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Rewild London Fund 2022

Grants guide

Banded demoiselle at Woodberry Wetlands

Key information

Publication type: General

Foreword

London’s green spaces have a crucial role to play in tackling the climate and ecological emergencies. Our iconic parks, shaded woodlands, nature reserves, wetlands, community gardens and more help keep London cool, reduce the risk of flooding and are vitally important for our health and wellbeing. They also provide homes for wildlife, bringing nature closer to our  communities for Londoners to enjoy.

We have over 1,600 sites protected because of their importance for wildlife. Known as Sites of Importance for Nature Conservation (SINCs) they cover nearly 20 per cent of the city’s surface area. We know how important nature is for both physical and mental health, which is why my manifesto committed to ensuring that all Londoners live no more than a ten-minute walk from green space.  

However, despite on-going efforts, our natural environment is deteriorating worldwide. My Rewild London Fund will help improve London’s network of important wildlife sites helping to connect people to nature as well as better supporting wildlife. I am committed to protecting wildlife and encouraging biodiversity. Improving our wildlife sites will also help London lead the fight against climate change and air pollution.  
At last year’s United Nations climate change conference (COP26) in Glasgow, as the chair of C40 Cities, I led a global network of mayors to demand tougher climate action from governments. Together, we represented 100 cities and over 700 million people. Later this year, governments from around the world will seek to agree a new set of global goals for nature over the next decade at the COP 15 biodiversity conference, and I will ensure London plays its part.     

Progress has been made. Since I became Mayor a record 430,000 trees have been planted, with a further £3.1 million programme available to plant more trees to shade and cool the city as well as strengthen our city’s precious green surroundings. This programme builds on the £6m I have committed to create and enhance green spaces and follows the £13m Greener City Fund in my first term which together with the strong protections for green spaces and nature in my London Plan, helped to secure London’s status as the world’s first National Park City.  

But we must do more. This is why I have established a Rewilding Taskforce to identify opportunities for rewilding in London that can strengthen  nature in our city and bring benefits to Londoners.  

Round one of my Rewild London Fund supported 19 projects to improve and connect more than 50 SINCs, to restore and create over 250 hectares of wildlife habitats across the capital and to reintroduce 101 water voles back into the Hogsmill River.   

I am committed to making London greener and better for nature, so I am delighted to invite applications to this second round of my Rewild London Fund. I look forward to receiving your proposals. 

Sadiq Khan
Mayor of London


 

1. Introduction and aims of the fund

London’s wildlife is surprisingly rich and varied. Over 15,000 different species have been recorded in London and the capital boasts a wide range of natural habitats. These range from nationally important wetlands like Frays Farm Meadows and Rainham Marshes, to the downlands that helped inspire Charles Darwin’s scientific discoveries, ancient woodlands, heathlands, and world-famous nature reserves including Richmond Park.

We know that despite on-going conservation efforts, biodiversity is deteriorating worldwide, and this decline is projected to worsen.  In line with international and national trends, and despite a long legacy of action in the city, much of London’s wildlife has not escaped this decline. 

Most of London’s most valuable sites for nature are recognised as Sites of Importance for Nature Conservation (SINCs). There are more than 1,600 SINCs across the city, covering nearly 20 per cent of its surface area. These sites are the core of London’s wildlife network and need to be at the heart of any actions to rewild the city and recover nature.  

To conserve this core network and to ensure it is resilient to pressures like climate change, it needs to be well managed, expanded and better connected through habitat creation, enhancement and restoration.  

The Mayor wants London to play its part in halting and reversing declines in biodiversity. He has established a Rewilding Taskforce to look at opportunities for rewilding in London while also bringing wider benefits to Londoners such as reduced flood risk, city cooling and access to nature. The Mayor has also announced a second round of the Rewild London Fund. This is designed to support SINC owners and managers in responding to the climate and ecological emergencies by creating and restoring priority habitats across London’s SINC network. 

