The Beavers are Doing the Work For Free
What a semi-aquatic rodent can teach us about Land Value Tax, the cost of conservation, and who really pays when we get land wrong. Get me on Substack now: Peter Smith Rewilding LAND, ECOLOGY AND POLITICAL ECONOMY There is a striking irony at the heart of modern conservation: we pour enormous sums into restoring habitats and recovering species, and yet we consistently overlook the cheapest, most effective workforce on the planet. It does not invoice. It does not require a project manager or a steering group. It does not need a monitoring contract renewed every three years. It just turns up, reads the landscape, and gets on with the job. It is, of course, the beaver. This essay began as a comment on a LinkedIn post by Matt Larsen-Daw, a conservationist whose argument I find difficult to fault. He made the point that policy thinking around biodiversity tends to chase single-species spectacles whilst ignoring the systemic pressures that are fragmenting habitats...