Monitoring & Evidence
Our objectives can be achieved through various means such as but not...
View pageSet against a backdrop of unprecedented concern for the future of the natural world and ecological crisis, and intergovernmental reports that the current global response to the effects of human impact on nature is insufficient.
The National Association for Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty believes that now is the time to significantly increase the scale and pace of nature conservation activity in AONBs.
The ‘richest’ sites for wildlife are too few, too small, too degraded and too disconnected. Nature Recovery must take place to restore and reverse this ecological decline.
Improve understanding of the natural capital and ecosystem services of Cornwall AONB. Promote and identify investment, vehicles and opportunities.
Support opportunities to further understand the state of the AONB’s biodiversity and geodiversity resource, including mitigation to avoid recreational impacts upon the qualifying features of the SAC or SPA.
Take a strategic, landscape-led, approach to the delivery of the Nature Recovery Network, supporting the Local Nature Recovery Strategy for Cornwall.
Support landowners, land managers and local. communities in the delivery of environmental land management initiatives to increase natural capital ecosystem services and biodiversity.
Hectares of habitat conserved or enhanced for biodiversity
400
Length (metres) of Cornish Hedges conserved or enhanced (managed, gapped up, extended or restored)
4000
Number of ELF grants issued by the AONB Trust
12
Number of art & culture events
60
The 'dating agency' for wildflower meadows in Cornwall.
The Grower specialises in growing and supplying trees and hedging through regenerative farming practices and is a pioneer of environmental diversification within a traditional farm model. To date, The Grower…
Cornwall’s natural environment is foundational to our health, prosperity, identity and heritage. It is globally renowned for its beautiful land and seascapes and their unique history. But nature is highly fragile, and not as healthy as it might seem. It is being destroyed at an historically unprecedented rate, with 41% of species having declined in the UK since 1970, Cornwall reflects these trends. Nature Recovery and Land Management goes hand in hand in order to restore Natural Capital assets and improving ecosystem services. Delivering climate solutions and increasing biodiversity aligned with 30 by 30 target will be at the forefront of the AONB’s agenda through projects and initiatives.
Priority
Aim
Protect, conserve and enhance the natural resources of Cornwall’s AONB, through an integrated approach to sustainable landmanagement which supports biodiversity conservation, habitat connectivity, enhances ecosystem-services supporting natures resilience to climate change. Work collaboratively to invest in natural capital, reversing the current decline of biodiversity through projects and future schemes which take an ecosystem services approach through Agri and agro-environmental targets.
Create and support opportunities to deliver local nature recovery, alongside partner organisations, conserving and enhancing existing habitat and increasing nature connections.
Support the monitoring of SSSIs and SAC features within ecologically appropriate intervals in order to maintain those in favourable condition. Support the restoration of those in currently unfavourable condition in order to bring them into favourable condition aligning with the aims and objectives of the Colchester Declaration and Local Nature Recovery Strategy.
Improve understanding of the natural capital and ecosystem services of Cornwall AONB. Promote and identify investment, vehicles and opportunities.
Timeframe: Long
Support opportunities to further understand the state of the AONB’s biodiversity and geodiversity resource, including mitigation to avoid recreational impacts upon the qualifying features of the SAC or SPA.
Timeframe: Long
Take a strategic, landscape-led, approach to the delivery of the Nature Recovery Network, supporting the Local Nature Recovery Strategy for Cornwall.
Timeframe: Short/Medium
Support landowners, land managers and local communities in the delivery of environmental land management initiatives to increase natural capital, ecosystem services and biodiversity.
Timeframe: Short/Medium
Support a catchment-based approach to soil conservation and river, estuarine and bathing water quality within the AONB, to reduce flood risk and improve catchment resilience, including mitigation to avoid water quality impacts upon the qualifying features of the SAC or SPA.
Timeframe: Long
Support opportunities to control and monitor terrestrial and aquatic invasive.
Timeframe: Long
Support measures to reduce litter and waste within the AONB and beyond the boundaries.
Timeframe: Long
Support management initiatives from marine and coastal organisations where they align with the Cornwall Marine and Coastal Code.
Timeframe: Short/Medium
Support the appropriate management of Cornish hedges and road verges to encourage wildflowers and pollinators. Raise the profile of the Cornish hedge and its role in ecosystem services.
Timeframe: Short
Support opportunities to enhance dark skies and conserve the nocturnal environment. Support initiatives which reduce artificial light and increase awareness of the impacts on the nocturnal environment.
Timeframe: Short/Medium
Support opportunities to increase wildlife-rich habitats, including those for pollinators, birds and ecosystem engineers. Support reintroduction of locally extinct species aligned to the Local Nature Recovery Strategy.
Timeframe: Short/Medium
Support land management initiatives which promote nature friendly farming and soil health as part of a profitable farm business.