£850,000 of funding is available, and we will offer grants of between £10,000-£50,000 for smaller projects and up to £150,000 for larger projects. Projects will start in January 2023 and be completed by March 2024. Amazon have contributed £0.75 million to this second round of the Rewild London Fund from their Right Now Climate Fund enabling more projects to be supported. Supporting a range of different sized projects in this way reflects the view of the Mayor’s Rewilding Taskforce. The Taskforce has identified the need for rewilding projects to happen at a range of spatial scales to help restore and connect wildlife areas across London. 

The Rewild London Fund aims to:

  • create new habitats in line with London Environment Strategy targets  
  • enhance London’s SINCs to restore nature and support biodiversity
  • strengthen local ecological networks to make them more resilient  
  • secure better future management of sites
  • build skills to better plan for and manage SINCs
  • support activities the enable underrepresented communities to actively participate in managing important wildlife sites
  • support innovative projects that rewild the city.

This guide sets out the objectives of the fund, the grants available and the application process in more detail.

The Rewild London Fund supports the London Recovery Board’s Green New Deal Mission, one of nine missions jointly developed by the Mayor and London Councils to guide the capital’s recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Green New Deal Mission aims to tackle the climate and ecological emergencies, and improve air quality, by doubling the size of London's green economy by 2030 to accelerate job creation for all.

The Rewild London Fund is one of several Mayoral funds to enhance green and blue spaces. For example, the Mayor's Grow Back Greener Fund 2022 was open for applications until 26 September to support London's communities to plant trees, create and enhance green spaces and increase climate resilience. The fund will prioritise projects in locations with low tree canopy cover, where Londoners live more than a 10-minute walk from green space and at high climate risk. Find out more about Grow Back Greener and other funds available.

1.1 About London's Sites of Importance for Nature Conservation and Priority Habitats

London's most valuable and special places for wildlife are identified by the Mayor and London boroughs as Sites of Importance for Nature Conservation (SINCs) through the local plan making process. Section 1.1.1 provides more information about SINCs and how they are protected

Most SINCs are managed by boroughs or other public bodies and offer opportunities for Londoners to enjoy nature close-up. However, it is estimated that 40-60 per cent of SINC sites are not covered by any regular management to conserve or enhance their special biodiversity. Priority habitats for conservation are listed in the London Environment Strategy (see section 1.1.2).

1.1.1 Sites of Importance for Nature Conservation

Over 1600 SINCs have been identified across the capital. They cover nearly 20 per cent of London, forming the core of our ecological network. Some of these sites are also statutorily designated as Local Nature Reserves or as internationally or nationally important sites for the habitats or species found within them. 

SINCs receive a high level of protection from development in the Mayor's new London Plan. Most are managed by boroughs or other public bodies. 

A comprehensive network of SINCs stretches across London, covering a breadth of important wildlife habitats, to public parks, cemeteries and railside land. Nearly all areas of priority habitats and many sites with important populations of priority or legally protected species are selected as SINCs. 

There are three tiers of SINCs:

  • Sites of Metropolitan Importance include the best sites in London and are of regional significance for nature. Over 150 metropolitan sites have been identified, with a total area of nearly 16,000 hectares (10 per cent of London’s land area). They include nationally important wildlife sites like Ruislip Woods, Ingrebourne Marshes and Farthing Downs, and locally important places like Dulwich and Sydenham Hill Woods and Hounslow Heath where Londoners can discover wild places that belie their urban setting.
  • Sites of Borough Importance include woodlands, rivers, grasslands and some of the more mature parks which have ancient trees and meadows. There are almost 800 borough sites identified to date, with a total area of about 12,000 hectares (almost 8 per cent of London’s land area).
  • Sites of Local Importance give people access to nature close to home. They are publicly accessible parks and green spaces with local intrinsic nature conservation value. About 460 local sites have been identified, with a total area of 1,700 hectares (just over 1 per cent of London’s land area).

You can find out more about how SINCs are selected on our website and in the Spaces Wild report.

