Projects

Carroglen Scottish Highlands

Peatland restoration

  • Avoidance
  • Innovation

Theory of change

In a healthy state, peatlands are carbon sinks that support a wide range of biodiversity. However, in degraded condition, they become sources of carbon.

80% of Scotland’s peatlands are degraded and are the fifth biggest source of emissions in the country. The Carroglen Estate has been significantly degraded, with extensive areas of actively eroding peat systems and frequent bare patches. The project supports a peatland rehabilitation programme involving reprofiling bare banks on exposed slopes, flooding large bare areas using peat and timber dams, and plugging artificial drains in order to restore bogs.

Climate change mitigation

The project addresses the factors causing land degradation and restores natural peatland ecosystems, which account for 15% of Scotland’s carbon emissions.

Restoring these ecosystems is crucial to reducing emissions. This contributes to climate change mitigation. The project transforms peatlands from sources of carbon emissions into carbon sinks. Restoration brings immediate emission reductions and improves the habitat for invertebrates, amphibians, birds and small mammals.

  • Preservation of  cultural heritage icon Preservation of cultural heritage
  • Enhanced water management icon Enhanced water management
  • 100-year  project duration icon 100-year project duration

At a glance

The project is located near Comrie on Carroglen Estate, an operating farm at the gateway to the highlands of Scotland. It involves restoring historic moorland across five subsites. This includes installing peat dams, reshaping moorland ridges and turfing exposed areas.

58.81 ha  restored in Scotland

SDGs

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