Connecting with nature in London
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1204 Londoners have responded | 09/01/2025 - 16/02/2025

Discussions
Around 52 per cent of London is green and blue when seen from above.
Londoners live in one of the greenest cities of its size in the world. However, our natural spaces are under threat from land use pressures and climate change.
We all have a role to play in protecting London’s nature. Across the capital there are opportunities to plant trees, volunteer in river clean ups, help wildlife monitoring and many more.
Join the conversation
- What are you currently doing to help protect London’s natural spaces?
- What would you like to do (more of) to help protect London’s natural spaces, and why?
- What’s stopping you from taking action to help protect London’s natural spaces?
- What would encourage you to do more?
Tia from City Hall’s Environment team will be reading your comments and joining in the discussion.
The discussion ran from 09 January 2025 - 16 February 2025
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Log into your accountjohnnyrsb
Community Member 6 months agoI am lucky Bromley is the greenest London borough and I have 3 parks within 15 minutes walk of me. there does seem a lack of direction though as to what these spaces are there for.
There was significant development in the one nearest me, a...
Show full commentI am lucky Bromley is the greenest London borough and I have 3 parks within 15 minutes walk of me. there does seem a lack of direction though as to what these spaces are there for.
There was significant development in the one nearest me, a new playground and an enthusiastic community group. Unfortunately that group now seems to have lost interest, I've volunteered to help twice but just been ignored.
Local events work well to increase awareness, in Lewisham I learnt a lot about the river developments from a summer event. I don't think every park needs an event programme but the local community can be bought in and encouraged to get involved by professional, rather than enthusiastic amateur organisation., which is well communicated and has significant local business and retail support.
Show less of commentMichael Edwards
Community Member 6 months agoA weakness of your survey is on London Plan and borough plan handling of these issues. We need London-wide policies to protect mature tree cover - for street trees + those on private and public land. Existing powers should be used to the...
Show full commentA weakness of your survey is on London Plan and borough plan handling of these issues. We need London-wide policies to protect mature tree cover - for street trees + those on private and public land. Existing powers should be used to the full and new powers may be needed.
On waterways the presence of occupied houseboats helps to make pedestrians feel safe and the CRT should stop hounding boaters. (Lea Navigation is the local case I know.)
Show less of commentlivehere
Community Member 6 months agoI agree with this, and I think 'nature' needs much stronger protection in national legislation, London-wide and local council policies and plans. Street trees need more protection from developers who are sometimes just not interested and...
Show full commentI agree with this, and I think 'nature' needs much stronger protection in national legislation, London-wide and local council policies and plans. Street trees need more protection from developers who are sometimes just not interested and sometimes determined to get rid of trees. Tree protection orders seem to be inadequate. What about all those cases of local councils cutting down trees, all over the country, and ordering people to cut down ones that are in their gardens close to roads? There has been quite a campaign against trees by councils, on the quiet, for a few years now.
Show less of commentAB388
Community Member 6 months agoDevelopers take advantage of cash strapped councils and exploit this. As a result they take charge of large areas of land instead of a building. Their is little thought beyond profit for the likes of Persimmons or TW. We end up with these...
Show full commentDevelopers take advantage of cash strapped councils and exploit this. As a result they take charge of large areas of land instead of a building. Their is little thought beyond profit for the likes of Persimmons or TW. We end up with these dead corporate spaces with token greenery. No new parks which actually seek to massively increase ecosystems for London's wildlife. Blocks featuring less and less green garden spaces shoot up for maximum properties per block and maximum returns to shareholders.
Train builders! We lack the skill now.
AB388
Community Member 6 months agoWe all have a part to play in not contributing to the deterioration of our waterways but Thames Water needs to be held responsible, along with the other corporate polluters of our rivers. No excuses, no hiding. Find the major sources of...
Show full commentWe all have a part to play in not contributing to the deterioration of our waterways but Thames Water needs to be held responsible, along with the other corporate polluters of our rivers. No excuses, no hiding. Find the major sources of pollution, hit them with a very heavy hand. Invest and fix out of their own and shareholder pockets. It is unreal the amount of corruption allowing these corporations to kill our country with virtual impunity.
Sort it out or seize their assets and send them packing.
Government exists to legislate. Close the loopholes, create the necessary laws and ensure they are upheld. Stop bending to corporate lobbying and strip them of their power.
AB388
Community Member 6 months agoCompanies who fail to tackle their pollution must be eradicated. There is no more time, we are on a precipice of destruction few can comprehend. Fail to act, cease to exist.
Government needs to step up and step out of the dogmatic neoliberal...
Show full commentCompanies who fail to tackle their pollution must be eradicated. There is no more time, we are on a precipice of destruction few can comprehend. Fail to act, cease to exist.
Government needs to step up and step out of the dogmatic neoliberal ideology mindset and step up to ensure we are not seeing monetary profits at the loss of our future
Show less of commentlivehere
Community Member 6 months agoYes, absolutely. But remember that some of those shareholders are pension companies, making what they thought was a more socially responsible investment. What about the water company bold holders? The government should be coming down much...
Show full commentYes, absolutely. But remember that some of those shareholders are pension companies, making what they thought was a more socially responsible investment. What about the water company bold holders? The government should be coming down much harder on the water companies, and local government should be doing whatever it can to sort out pollution of our rivers and canals.
Show less of commentamerbrit
Community Member 6 months agoI am a PhD Biologist and my expertise is freshwater algae. It is a tragedy that the water companies are dumping untreated sewage in our rivers, lakes and ocean shoreline. I am willing to conduct workshops about the ecology of lakes and...
Show full commentI am a PhD Biologist and my expertise is freshwater algae. It is a tragedy that the water companies are dumping untreated sewage in our rivers, lakes and ocean shoreline. I am willing to conduct workshops about the ecology of lakes and rivers. I am also very concerned about climate change.
Show less of commentldwgf
Community Member 6 months agoI am a Ranger with LNPC the problem is developers chopping down mature and replacing them with new trees which will take years to grow. British Land at Canada Waters removed a large area of natural growth by the inland water where our swans...
Show full commentI am a Ranger with LNPC the problem is developers chopping down mature and replacing them with new trees which will take years to grow. British Land at Canada Waters removed a large area of natural growth by the inland water where our swans nested for years, to store their waste while building investment flats, they have now replanted it claiming gree credtials, the swans have left and this area will take year to grow bringing the benefits for clean air and biodiversity. They are also buidling another tall investment block overlooking a primary school on the edge of our Nature Reserve, causing harm to the biodiversity. Planning laws need to the improved to protect our environment. London is small and offices and investment flats are NOT needed homes for people and our precious biodiversity Must be protected
Show less of commentantonybutcher
Community Member 6 months agoAgree
livehere
Community Member 6 months agoAgree, also.