife Trust has outlined environmental concerns about a proposed extension to the Thanet Offshore Wind Farm at a Planning Inspectorate hearing.
Kent Wildlife Trust has been chosen to benefit from the Co-op Local Community Fund. The funding will help the charity to connect people with nature through a programme hands-on activities in Medway.
There has been significant press and social media coverage of the damage to the Bluebell Hill Roadside Nature Reserve northbound on the A229, due to emergency drainage works carried out by Kent County Council.
There has been some public concern in response to incorrect use of the term ‘partnership’ in relation to Kent Wildlife Trust’s involvement with proposed development works by Wates Group in Tenterden. We would like to take this opportunity to allay concerns and clarify the situation.
30 Days Wild is almost here and we can't wait. It's not too late to sign up and join in. So why not make a little room for nature this June?
Kent Wildlife Trust is delighted with the Government’s designation of an additional five Marine Conservation Zones (MCZs) in Kent, but now wants to see real action.
Kent Wildlife Trust is inviting its supporters to join them as they travel to Parliament to call on MPs to secure ambitious new laws which will halt nature’s decline and secure the recovery of wildlife and natural places across the UK.
Kent Wildlife Trust this week joined 12,000 people from across the UK in Westminster for historic natural environment and climate lobby with MPs outside Parliament.
This week our Dover Connector Project Officer Ed Turpin joined the community of Bunker’s Hill for a fun-filled day of getting outside, green-thumbed and re-connected with nature.
The UK’s wildlife continues to decline, according to the State of Nature 2019 report. The latest findings show that since rigorous scientific monitoring began in the 1970s there has been a 13% decline in average abundance across wildlife studied and that the declines continue unabated.
Sir David Attenborough, president emeritus of The Wildlife Trusts has made a short film with the charity to provide answers to the State of Nature partnership’s latest warnings of continued, devastating wildlife declines in the UK.