1.1.2 Priority habitats

In London, priority habitats are: 

  • acid grassland 
  • chalk grassland 
  • coastal and floodplain grazing marsh 
  • fen, marsh and swamp 
  • heathland 
  • lowland meadows 
  • open mosaic habitats on previously developed land 
  • ancient woodland
  • wet woodland
  • orchards 
  • reedbeds 
  • rivers and streams. 

The creation of new priority habitat will be of highest ecological value where it expands or connects existing habitat areas. The London Habitat Opportunity Maps identify ecologically suitable areas to create new priority habitats. 

The London Environment Strategy sets targets for the creation of priority habitats.Reference:1 These targets relate to habitats with the greatest opportunities to create new areas across much of London, and for which progress can be accurately monitored to 2050.

Table 1.1 Priority habitat targets
Habitat By 2025 By 2050
Species-rich woodland 20ha 200ha
Flower-rich grassland 50ha 250ha
Rivers and streams 10km 40km
Reedbeds 5ha 30ha

There are also targets at a borough level for locally relevant priority habitats, set through local nature recovery plans and biodiversity action plans (BAPs).

1.1.3 SINC status

You will be required to provide the SINC name(s) and grade(s) (i.e. local, borough or Metropolitan) as part of your application. This information is available on the Planning Data Map and in borough local plans.

You can also download the Greenspace Information for Greater London CIC (GiGL) SINCs Open Data dataset from the London Datastore. This is a GIS polygon dataset that shows the boundaries, site names and grade of all SINCs in London.

The full version of this dataset with all its attributes (including site references, access information and planning dates) and citations (containing full site descriptions and habitat lists) are available under a GiGL data use licence to GiGL Service Level Agreement partners. Detailed SINC data, including citations, are also available as part of GiGL’s information services for community volunteers – please see GiGL's website for more information.


 

2. What the Rewild London Fund will support

In this new round of funding, the Rewild London Fund will support a range of projects that help to create new priority habitats and enhance London’s SINCs. 

These projects should take place within SINCs or create/ restore priority habitats directly adjacent to SINCs to buffer, expand and connect sites. We will also support projects that include some priority habitat creation not directly adjacent to a SINC where this will improve connectivity between sites for target species (for example through corridors or stepping stones), as well as projects that tackle off-site impacts on SINCs such as poor water quality where applicants can show there will be a direct benefit from the projects. Innovative approaches will be considered, including rewilding approaches where these can be proved to support the improvement of SINCs.

Priorities of the fund

The Fund aims to support land managers to deliver the London Environment Strategy priority habitat targets (see section 1.1.2.). The fund also aims to help SINC managers to tackle barriers to good site management and support projects that showcase innovative or strategic approaches to improving the resilience of the SINC network.

We will prioritise projects that deliver outcomes in line with the Green New Deal and the Rewild London Fund aims. These are projects that:

  • focus on outcomes that address the ecological emergency and ensure sites are better managed, bigger and better connected 
  • help improve sites in the longer term, particularly to sustain and expand important populations of priority species
  • demonstrate innovation with new approaches to overcoming long-standing barriers to site management 
  • share good practice across London.

Projects could include:

  • expanding and buffering SINCs through new habitat creation on adjacent land, such as the creation of new chalk grassland banks
  • works to enable more effective and efficient site management, such as infrastructure and equipment to bring amenity grassland into meadow management
  • trials and monitoring of innovative management techniques that can be rolled out to other sites, such as no-fence collars for conservation grazing projects
  • improving habitats between SINCs to ensure they are better connected and more resilient, such as creating habitat stepping stones to help secure landscape connectivity for priority species
  • enhancing more than one SINC to improve a local nature network, such as installation of reedbeds along a waterway/ waterbody to create a local network
  • ecological surveys or monitoring of the outcomes of management to inform future site management and local nature recovery plan development, such as hydrological studies to design wetland creation schemes
  • creating the conditions for potential species (re)introductions that meet wider conservation objectives (e.g. invertebrate diversity and abundance)
  • focused staff training activities to make sure that those responsible for the day-to-day planning and management of SINCs have the right skills to do so (note that this will not be provided by LWT in their advisory role). 

