Project Summary
The Wyre Catchment NFM project is the first example in the UK of private investment enabling the delivery of natural flood management. The project will deliver more than 1,000 targeted measures to store, slow and intercept flood water and prevent peak flow in a catchment in England, with the interventions hosted by local farmers. Beneficiaries of the reduced flood risk are paying for the interventions, and the Project’s Community Interest Company has successfully raised a nine-year £850k private loan facility to help fund the interventions.
Acknowledgements
With many thanks for their time and insight on this case study:
Dan Turner, Technical Lead, Land Management and Market Creation, The Rivers Trust
Dan Hird, Principle and Founder, Nature Finance
Thomas Myerscough, General Manager, Wyre Rivers Trust
Date published: 08/12/2022
Mapping Sellers
The hydrological modelling carried out in initial scoping (see Milestone 1) showed what locations the specific interventions would need to be delivered on – there are over 1000 NFM interventions planned out, to be hosted by 10-15 land managers in the area.
The Wyre Rivers Trust examined the map that was used in this hydrological modelling and compared it with its own data to identify the ‘sellers’ or land managers that operated in the area. Although this information would have been attainable through the Land Registry, the Wyre Rivers Trust also used prior engagement and local connections having a good understanding of who owned and occupied the land, versus who were tenant farmers.
Turner comments that for those considering NFM projects, the approach is highly place-based: “This is true for all nature-based solutions, but for slowing peak flood flow, your options are particularly restricted to what the data tells you. A hedgerow along one farm field verses another might not deliver the same impact, even if those fields are right next to each other,” explains Turner.
Approaching Sellers
The project team approached the sellers (land managers) via the Upper Wyre farmer facilitation group, hosted by the Wyre Rivers Trust. Farmer facilitation groups, sometimes called farmer cluster groups, are groups of local farmers that develop and work together towards a common set of goals that is specific to their area. This might include conservation or business specific objectives. Farmer cluster groups can currently be found across England, Scotland and Wales.
The land managers in scope had first been approached by the Wyre Rivers Trust, as part of their ground truthing exercise in initial project scoping (See Milestone 1). This exercise identified high level possibilities to diversify income streams using payments for ecosystem services, such as nutrient reduction, carbon and biodiversity credits.
However, with a more developed understanding of the potential of the project to deliver flood risk reduction, the project team utilised the Farmer facilitation group to engage with the members.
Members of the team attended famer cluster meetings to present the project’s aims and the work done to date. Turner says that the presence of a local project partner that is trusted by the seller group is key in approaching sellers. For the Wyre NFM project, this partner was the Wyre Rivers Trust, which had longstanding relationships with each of the land managers and who ran and hosted the group.
Identifying Seller Motivations and Challenges
The land managers were receptive to the idea of the project, especially given that buyers were already engaged and considering payment figures. The land managers liked that the project was based on specific local priorities and needs. They also viewed this as an opportunity to diversity their income streams in a time where Basic Payment Scheme (BPS) payments were being withdrawn.
However, this factor also presented a major challenge in terms of opportunity cost. The farmers wanted assurance that they wouldn’t lose income overall by being excluded from future payments of Environmental Land Management schemes (ELMs) as a result of participating in this project. This presented a ‘hold-up’ problem for the project team.
There were also existing agreements in place – Countryside Stewardship (CS) agreements – that posed the threat of penalties to farmers who hosted interventions on sites under these agreements. Farmers could have theoretically had to pay back up to 10 years of previous funding from their CS agreements if this conflicted with their agreement. This was due to the legal restraints the CS agreements place on land to prevent a conflict in delivering environmental outcomes.
To overcome these barriers, the project team had a series of conversations with Defra and the Rural Payments Agency, which are designing the ELMs and also administer the CS scheme. These bodies then provided a written statement to say that project participation wouldn’t exclude farmers from ELMs participation, or result in penalties from existing CS agreements. This was under the provision that the environmental outcomes of the project and any scheme would not conflict with each other.
Farmers generally accepted this statement as sufficient assurance to continue engaging with the project. Many farmers also looked upon the project more favourably for being able to take local issues to national government bodies and resolve barriers.
Structuring Payments
One of the earlier design principles that the project team decided on was the shift away from compensating landowners based solely on the amount of land they owned – what they term ‘land-based payments’, which they consider to put smaller landowners at an unfair disadvantage.
Instead, land managers receive these payments as annual management fees. The project team agreed on this payment mechanism to reflect the land managers’ role of hosting and maintaining the interventions, with the Wyre Rivers Trust responsible for monitoring and replacement of interventions when needed.
However, land managers also dedicated a significant amount of time to ‘co-designing’ the project by giving feedback, for example on such elements as payment rates. Recognising this as a resource, the project team also offered a £500 onboarding fee for every land manager to compensate them for the engagement they would be contributing to the project’s development.
The above terms were set after testing ideas directly with the land managers. To do this, the project team spoke regularly to the farm clusters. This collaborative and transparent approach also appealed to the land managers, as it gave them confidence that all farmers were engaged on payment terms.
To date, 10 land managers have signed up to the project to deliver the interventions necessary for the first year of the project. Negotiations are ongoing with five further land managers for the interventions scheduled in the second and third years.
Addressing Land Tenure
Another design principle agreed by the project team was that these payments should go towards those who manage the land, and not simply those who had underlying ownership. Of the land managers who were identified to deliver the target reduction, a number of them were tenants and the others were owner-occupiers. As the land managers would be helping to develop the project and host the interventions, the project team felt that directing payments to them was a fair outcome.
However, land owners also needed to agree to the project for it to have legal validity. There were several different types of tenancies involved, and each tenancy had their own conditions, which made engagement with landlords more complex.
There were two landlords engaged. These landlords did not receive any direct financial compensation, though adjustments on a site-by-site basis were made to comply with special features of the tenancies that the sites were part of, such as business practice commitments.
Though each landlord had slightly different motivations for agreeing to the interventions, a major underlying driver was the fact that this project increased payments towards their tenants. This meant that the landlords were benefiting by having a more financially secure tenancy agreement. One landlord was particularly supportive due to the environmental outcomes of the project.
Reaching Agreement
Once negotiations with the land managers were concluded, the project team created and used a standard Memorandums of Understanding (MoU) for the purpose of documenting a non-legally binding agreement with each land manager. These clarified the standard commercial terms of engagement, including the payment figures for the particular interventions agreed between the parties and planned for each site. Overall, it took 15 months from the initial pitching of the project to getting the majority of the MoUs signed.
The MoUs were developed with guidance from Triodos Bank and designed so that the terms of the MoUs were consistent across the land managers, with the exception of the payments and interventions that were bespoke to each land manager. No external legal advice was required at this stage because the MoUs were non legally binding.
Turner comments that this set of MoUs, though not legally binding, was useful to the project for two reasons. Firstly, it made sure there was no confusion from the land managers as to what participation in the project looked like, preventing difficulties later. It was also essential for showing other external stakeholders, namely the investors, that the ‘sellers’ of the ecosystem services were not only engaged but also agreeing to defined terms.