Published on 

Work begins on strategic review of the National Parks and Wildlife Service: Chairpersons appointed

A strategic review of the National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) gets underway today (February 3rd 2021). The review will assess the remit, status and funding of the NPWS division of the Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage in the context of unprecedented ambition for the protection, conservation and restoration of biodiversity in Ireland. It will be led by Dr Jane Stout, Professor in Botany at the School of Natural Sciences, Trinity College Dublin (Chairperson) and former EPA Director Dr Micheál Ó Cinnéide (Deputy Chair).

The purpose of the review is to appraise the current operational model of the NPWS and to identify any issues, including structure, resourcing, staffing and governance, which need to be addressed in order to better equip the NPWS to meet its operational objectives. The review was a key commitment in the Programme for Government and its recommendations will inform the future development of the NPWS to enable it to support Ireland’s biodiversity objectives in alignment with the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration, the EU 2030 Biodiversity Strategy and the forthcoming post-2020 global biodiversity framework.

Minister of State for Heritage and Electoral Reform, Malcolm Noonan, said:

“Ensuring that the National Parks and Wildlife Service is properly resourced, staffed and equipped to lead Ireland’s response to the biodiversity emergency is one of my key priorities as Minister of State for Heritage and Electoral Reform. In 2020, NPWS’s funding was 70% down on what it had been before the financial crisis in 2008. I increased its funding by 80% in Budget 2021, but there is much more to do. The scale of this Government’s ambition for nature is unprecedented, and the recommendations of this strategic review will be critical in enabling us to meet that ambition.”

The review will comprise three phases, including 1) an extensive stakeholder engagement process (both internal and external), 2) an assessment of NPWS capacity, resourcing, staffing, governance and other key operational aspects, and 3) a comparative desktop analysis of resources/structures of similar organisations in other jurisdictions and an overview of the role and responsibilities of other state bodies and their relationship with NPWS.

It is anticipated that the review process will be completed this summer, with publication of the report and its key recommendations to follow. The Terms of Reference will be published in advance of the stakeholder engagement process, which will commence in the coming weeks.

Ends

Notes to the Editor:

The formal mandate of the National Parks and Wildlife Service is to preserve, protect and present our Natural Heritage.

The review is a key commitment in the Programme for Government, which set out to “review the remit, status and funding of the National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS), to ensure that it is playing an effective role in delivering its overall mandate and enforcement role in the protection of wildlife”.

Jane Stout is a professor in Botany in the School of Natural Sciences, Trinity College Dublin. She is an internationally renowned expert on pollinator and pollination ecology, and a prominent voice for biodiversity and its value. Her research seeks to understand how land management practices affect ecological processes and the benefits of nature for humans. Jane works across disciplines, and with a broad range of stakeholders in public and private organisations, to improve environmental policy and practice. She leads a large team of researchers in the Plant-Animal Interactions Research group at Trinity. She is co-founder and Chair of the Board of the Natural Capital Ireland www.naturalcapitalireland.com, and co-founder and deputy Chair of the All-Ireland Pollinator Plan www.pollinators.ie.

Micheál Ó Cinnéide brings a wealth of experience as a manager in the Irish public and private sectors, with a special interest in policy and advocacy for the environment, marine and sustainable development. In 2020, he carried out a review of the Local Authorities Waters Office (LAWPRO) and co-authored a recent study on ‘Business & Biodiversity in Ireland’.Previously, he spent a decade as a Director with Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and a decade as Director of the marine environment team at the Marine Institute. He was an adviser to Eamon Gilmore in the Department of Marine and worked with the Irish Seafood Producers Group, a start-up marketing firm in Connemara. Micheál holds a Doctorate in Business Administration from Waterford IT on “Social Learning and Water Management - the Water Framework Directive in Europe”. He is a co-founder of Corrib Beo Partnership, Galway, a voluntary group which promotes sustainable development in the Corrib catchment; a former Director with Natural Capital Ireland and a co-founder of Fondúireacht an Bhlascaoid (Blasket Island Foundation) in west Kerry.