2.1 Supporting more action for nature

The Mayor recognises that not all SINC owners or managers have access to the expertise needed to plan and deliver the types of essential projects this fund will support.  To help more applicants to access and meet the aims of the fund we have partnered with London Wildlife Trust (LWT) to provide expert support to those organisations who need it to help them take more action for nature.  

Grant funded projects will be offered advice and support from LWT during project delivery. This support is funded as part of the programme and will be allocated to projects based on need and the availability of relevant experts. Requests for LWT support will be triaged by Groundwork London who will be providing grant management support for this Fund (see section 4.1).  

It is expected that projects will typically be allocated 0.5-1.5 days of specialist support from LWT over the course of the project depending on need. LWT’s involvement will help ensure the projects are exemplary by providing a ‘critical friend’ role, offering advice and sharing knowledge. Expertise on offer will include:   

  • habitat management, restoration and creation advice
  • how to integrate projects into existing management plans
  • advice on the suite of habitat and species surveys required: what surveys might be needed and who to contact (not survey delivery).

Please note that the funded support from LWT will not include any elements of project delivery. Their time cannot be used for: carrying out or writing methodologies for site surveys; writing management plans; supervising contractors or writing tender documents for contractors/consultants; providing volunteers or marketing and communications support for your project. If your project requires more detailed and/or ongoing ecological expertise and support, please include this in your grant budget.

2.2 Projects quality

Applicants should consider the following when deciding if their project meets the aims of the fund: 

Project size and ecological relevance

Applicants should be able to demonstrate that their proposed project is of appropriate scale for its ecological and landscape context. Applicants should use this information to decide which funding programme to apply for (smaller projects of £10,000 - £50,000 or larger projects of £50,000 - £150,000). Projects must deliver ecologically appropriate outcomes in terms of the types of habitats being restored and created and the size of these habitats. This is particularly relevant to projects seeking to improve connectivity between or buffer or expand SINCs.  

Applicants should also explain how their proposed project responds to the priorities in local Biodiversity Action Plans and/or fits within local strategies for nature’s recovery or other relevant plans or strategies.      

Long-term outcomes

We will not fund routine or one-off habitat management activities unless the application demonstrates there is a plan in place to secure appropriate management long-term. For example, we would not fund a project to clear scrub from a degraded grassland site that does not demonstrate how the site will be managed in the future to prevent it scrubbing over again, but would fund a project to clear scrub and install fencing or other infrastructure to support ongoing management.

Sharing best practice 

We will expect grant recipients to share their knowledge and best practice to help accelerate the changes required across London to create healthy, sustainable places and to tackle the climate and ecological emergencies.

Applicants should identify how they will share best practice within their own organisation and with other organisations across London. All successful projects will be required to work with LWT to develop a case study of the project to share good practice and learning that can be adopted elsewhere, with a target audience for these case studies being fellow land managers and other active in the sector in London. 

Permissions and risks

Projects will need to be delivered by March 2024. If your project requires permits, such as those from statutory agencies, or other permissions these should either be secured at time of application or be on track to be secured by the time a grant agreement is signed (i.e. by December 2022). We expect any risks to project delivery to be identified and mitigated. Please contact us in advance of submitting your application if you need help understanding what permissions will be required to undertake your proposed project. You can contact us with any questions via [email protected] or to arrange a phone call. 

Equality 

As a public-sector organisation, the GLA must have due regard to the Public Sector Equality Duty and the need to eliminate unlawful discrimination, harassment, victimisation and any other conduct which is unlawful under the Equality Act 2010. It must advance equality of opportunity and foster good relations between people who share a protected characteristic and people who don’t have that characteristic. As recipients of public funding, successful applicants will also need to meet this Duty.

See section 5 for more detail on the application questions you will need to answer and how to complete the application form.  


