Two marine experts are among six people appointed to the Independent Advisory Committee (IAC) on Nature Restoration.
The appointments were made this week by Minister for Agriculture, Food and Marine Charlie McConalogue and Minister of State for Nature, Malcolm Noonan.
Norah Parke, policy officer with the Killybegs Fishermen’s Organisation (KFO) until her retirement last year, and Prof Tasman Crowe, vice-president for sustainability at University College, Dublin (UCD), both have marine expertise.
Ms Parke worked with the KFO from 2005 to 2023, and was also the vice-chair of the Sea Fisheries Protection Agency Consultative Committee until her retirement.
With her husband Malcolm, she ran a successful family seafood business in Donegal that specialised in the live transport of brown crab and lobster.
Prof Crowe was director of the UCD Earth Institute and co-founder of a new interdisciplinary BSc in Sustainability.
He is chair of Ireland’s National Biodiversity Forum and chaired an advisory group to the Government on the expansion of Ireland’s network of Marine Protected Areas.
His research characterises impacts of multiple stressors on marine ecosystems and the services they provide to society, including their cultural value.
Minister Noonan said that “from the very start of the debate around the Nature Restoration Law, I’ve been clear that everyone’s voices will be heard, that decisions will be made on the basis of the best available evidence and that the development of Ireland’s Nature Restoration Plan will be co-designed with stakeholders in a spirit of collaboration, understanding and partnership”.
“The wealth of experience on our Independent Advisory Committee will ensure that the minister responsible will be well supported to deliver an ambitious, inclusive and impactful plan that can empower all sectors to restore nature at scale,”he said.
Minister McConalogue said that “farming and nature are connected with farmers and fishers being the custodians of much of our landscape and marine areas”.
“It is critical that they are central to development of our national plan. We sought and secured important flexibilities under the regulation, such as recognising the contribution of state-owned lands and the voluntary nature of actions at individual farm level,”he said.
“Farmers and fishers have proven themselves to be supportive of improving our national biodiversity, provided they have their voice heard in such plans and the correct structures and supports are in place. The advisory committee will be important in contributing to this process,”he said.
The committee will be tasked with providing advice to the minister on the content of Ireland’s Nature Restoration Plan, which is to be developed under the EU Nature Restoration Law.
The Advisory Committee will also engage with the stakeholder participation process, and ensure that the olan addresses the views of the public, key groups and sectors.
In addition, it will be responsible for considering the outputs from technical, inter-departmental working groups across themes of “Land, Sea, Towns and Cities, and Finance”.
The Minister will retain overall responsibility for the Plan, which will require an all-of-Government approach and Government approval.
Dr Aoibhinn Ní Shúillebháin, award-winning science communicator who chaired the Citizens’ Assembly on Biodiversity Loss and is Associate Professor in the UCD School of Mathematics and Statistics, will chair the advisory committee.
The other members are David Kerr, a Farming for Nature Ambassador, farming a 70-hectare commercial dairy farm with 150 cows and a small flock of sheep in Ballyfin, Co. Laois; Linda Lennon, who became CEO of Birdwatch Ireland in 2022; and Joe MacGrath, a native of Nenagh in County Tipperary, who was appointed as the first Chief Executive of Tipperary County Council in 2014 following the merger of the former North and South Tipperary County Councils and retired this year.