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SRCThe Guardian - World News
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TUE · 2026-04-14 · 05:00 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0414-66739
News/MSPs not told about collapse of funding deal for Scottish na…
NSR-2026-0414-66739News Report·EN·Environmental

MSPs not told about collapse of funding deal for Scottish nature restoration

A £100 million funding deal between NatureScot and Aberdeen to attract private investment for nature restoration projects in Scotland collapsed in late 2023. The Scottish government, specifically agriculture minister Jim Fairlie, did not disclose this information when questioned by a Member of Scottish Parliament (MSP) in March.

Severin Carrell Scotland editorThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-04-14 · 05:00 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 4 min
MSPs not told about collapse of funding deal for Scottish nature restoration
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
4min
Word count
783words
Sources cited
6cited
Entities identified
12entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

A £100 million funding deal between NatureScot and Aberdeen to attract private investment for nature restoration projects in Scotland collapsed in late 2023. The Scottish government, specifically agriculture minister Jim Fairlie, did not disclose this information when questioned by a Member of Scottish Parliament (MSP) in March. Aberdeen reportedly withdrew due to concerns about insufficient investment returns. NatureScot briefed stakeholders about the withdrawal in February, but both NatureScot and Aberdeen have declined to comment publicly, citing civil service rules during an election period. Opposition parties are demanding an explanation, accusing the Scottish National Party (SNP) of concealing the collapse to avoid embarrassment. This marks the second failed attempt by NatureScot to secure private investment for nature restoration.

Confidence 0.90Sources 6Claims 5Entities 12
§ 02

Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Environmental
Political Strategy
Tone
Measured
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.70 / 1.00
Factual
LowHigh
Sources cited
6
Well sourced
FewMany
§ 03

Key claims

5 extracted
01

NatureScot's webpage still lists Aberdeen as a member of the partnership.

factualThe Guardian
Confidence
1.00
02

The program originally aimed to generate up to £2bn in private financing to plant millions of native trees and restore degraded peatland.

factualThe Guardian
Confidence
0.90
03

Aberdeen withdrew from a partnership with NatureScot to raise at least £100m for conservation projects.

factualThe Guardian
Confidence
0.90
04

Scottish government ministers did not disclose the withdrawal when asked about the nature investment partnership.

factualThe Guardian
Confidence
0.80
05

Aberdeen withdrew because it felt the investments would make insufficient returns.

factualSources with direct knowledge
Confidence
0.70
§ 04

Full report

4 min read · 783 words
A funding deal to raise £100m from private investors for urgently needed nature restoration in Scotland has fallen through without the Scottish Parliament being told.The Guardian has learned that Aberdeen, the investment firm, decided to withdraw from a partnership with the agency NatureScot to raise at least £100m for conservation projects from commercial and private investors late last year.Scottish Government ministers did not disclose that when the Highlands Labour MSP Rhoda Grant tabled a question at Holyrood asking for an update on what was known as the nature investment partnership.Jim Fairlie, the Scottish National Party agriculture minister, said only that NatureScot “continues to engage with a range of investors” and that “no private finance has yet been directed through the partnership into on-the-ground projects”.Sources with direct knowledge of the issue said it became clear by December last year that Aberdeen was pulling out because it felt the investments would make insufficient returns. In February, NatureScot briefed stakeholders it had withdrawn.NatureScot and Aberdeen refused to confirm or deny it had done so, citing the civil service rules that prevent public bodies from commenting during an election campaign on policies or decisions that were not in the public domain.NatureScot’s webpage for the partnership still lists Aberdeen as a member.Jackie Baillie, Scottish Labour’s deputy leader, said an urgent explanation was needed. “It looks a lot like Jim Fairlie and the SNP kept the collapse of this project under wraps to spare their government embarrassment ahead of an election,” she said.“Scotland deserves to know what went wrong and what the consequences will be for the important work of nature restoration.”An SNP spokesperson did not deny Aberdeen had withdrawn, or whether Fairlie knew that in March, but said the question tabled by Grant was “generic” and did not name Aberdeen.“The nature investment partnership continues to be an important part of delivering private investment into nature restoration,” he said.“The SNP will continue to support responsible private investment in natural capital – our focus is on ensuring that new approaches to nature finance will deliver responsible, high-integrity investment into nature restoration projects that work for rural communities and businesses.”This is the second time NatureScot’s efforts to bring in private investors to fund the multibillion pound cost of nature restoration has collapsed.First unveiled in early 2023 by the then Scottish Greens minister, Lorna Slater, who is standing again in May’s Holyrood election, the programme originally aimed to generate up to £2bn in private financing to plant millions of native trees and restore degraded peatland.Slater signed a deal with a small private bank called Hampden & Co and the investment companies Palladium and Lombard Odier. NatureScot said £2bn could fund 185,000 hectares (457,000 acres) of new woodland, which would store about 28m tonnes of CO2 over the next 30 years.Amid considerable scepticism from conservation and financing experts, that arrangement soon fell apart. Very few pension funds, banks or private investors are prepared to sink money into nature recovery because the returns are too low, too long term and too uncertain.NatureScot’s model is based on private funders meeting the costs of planting new forests not covered by public subsidies, while paying landowners rent for using their land. In return they share the profits from the carbon credits sold once the woodland matured.Aberdeen then stepped in but with the much more modest goal of raising £100m. By September last year, only the UK government’s national wealth fund had offered money but it has now withdrawn its £50m offer because Aberdeen is no longer in place to provide match-funding.Tom Gegg, a nature finance expert who worked for Palladium until October last year, said this situation exposed the weaknesses of a funding model that relied on private financing rather than government investment.In a blog for the thinktank Future Economy Scotland, Gegg estimated the gap between available public funding and the cost of nature restoration for Scotland by 2040 was about £6.6bn. The UK’s state-owned investment banks should take over funding it, he said.“Growing trees is a very slow way to make money. [If] they invested instead in, say, a windfarm, then once the turbines are built revenues from electricity sales start to roll in fairly quickly,” he said.Laurie Macfarlane, a codirector of Future Economy Scotland, said: “While it’s welcome that policymakers are finally waking up to reality, the lack of transparency surrounding this is deeply concerning. Restoring woodlands and peatlands is crucial to Scotland’s net zero pathway, yet there is no credible plan for how targets will be delivered.“It is time to face the facts: nature is a public good, and meeting targets will require coordinated public investment. We can’t afford to waste any more time waiting for private finance that simply isn’t going to materialise.”
§ 05

Entities

12 identified
§ 06

Keywords & salience

9 terms
nature restoration
1.00
funding deal collapse
0.90
private investment
0.80
naturescot
0.70
aberdeen
0.60
scottish government
0.60
scottish parliament
0.50
financial returns
0.50
election
0.40
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Topic connections

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