 

3. Grants available

A total of £850,000 is available in this funding round, and we expect to be able to support about 15-20 projects. 

The majority of grants will be between £10,000 and £50,000, with two to three projects being supported through larger grants of £50,000 to £150,000.

Organisations can apply for a maximum of two grants for two stand-alone projects such as two unrelated projects at two separate SINC sites. Where a project includes works across multiple sites, a single application should be made. This applies to both smaller and larger grants. 

Funded projects should start from January 2023 and should be completed by March 2024. Grants cannot be used to retrospectively fund work already completed or under way. Projects must take place within Greater London.

3.1 Eligible organisations

Applications are open to:

  • local authorities
  • civil society organisations which manage land. These could include:
    • registered charities including charitable incorporated organisations
    • formally constituted community groups
    • social and not-for-profit businesses including community interest companies and social enterprises
    • community benefit societies.

Applications must be from a formally constituted organisation that has an organisational bank account and is able to enter into legal contracts. You cannot apply as a private individual. 

We welcome applications that involve different organisations; however, the lead applicant MUST be the primary manager of the land. If they do not own the site, they MUST provide evidence of landowner permission and approval for the proposed project with their application. 

3.2 Grant funding terms

Successful applicants who receive funding offers must sign a grant agreement before the project can start.

Payments will be made according to the following schedule:

  • 50 per cent upfront, on return of signed funding agreement
  • 50 per cent on completion, subject to submission of a satisfactory final monitoring report and proof of expenditure.

We understand some organisations may have cashflow difficulties, particularly as we recover from the impacts of the pandemic. We are happy to discuss alternative payment schedules for successful projects, including a mid-project grant payment.

3.2.1 Match funding

Projects must have a minimum of 20 per cent match funding. For example, if you are applying for a grant of £10,000, you should have at least £2,000 in match funding. This match funding can be either cash (for example, from another grant or from your own funds), or in-kind (for example, donated materials, or staff or volunteer time).

The value of volunteer time for “unskilled” volunteering – that is, a task that can be carried out with basic or no training – should be calculated using the London Living Wage (£11.05) per hour. For example, 100 hours of volunteering would be worth 100 x £11.05 = £1,105. The value of volunteer time that relies on specialist skills (for example, a landscape gardener giving a day’s work for free) should be calculated using the typical day or hourly rate for that task/ profession.

3.3 Eligible costs

The Rewild London Fund can support a range of costs as long as these are contributing to the delivery of the project, and to the core aims of improving London’s SINCs and making the city’s ecological network more resilient.

Costs that CAN be supported by the Rewild London Fund, with NO restrictions

This includes both capital and revenue costs, such as:

  • purchase of trees and plants for habitat creation
  • purchase of other materials to improve SINCs and create new habitat
  • fencing, paths and other site infrastructure that is directly related to SINC habitat improvements and management 
  • machine and equipment purchase or hire to create or restore habitat
  • staff and/or contractor costs for project delivery, including labour, design, project management, volunteer management 
  • specialist fees, for example, an ecologist or arboriculturalist; surveys or monitoring; volunteer expenses
  • payment of administrative costs directly related to delivery of the work, e.g. consents for works on river
  • event costs, such as training workshops for staff,volunteers or contractors 
  • PPE or other equipment necessary for safe project delivery.

Costs that CAN be supported by the Rewild London Fund, with restrictions

  • a maximum of 10 per cent of the total grant can be used for maintenance costs associated with establishment of new habitats that will be incurred beyond the end of the project period (that is, after March 2024). 

Costs that CANNOT be supported

The Rewild London Fund cannot be used towards the following costs:

  • land purchase
  • capital items that are not primarily about improving SINCs – for example, improving a building or other grey infrastructure 
  • “business as usual” activities – for example, routine maintenance
  • works that are legally required of the landowner/ manger, for example protection, management and/ or restoration of SSSI features (for which the SSSI is designated), delivery of agri-environmental scheme targets or woodland management grants subject to existing contract agreements, or maintenance of a Public Right of Way
  • projects where the specific elements being applied for have already started or are a direct continuation of existing work. We will fund projects that expand previous or existing projects that have worked well (i.e. are new programmes) and stand-alone habitat creation or restoration projects within a larger programme of site improvement works  
  • core staff costs or other core costs that are not project specific.

