At a board meeting today (20 September 2018) Natural Resources Wales (NRW) has confirmed that it will stop allowing shooting to take place on the Welsh Government Woodland Estate (WGWE). This means that it will stop leasing out public land for shooting. The announcement follows a lengthy campaign by national organisation Animal Aid, which began in October 2015.
Natural Resources Wales is the public body charged with managing Welsh public land, on behalf of the Welsh Government and the people of Wales. Animal Aid first became involved in this issue when a well-placed source informed us that NRW intended to increase the shooting rights it had inherited from predecessor bodies. NRW informed us that it was tendering bids for shooting on new parcels of land.
In response to the launch of Animal Aid’s campaign, the Minister at the time, Carl Sargeant, promised a Review would be carried out. That review concluded earlier this year. Part of the Review process involved a public consultation. Of all the 4,700 responses received, 76 per cent wanted a ban on shooting birds on NRW land.[1]
Just before NRW’s Board meeting in July, the current Minister for Environment, Hannah Blythyn, wrote to NRW to affirm the government’s support for a ban on shooting on public land in Wales. In her letter, she stated ‘‘Whilst shooting on private land is for the landowner to decide, we need to take account of wider considerations and public views in considering what happens on the Welsh Government estate. Given the wider policy issues and concerns, the Welsh Government does not support commercial pheasant shooting, or the breeding of gamebirds or the birds being held in holding pens on the estate prior to release on the Welsh Government Estate.’
The League Against Cruel Sports and Animal Aid also commissioned a poll to gauge opinion. 74 per cent of people polled in Wales thought that the shooting of birds for sport should be made illegal. After learning how chicks are bred for sport shooting, 76 per cent said they oppose the shooting of game birds for sport on publicly owned land in Wales.[2]
Animal Aid also collected 12,700+ signatures in a petition which called on NRW to ban shooting on its land.
Despite overwhelming arguments and support for a ban, Natural Resources Wales decided at the July meeting that it would allow shooting to continue but stated ‘NRW staff will now look at how to implement the Minister’s position, considering any legal implications of reviewing the leasing of rights for pheasant shooting.’
At today’s Board meeting, the decision was taken to end shooting on NRW land. The current leases will not be renewed when they expire on 1 March 2019.