Timeframe: Short/Medium
Identify opportunities to understand the geological and geomorphological features and processes of the AONB to achieve more benefits for people and nature.
Timeframe: Medium/Long
The Cornwall AONB is protected by statutory requirement, planning policy and material considerations which require the conservation and enhancement of the natural beauty of the AONB landscapes. Great weight should be given to conserving the landscape and scenic beauty of the designated landscape which enjoys the same level of protection as a National Park. These policy measures apply to ensure that the characteristics that make the AONB unique and irreplaceable are maintained for future generations. Cornwall Council as the Local Planning Authority has the key role in the long-term care of the AONB landscape through the implementation of these development plan policies and particularly the Cornwall Local Plan and Climate Emergency Development Plan Document.
Priority
Aim
To ensure development conserves and enhances the local distinctiveness and natural beauty of the AONB landscapes and their settings while meeting the needs of local communities. Development within the designated landscape should be demonstrably “landscape-led” to allow it to provide a contextual response to its specific setting within the AONB, clearly addressing locally characteristic forms of development in terms of scale, massing, form, architectural treatments, distinctiveness, respect to local heritage, biodiversity and other key attributes of the local landscapes.
Development should conserve and enhance and feel part of the existing landscape and settlement pattern and form. This can include responding to both built and natural attributes, for instance reflecting vernacular construction methods, built forms, field patterns and landscapes. It may also include retaining or enhancing key views, landscapes and buildings that provide a tangible link to Cornish culture as well as ensuring that local place names and character are understood and form part of the development proposals.
All development within the AONB will be required to adopt a “landscape-led” approach as set out within this document in order to conserve and enhance the natural beauty of the AONB.This approach will provide for the statutory protection of the AONB landscapes and will deliver the policy requirements that stem from this. Development proposals within the AONB landscape will be required to demonstrate a contextual understanding and response to the unique and characteristic attributes of the site and its setting and to demonstrate how the proposed development positively responds to these in conserving and enhancing the designated landscape.
Provided that this does not impact upon the qualifying features of the SAC or SPA from land take or changing land use.
Development management decisions should specifically consider the cumulative effects of individual developments on the designated landscape. The addition of further individual developments and particularly replacement and redevelopment of existing dwellings and buildings and the extension of settlements will be supported where these are landscape led and do not exceed the sensitivity and capacity of their designated landscape setting and where they do not give rise to cumulative effects particularly through the inclusion of uncharacteristic contemporary elements, domestic paraphernalia and light spill. The unique historic character of many of the settlements and clusters of dwellings in the designated landscape reflect both their vernacular form and buildings and also their relationship to their landscape setting. The loss of either characteristic will be disproportionately harmful.
The replacement and redevelopment of existing dwellings will be supported where the overall scale, density, massing, height, layout, materials and landscaping of the development appropriately responds to local character and natural beauty of the surrounding AONB landscape. Such development should be broadly comparable to the size, scale and bulk of the dwelling being replaced, and not adversely affect the character of the surrounding area.
“Major development” should be refused in the Cornwall AONB subject to the tests set out in NPPF para 177. This Management Plan, at Appendix ii, sets out the views of the AONB Partnership as to what should be considered to constitute “major development” in the AONB.
Seek to embed the statutory purposes of the AONB designation and AONB Management Plan policies, and requirement for a landscape-led approach in the all relevant Cornwall Council and other stakeholder plans, policies, strategies and programmes.
Support appropriate characteristic green infrastructure within built development and the wider landscape, where this would follow the required landscape-led approach required for the AONB.
Support small scale developments that enable the identified needs of local people to be met in terms of provision of affordable housing, maintaining and enhancing local community amenities and services. Housing need and affordable housing need within the AONB should be based on robust evidence of local need arising from within the AONB. The extent to which the AONB is required to accommodate objectively assessed needs arising from outside the AONB should be limited. Any such development should be in sustainable locations with good access to services where landscape capacity and opportunity to conserve and enhance the protected landscape can be demonstrated. Exception sites for affordable housing related to any settlement within the AONB should be identified in the light of a “landscape-led” comparative analysis of alternative sites to ensure that only the most appropriate sites are brought forward.
Provided that this does not impact upon the qualifying features of the SAC or SPA from land take or changing land use.
Support new tourism, leisure and recreation development that conserves and enhances the diverse local landscape characteristics of the various sections of the Cornwall AONB. Development of such facilities should respond to the character, sensitivity and capacity of the designated landscape and not comprise a conspicuous uncharacteristic element harming the character, tranquillity and biodiversity of the landscape, ensuring that the scale, design, colour, and use of materials have appropriate regard to the protected landscape. Seek better integration of existing holiday sites, visitor infrastructure, and car parks in order to reduce landscape and visual impact.