 

4. How to apply

Please read this guidance carefully, including the application guidance and assessment criteria below. Applications must be made and submitted through the online application form. You will be asked a series of eligibility questions before accessing the form. Once you have started your application, you can save your progress and return to it before submitting.

Access the online application form.

You can find a copy of the application form questions in Appendix A. As well as the form, you will need to provide at least three photographs of your project site(s), maps showing the location of the site(s) and the extent of proposed works and any relevant sketch designs, plans or maps. You can also upload additional files, such as letters of support or summaries of site management plans or ecological surveys where relevant.

The deadline for applications is 9am on Monday 28 November 2022.

4.1 Support in preparing your application

The application and delivery timeline are outlined below. Applications will be managed by Groundwork London, who will be happy to answer any questions you have about the application process, or about your project. Groundwork London is part of a federation of charities mobilising practical community action including on the environment.

Please email [email protected] with any questions or to arrange a phone call.

We will be holding an optional applicant information webinar on Friday 14 October from 3pmRegister via zoom.

This will be an opportunity to hear more about the aims of the fund, the application process and assessment criteria. It will give you a chance to ask questions and receive advice on completing your application. 

Section 5 of this guide provides more detail on completing the application form and the assessment criteria. 

Table 4.1 Application and delivery timeline
Date Milestone
3 October 2022 Applications for Rewild London Fund open

September -

November 2022

Read this document in full to understand the fund requirements and how to apply. Contact [email protected] with any questions about the application process or your project.

Join the optional information webinar for additional support on Friday 14 October from 3pmRegister via zoom.

By 9am on 28 November 2022 Submit your application online.
November - December 2022

Assessment process takes place. You may be asked for more information about your project, or to clarify any queries.

January 2023 You will be informed of the outcome of your application. If successful, you'll be asked to complete and sign a funding agreement.
January 2023 Projects start. Grantees receive first payment instalment.
August 2023 Submission of mid-project monitoring report.
March 2024 Submission of final project monitoring report and proof of expenditure. Grantees received final payment instalment.

4.2 Support for project delivery

If your grant application is successful and you are awarded funding, Groundwork London will be your first point of contact during your project delivery period.

You will be assigned a grants officer who will be able to help you with queries, discuss any changes to your project, and help with the required grant reporting and payments. If you require more specialist advice and support from LWT you will be able to request this via Groundwork London (see section 2.1) and they will also work with LWT on project monitoring.  

Groundwork London will host a programme induction session once funding has been awarded, to help successful applicants understand the requirements of the programme and answer any initial questions. This will also be an opportunity to meet other grantees and share ideas. 


 

5. Application guidance

This section outlines the application requirements and assessment criteria and provides advice on completing the application form. Please read this in detail before starting your application.

5.1 Completing the application form

The application form for the Rewild London Fund is split into six sections, which will be used to assess your project’s suitability for the fund. A copy of the application form can be found in Appendix A. Before accessing the form online, you will be asked a series of gateway questions. These questions are designed to check whether your project proposal is eligible for the fund. They are not scored, but all projects must meet the basic eligibility criteria.

