The World Forum on Natural Capital defines natural capital as including “the food we eat, the water we drink and the plant materials we use for fuel, building materials and medicines”.
The concept of putting a “value” on different aspects of the natural world has become influential in policy making and is expected to be at the centre of the UK Government’s new “25 Year Plan for Nature”, due out soon.
The funding will enable UEA’s Dr Rupert Read and Dr Aled Jones and Victor Anderson, from Anglia Ruskin’s Global Sustainability Institute, to set up a network where academics from a range of disciplines, together with the business community and policy makers, can discuss the implications of looking at the East’s natural world through the prism of natural capital.
Dr Aled Jones, Director of Anglia Ruskin’s Global Sustainability Institute, said: “Essentially the question we’ll be trying to answer is this: If we say that nature is priceless, do we end up in effect treating it as valueless? Or is being unwilling to price nature the best protection we have against it being packaged up, owned, bought, sold or used up?
“By 2018, as a result of this network’s creation, we will hopefully be closer to being able to decide whether nature ought to be evaluated primarily in terms of the price that can be put on it, or in terms of its ‘pricelessness’.”
The 18-month project will culminate with a conference and art exhibition, hosted in the Ruskin Gallery at Anglia Ruskin’s Cambridge campus, focusing specifically on the natural capital of Cambridgeshire’s Fenland. Rosanna Greaves, Lecturer in Fine Art at Anglia Ruskin, has been commissioned to produce artwork for the show.
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For more press information please contact:
Jon Green on t: 01245 68 4717, e: jon.green@anglia.ac.uk
Jamie Forsyth on t: 01245 68 4716, e: jamie.forsyth@anglia.ac.uk
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