Shared values and management pathways for the Peak District's peatlands

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Moorland landscape looking across a valley with a brooding grey sky above.

Higher Shelf Stones in the Peak District National Park, viewed from Bleaklow. Credit: John Gregory.

Shared values and management pathways for the Peak District's peatlands

Location:
The Globe, 144 High Street West, Glossop, SK13 8HJ
This interactive workshop will explore how upland peatlands can contribute to greenhouse gas reduction and removal while supporting viable livelihoods, biodiversity, and community wellbeing.

Event details

Date

Time
4:00pm - 9:00pm
A static map of Shared values and management pathways for the Peak District's peatlands

About the event

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Overview

Join Scotland's Rural College at The Globe for a workshop diving into the shared values and management pathways of the Peak District.

Workshop: Shared values and management pathways for the Peak District's peatlands

Date: 17th December 2025

Time: 16.00-21.00 - including dinner (please let us know any dietary requirements in advance)

Location: The Globe, Glossop

Workshop overview

This interactive session will explore how upland peatlands can contribute to greenhouse gas reduction and removal while supporting viable livelihoods, biodiversity, and community wellbeing. Participants will work through a structured process moving from identifying shared values to practical management pathways. The workshop is a collaboration between Scottish Rural University College, Bangor University, the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, and Ecologos Research as part of the UK-wide GGR Peat project funded by UK Research and Innovation (https://co2re.org/ggr-projects/peatland-restoration/).

Format and Activities

The session will combine small-group discussion, scenario exercises, and negotiation-based tasks. Topics may include:

1) The values and priorities shaping decisions about peatland restoration and management.

2) Technologies being trialled at Featherbed Moss under the UKRI GGR Peat project (https://co2re.org/ggr-projects/peatland-restoration/), including biochar application.

3) Potential management scenarios, assessing what is feasible, desirable, and deliverable in practice.

4) Trade-offs across environmental, social, and economic objectives — asking whether each scenario reflects what might realistically happen (“crystal ball”) or what should happen (“normative” vision).

5) How adoption could occur in practice: governance arrangements, incentive structures, and realistic restoration measures (e.g. depth, timelines, and enabling conditions).

6) What constitutes a fair price for farmers and land managers, alongside broader questions of finance, institutional enablers, and hybrid public-private models.

7) Generate a checklist of what is required to deliver each scenario at demonstrator sites, including adoption likelihood, preferred approaches, and timing.

Who Should Attend?

This workshop is designed for anyone involved in upland peatland restoration and farming, including:

  • Private and institutional landowners (e.g., National Trust, local estates)
  • Farmers, grazing tenants, and shooting tenants
  • Local and national policymakers
  • Conservation NGOs and researchers
  • Utility companies
  • Tourism and recreation sector representatives
  • Community organisations and community councils

Expected Outcomes

By the end of the session, participants will have:

1) Contributed to a set of recommendations for policy and practice that balance attending to climate mitigation,peatland conservation, and rural livelihoods.

2) Helped define practical management options for peatland restoration across demonstrator sites.

3) Informed a working list of requirements and enabling conditions — institutional, financial, and technical — for future adoption.

For more information contact Dr Rosie Everett: rosie.everett@sruc.ac.uk

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