The application form sections are:

  • Section 1: About your organisation – these questions are designed to check whether your organisation is eligible for the fund, and to enable due diligence checks to be carried out. They are not scored, but all organisations must meet the eligibility criteria
  • Section 2: About your project – these questions provide an overview of your project, the activities that will take place and the outputs you aim to deliver. They are not scored, but will be used for initial screening to check that your project meets the core aims of the fund
  • Section 3: Meeting the aims of the fund – these questions form 60 per cent of the assessment of your project (15 per cent for each question). They allow you to go into more detail about what your project will achieve and enable us to assess how well your project meets the aims of the fund. Further details of the assessment criteria are outlined below
  • Section 4: Delivering your project – these questions form 20 per cent of the assessment of your project. They allow you to demonstrate how your project will be delivered successfully, on time and within budget, and safely.
  • Section 5: Project budget – this question forms 20 per cent of the assessment of your project. It allows you to demonstrate that you have thought about the costs of your project, and that it delivers good value for money.
  • Section 6: Equalities Monitoring - this information is used to monitor the different backgrounds of grant applicants and recipients. It is not part of the assessment and is optional. 

5.2 Assessment criteria

Your application will be assessed against the criteria outlined below.

Application form Section 3: Meeting the aims of the fund

These questions form 60 per cent of the assessment of your project (15 per cent for each question). They allow you to go into more detail about what your project will achieve and enable us to assess how well your project meets the aims and priorities of the fund.

1. How will your project increase the resilience of the SINC network, respond to the ecological emergency and contribute to the London Environment Strategy habitat targets?

Your answer to this question should focus on why your project is needed and why the location of your project is a priority. 

You should describe how your project fits within the wider ecological network and responds to priorities in local strategies and plans to respond to the climate and ecological emergencies. This could include priorities for sites, habitats and species identified in the London Environment Strategy, Biodiversity Action Plan, Local Nature Recovery Plan, Green Infrastructure or Open Spaces Strategy and/or Local Plan.  

You should explain the significance of your project in terms of location and size within the local ecological network and provide a map showing the location of your project site/s and any key ecological connections that are relevant to the project. 

 

2. What will your project do to enhance a Site(s) of Importance for Nature Conservation and/or improve ecological connectivity between SINCs?

Your answer to this question should focus on what your project will do to address the need or opportunities that you described in response to question 1. This is where you must tell us about the key outcomes or outputs from your project (section 3.5 of the application form enables you to list the outcomes and outputs that your project will deliver).

You should provide details about your proposed activities (set out in your Project Plan – see Application Form Section 4 below) and the anticipated environmental benefits. 

Where relevant, you should include information about how any new habitats created will be accommodated and work within the existing site use to demonstrate that they can be maintained in the long term.   

You should include full details of how you will improve the condition and resilience of the site or SINC network and/or enable site management and further improvements to take place in the future.   

You should also provide details of any ecological surveys or management plans that will be undertaken or produced through the project and explain how these will be used.  

You should also provide details of consents or permissions that might be required (for example tree works in a Conservation Area), and to what level these have progressed at the time of application. 

You should provide a map denoting the areas of your planned activity and provide details of the area of habitat that will be restored and/or created in Ha. 

3. How will you ensure that your project leaves a positive legacy and supports the site(s) to be better managed in the long term?

Any project must have a clear plan for maintenance, to ensure that the benefits of activities to improve the space are fully realised. In order to support this, up to 10 per cent of any grant can be spent on maintenance required to help with the establishment of newly created priority habitats beyond the end of the project.  

Your answer to this question should detail how any maintenance budget will be spent, who will be responsible for maintaining the new or improved space, and how any volunteering or community involvement to help manage the site will be sustained if relevant. 

If the project includes surveys or monitoring, then you should describe how these will inform future management. 

Your answer should also describe any staff training that will be delivered to increase skills and help to ensure the appropriate long-term management of the project site(s).

4. How will your project capture best practice and share approaches and learning?

Your answer to this question should demonstrate an awareness of how your proposed activities fit in the context of London’s SINC network, and the potential wider benefits of your project.    

You should provide details of any monitoring that you will undertake and how the results from this or other learning from the project will be used to inform management of other SINCs and/or shared with relevant networks.   

All successful projects will be required to work with London Wildlife Trust to develop a case study of the project to share good practice and learning that can be adopted elsewhere by fellow land managers and others active in nature conservation in London. Time should be factored into your project plan to do this.   