Provided that this does not impact upon the qualifying features of the SAC or SPA from recreational disturbance.
Support the sustainable management of recreational water sports, and commercial and operational maritime activities including shell fisheries and dredging in AONB estuaries and at the coast. Recognise the potential harm to tranquillity and biodiversity from both recreational and commercial and operational maritime activity both within the enclosed waters of the designated landscape and also the marine areas which form their setting.
Support measures to conserve and enhance the AONB coast, including safeguarding currently undeveloped coastal stretches. Provided that this does not impact upon the qualifying features of the SAC or SPA from recreational disturbance.
Support appropriate landscape-led site selection and design of new telecommunication and power infrastructure. Require such development to comply with the Code of Best Practice on Mobile Network Development in England (or any successor document).
Any development in, or within the setting of, the AONB must be sustainable development that:
Particular care should be taken to ensure that development outside the AONB does not harm the natural beauty, character and special qualities of the AONB and/ or its setting or otherwise prejudice the achievement of the AONB purposes. The AONB enjoys equal protection from effects whether they result from development within or outside the designated area.
Provided that this does not impact upon the qualifying features of the SAC or SPA from land take or changing land use.
Quarrying and mineral extraction within the AONB or within its setting should conserve and enhance the landscape character and natural beauty of the area. Support the landscape restoration of existing mines and quarries, to enhance landscape character and natural beauty by seeking appropriate new planning conditions through the Review of Mineral Planning Permissions. Support existing small-scale quarries within the different sections of the CAONB, in order to allow controlled production of characteristic stone for use locally to facilitate contextually responsive development. These quarries will be required to respect landscape character, topography and vegetation in their operation and restoration and minimise short- and long-term landscape and visual impacts. Support further measures to protect and enhance environmental and landscape quality when existing quarrying permissions are reviewed.
Provided that this does not impact upon the qualifying features of the SAC or SPA from land take or changing land use.
Support the use of local vernacular stone and other building materials used in vernacular ways within built development and infrastructure. If necessary, by the small-scale and sensitive reworking of local quarries.
Renewable energy technologies and associated infrastructure, both onshore and offshore, should be of a scale and design able to be accommodated within the AONB and its setting. Any such development should adopt landscape led principles to guard against landscape, visual and cumulative impacts, in accordance with the evidence base contained within the local relevant renewable policies.
Provided that this does not impact upon the qualifying features of the SAC or SPA from land take or changing land use.
Built development should provide gains for biodiversity; promoting habitat retention, creation, enhancement and species protection aligned with other relevant policies.
Provided that this does not impact upon the qualifying features of the SAC or SPA from land take or changing land use.
Any development within the marine, coastal and estuarine environment must take account of terrestrial and marine based planning policies and processes.
Provided that this does not impact upon the qualifying features of the SAC or SPA from land take or changing land use.
Farm diversification and infrastructure will generally be supported where they provide sustainable rural businesses, enhance local distinctiveness and cultural heritage and where the development is of a scale, design and location that can be accommodated within the sensitive landscapes of the AONB.
See Appendix i.
The conversion of existing redundant agricultural (and other similar)buildings to form dwellings will only be supported where:
• The existing buildings are characteristic, historic, vernacular buildings which are recognisably an important part of the local built and landscape context; and
• The existing buildings are worthy of retention in their own right; and
• The conversion very substantially retains the scale, character and appearance of the original building with repair generally preferred to renovation; and
• The conversion does not give rise to the introduction of uncharacteristic fenestration or domestication of the setting or the introduction of conspicuous domestic paraphernalia into the setting of the building.
The conversion of redundant existing agricultural (and other) buildings such as pole barns, simple concrete block barns or portal frame buildings which in the absence of an agricultural use would form alien elements in the landscape will not generally be supported.
Avoids impacts upon the qualifying feature of the SAC and SPA from land take or changing land use.
Require the conservation and enhancement of the existing character of the local road network and particularly the minor lanes within the designated landscape. The pattern and character of the roads of much of the designated landscape contributes appreciably to the character of the area, from sunken and enclosed lanes in wooded valleys to open unenclosed moorland roads. Changes to the roads and lanes in the designated landscape require particular design to ensure that their characteristic form is not lost or compromised. Widening, straightening, re-routing, kerbing and enclosure of currently unenclosed sections or the inclusion of uncharacteristic standard suburban details and particularly the proliferation of signage should be avoided. New openings to lanes through existing hedge banks or vegetation which require uncharacteristic contemporary design standards and uncharacteristic visibility splays will not be supported. Where new highway works are required these should adopt traditional approaches including locally appropriate Cornish hedge banks and where appropriate characteristic soft passing places and should reflect characteristic local landscape patterns and boundaries. The management of verges should provide opportunity for biodiversity net gain.
