FedEx Express has announced a three-year grant to environmental non-profit Rewilding Europe to support its ninth rewilding area in the Affric Highlands.
Launched with Scottish non-profit Trees for Life and local stakeholders last September, the project seeks to create a vast nature recovery area.
Over the coming three years, FedEx funding will back work with local communities, organisations and landowners to enhance biodiversity, address climate change and create new jobs in the nature-based economy.
David Canavan, chief operating officer at FedEx Express Europe, commented: “By supporting rewilding, we want to make a connection between carbon capture as a concept and what these natural solutions can really look like on the ground.
“Now is an exciting moment to get behind this form of land use, as projects like this seek to demonstrate not only the environmental benefits of rewilding, but also connect landowners to alternative sources of income that may not have been possible or accessible until now.”
Frans Schepers, managing director at Rewilding Europe, added: “Having support from FedEx early in the development of Affric Highlands is a great kick-start enabling positive grassroots, community-led actions for the coming three years.
“When corporate partners like FedEx speak to the value of rewilding - for carbon capture and biodiversity impact - it helps landowners unlock the potential of their land and the benefits of restoring nature at landscape scale.”
A second component of the FedEx grant provides year one funding to develop a carbon credit standard for rewilding across Europe.
Rewilding Europe aims to guide towards an accurate value for the carbon capture potential of land that has been rewilded - and that is simultaneously reversing biodiversity decline.
FedEx has a stated goal of achieving carbon neutral operations by 2040. Alongside focused emissions reductions efforts, charitable grants to environmental non-profit organisations are part of its strategy towards that target.
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