5. What outputs and outcomes will your project deliver?

This section will be used to understand what your project will deliver. For example, number of SINCs improved or connected, area of SINC improved and area of priority habitat restored / enhanced.

Application form section 4: Delivering your project

These questions form 20 per cent of the assessment of your project. They allow you to demonstrate how your project will be delivered successfully, on time and within budget, and safely.

1. Project permissions

This will establish the extent to which your project has the required permissions and consents to begin delivery.  

2. Project plan

In this section you should set out the key milestones for your project, the timeline for achieving them, and the actions you will need to take. Your project must be completed by March 2024, and the timeline should reflect this. Your answer should demonstrate that you have a well-thought-out project plan, with realistic and achievable timelines. 

3. Risk register

In this section you should outline some of the key risks to your project, and how you will mitigate these risks. You should score each risk according to its likelihood of happening (probability), and how big an impact it would have. The total score (probability x impact) should be assigned a red, amber or green rating. Any red risks may need further mitigation to ensure that they don’t prevent your project from being successfully completed. 

This should include health and safety risks and mitigations. While restrictions introduced to combat the spread of COVID-19 have been lifted, projects should always follow the latest guidance. The most recent COVID-19 updates and information can be found on GOV.UK

You should consider in your risk register measures that you could introduce to ensure that your project can continue to be delivered safely and in a timely manner, should social distancing and other public health measures be reintroduced in the future. This could include restricting the number of volunteers attending sessions. 
 

Application form section 5: Project budget

This question forms 20 per cent of the assessment of your project. It allows you to demonstrate that you have thought about the costs of your project, and that it delivers good value for money.

Your budget should be as detailed as possible and should follow the guidelines on eligible costs outlined in section 3.3 above. It’s useful to get at least three quotes for major items and check the costs for smaller items with reputable suppliers.

Approximately 15 projects will share funding, divided into two funding programmes:

  1. Approximately 10-15 smaller grants of between £10,000 and £50,000.
  2. Two to three larger grants of between £50,000 and £150,000. Examples of projects could include 'daylighting' of a lost stream of extensive reedbed creation.

The amount requested from the Rewild London Fund by each applicant should be a genuine reflection of the funding need of the project, rather than aiming for the upper limit of the funding programme applied for without justification. This will allow the panel to award funding to a greater number of projects. 

To be eligible to apply for the larger grant amount, you must have a transformational, flagship project idea. If you believe you have a suitable project and want to discuss it further, please get in touch at [email protected] If you are successful, the reporting and monitoring requirements may be more than stated in this guide, and may include a site visit.

5.3 Assessment process

Once you have submitted your application, it will be assessed according to the following process:

  1. Sifting: initial review of all applications for eligibility, including: organisation, delivery timelines, grant amount, project remit. Ineligible applications will be rejected at this stage.
  2. Shortlisting: all applications are scored by a minimum of three assessors from the Greater London Authority (GLA), London Wildlife Trust (LWT) and Groundwork London, according to the criteria outlined above. Applications that score less than an agreed threshold will be rejected at this stage.
  3. Grants panel: shortlisted applications are reviewed by the grants panel for a final funding decision. The panel will include officers from the GLA, and LWT, as well as independent nature conservation experts. The panel will review applications collectively to ensure a breadth of project types and locations, in line with the priorities of the fund.
  4. Site visits (if required): LWT officers will carry out site visits, if required, to confirm the suitability of proposed activities before grant funding is offered. 

We expect final funding decision on all applications to be made by January 2023. During the assessment process, we may contact you to clarify points in your application, ask for more information or arrange a site visit.

As we anticipate a high volume of applications, unfortunately we may not be able to fund every good application. The grants panel will prioritise those applications that most closely fit the assessment criteria and will also consider the location and type of projects to support a balanced programme across London.

Any offer(s) of funding will be made subject to you accepting a grant agreement which must be signed before your project can start.


 

References

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Related documents

Rewild London Fund 2022 Appendix A application form sample.pdf