Support the preparation of Neighbourhood Development Plans by Cornwall AONB parishes, in the light of robust landscape evidence bases, promoting the conservation and enhancement of local landscape character and distinctiveness.
Timeframe: Long
Seek opportunities to reduce and remove existing overhead power and telecommunications lines via the Ofgem Undergrounding and other programmes in order to reduce landscape and visual impact.
Where/if the overhead cables are in proximity to a Habitats site that there may be a potential impact pathway through direct land take if the undergrounding route were to transit through the Habitats site. A project-level HRA screening at application stage may therefore be necessary
Timeframe: Long
Promote a pragmatic approach for coastal communities to accommodating the effects of climate change including the relocation of infrastructure and facilities where this is compatible with the primary purpose of the designation and other policy requirements.
Timeframe: Long
Any development should consider the relative carbon balance between the options of new build or refurbishment with a strong preference for the lowest carbon options considering the balance between embedded carbon and operational carbon emissions and preferring low carbon materials and construction methods.
Timeframe: Long
Cornwall’s landscape, cultural heritage and local distinctiveness directly underpins the economy of Cornwall. The rural economy makes a huge contribution to local communities and the business structure of Cornwall. Living in a rural protected landscape has huge benefits but it is recognised that it also holds some major challenges. For people living in isolated locations, access to shops and services can be challenging; there is heavy reliance on motor vehicles and often the housing is less energy efficient, which can in turn lead to fuel poverty. There are real pockets of deprivation in the AONB and communities often struggle to have access to employment opportunities and affordable homes of the right kind. There are some significant opportunities over this plan period to address some of these issues in the coming years through local initiatives which could see communities securing better access to local food and fuel and taking a lead on planning for rural communities.
Priority
Aim
To ensure the Cornwall AONB is a natural place for growth through:
Effective demonstration that people’s needs can be met fully, in sustainable ways that can enhance natural beauty, particularly how affordable housing can be accommodated through a good understanding of landscape capacity and high-quality design.
Support sustainable recycling and plastic free initiatives in local communities.
Timeframe: Medium
Support the green economy and investment in renewable energy technologies that have multiple benefits (such as community renewables and those which provide local employment) and that can be accommodated within the sensitive landscapes of the AONB.
Provided that this does not impact upon the qualifying features of the SAC or SPA from land take or changing land use.
Support coastal and fishing communities to conserve and enhance the coastal character, ensuring the sustainable businesses an thriving communities.
Value and protect the landscape and seascape of Cornwall AONB. Support sustainable management of tourism, where this does not adversely impact the landscape character of the AONB, provided that this does not impact upon the qualifying features of the SAC or SPA from recreational disturbance.
Support communities to be more sustainable and self-reliant in terms of food, services, employment, affordable housing and green infrastructure enabling adaptation to climate change and improving economic resilience.
Support economic and employment facilities within AONB communities which respect and enhance the historic environment, local vernacular and settlement pattern, provided that this does not impact upon the qualifying features of the SAC or SPA from land take or changing land use.
Ensure AONB considerations are taken into account when developing Neighbourhood Plans, Parish Plans and other community documents
Support the sustainable management of the AONB landscape to benefit local communities e.g. allotments, agroforestry and community growing initiatives in ways that respond to, and enhance, landscape character.
Promote energy efficiency and renewable energy measures in ‘hard to treat’ homes, businesses and community buildings, increasing resilience to fuel poverty, where this does not detract from landscape character and cultural heritage and historic assets.
Reinforce the link between a high quality, culturally distinct landscape and a prosperous and sustainable economy. Develop opportunities to value ecosystem services in the AONB and mechanisms for investment.
Timeframe: Long
Promote the use of land management techniques aligned with best practice, where this does not compromise landscape character, and which deliver for local nature recovery e.g. Cornish hedging and heritage restoration/management/construction sectors in providing education and training and job opportunities.
Timeframe: Medium
Promote an approach to sustainable economic development and environmental growth in the Cornwall AONB using the principles of circular economics.
Timeframe: Long
Support projects which deliver for people, place, nature and climate in the Cornwall AONB, which deliver on the AONB Management Plan and Local Policies. Promote the use of Farming in Protected Landscapes funding and Defra’s Future Schemes
Timeframe: Short
Communicate the special qualities of the AONB and support the sensitive marketing of the AONB by local tourism organisations and businesses.
Timeframe: Medium
Raise awareness of the 12 Sections of the Cornwall AONB among its local communities and beyond the boundaries.
Timeframe: Long
Support a pragmatic approach to accommodating the effects of climate change such as the relocation of infrastructure and facilities where this is compatible with the primary purpose of the designation and other policy requirements.
Timeframe: Long