PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Stakeholders meet to discuss national peatland impact plans for Finland, Germany, Netherlands

2025-09-19
(Press-News.org) Between 2nd  and 10th September around 40 stakeholders involved in protecting and restoring peatlands and wetlands in Germany, the Netherlands and Finland joined a series of online workshops to develop impact plans that aim to influence policies and markets in each country, to scale up the restoration of degraded peatlands. 

The meetings were organised by the EU-funded research project WET HORIZONS, the UNEP’s Global Peatlands Initiative, Wetlands International, and Eurosite - the European Land Conservation Network, who are coordinating the European Peatlands Initiative. 

“The majority of participants were researchers from universities, research institutes and federal research agencies, covering social and natural science topics related to peatlands,” said Imogen Cadwaladr-Rimmer of Scotland's Rural College and organiser of the workshops. “We also had a small number of participants from environmental NGOs and associations, and some private companies too.” 

Workshop attendees discussed ways to accelerate peatland protection and restoration in each country. By bringing together dedicated peatland experts, a lot of overlaps and potential collaboration opportunities came up, said Cadwaladr-Rimmer. 

Focus areas included new policies to protect and restore peatlands, opportunities to integrate public funding across different policy domains (for example, integrating new initiatives under Europe’s Nature Restoration Law) and options to use public funding to de-risk and leverage private investment in restoration via carbon markets.  

The resulting national impact plans aim to align policy goals with specific tasks, enable coordination and accountability️, support efficient funding and market innovation, and track progress and encourage collective ownership.  

Several of these actions are now being explored with participants, including workshops to share evidence and experience between researchers and policy teams in Germany, the Netherlands and Finland with teams elsewhere in Europe. This includes Scotland, where blending public funding and private finance for peatland restoration is currently being piloted.  

Other proposed activities include exploring links between paludiculture projects and carbon markets for peatland soils and biochar across Europe, organising an EU-wide workshop around national implementation of the EU Nature Restoration Law for peatlands, and briefings on the integration of remote sensing using radar and forest-to-bog restoration in peatland carbon markets. 

By bringing together those already working on these topics in each country, Cadwaladr-Rimmer says that the workshops and subsequent impact plans will hopefully motivate future collaboration opportunities, generate shared learning opportunities, and foster a sense of shared commitment and responsibility towards the goals identified.  

“We would like to maintain momentum and organise follow up meetings with relevant parties to keep important conversations going on how we may be able to learn from one another and achieve our goals of increasing peatland restoration and protection.” 

Ongoing support will be provided by the WET HORIZONS team at Scotland’s Rural College, UNEP’s Global Peatlands Initiative and Wetlands International, with lessons contributing towards the design of an implementation phase in an ambitious international strategy, the Peatland Breakthrough.  

Building on the first UNEP Global Peatlands Assessment, initiative brings together public and private partners to raise the profile of peatlands and enable action such as climate-friendly land uses like paludiculture. It represents a key step towards achieving climate and biodiversity targets while safeguarding ecosystems and livelihoods. 
 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Physically cold, mentally strained

2025-09-19
Performance in endurance sports, such as long-distance running, cycling, and cross-country skiing, requires sustained activity over prolonged periods of time, and is influenced by multiple factors, such as temperature and mental state. In chilly temperatures around 10°C (50°F), endurance performance has been shown to improve in certain circumstances. In contrast, extreme cold can slow down muscle and nerve function and cause a decline in performance. Such reactions suggest the involvement of the Sympathetic Adrenal-Medullary (SAM) system, a stress response pathway. Further performance decline can be attributed to mental fatigue caused by psychological pressure, which leads to decreased ...

Consistent policy, not “patchwork” regulations, recommended for the coexistence of crops

2025-09-19
Australian farmers face inconsistent guidelines when it comes to crop regulations across genetically modified (GM), organic and other crop frameworks, according to new research from the University of Adelaide. “Even though different sectors in Australian cropping regulate coexistence of both genetically modified and organic crops, they do so in different ways,” says lead researcher Michail Ivanov, whose review was published in Griffith Law Review. “For example, different standards or codes of conduct recommend different physical barriers or buffer zones between paddocks to ...

LEDs shed light on efficient tomato cultivation

2025-09-19
Researchers including those from the University of Tokyo have successfully grown large tomatoes and cherry tomatoes, both rich in nutrients, in tightly controlled environments where the light source was energy-efficient LEDs. Such methods were often limited by the types or sizes of plants that could thrive in such conditions. This feasibility study demonstrates the researchers’ method is suitable for urban environments, potentially even in space, and can offer food security in the face of climate change or extreme weather conditions. Pizza, pasta, soup, salad, the tomato ...

2025 Ig Physics Nobel Prize for perfect pasta sauce

2025-09-19
The Ig Nobel Prize honors research that first makes people laugh, then makes them think. Its 35th award ceremony possibly also makes people hungry: ISTA physicist Fabrizio Olmeda and colleagues researched the secret of a perfect cacio e pepe pasta sauce. They received the popular award for their findings on Thursday evening in Boston, USA. Cacio e pepe is one of Italy's most popular pasta dishes, but even (Italian) scientists often fail to prepare the perfect creamy sauce. Fabrizio Olmeda, a physicist at the Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA), also struggled ...

Bright squeezed light in the kilohertz frequency band

2025-09-19
Bright squeezed light, exhibiting sub-shot-noise quantum noise combined with significant optical power, is essential for enhanced sensitivity in quantum metrology and precision measurement. In the deep application within the field, the squeezing must be extended to kHz–MHz bandwidth with milliwatt optical power. However, it remains a longstanding challenge to achieve this goal with conventional technologies, since they suffer from low-frequency technical noise and vacuum noise coupling, which caps ...

Water flowed on ancient asteroid

2025-09-19
A team of researchers, including those at the University of Tokyo, discovered that liquid water once flowed on the asteroid that spawned near-Earth asteroid Ryugu more than a billion years after it first formed. The finding, based on tiny rock fragments returned by the Hayabusa2 spacecraft of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), overturns long-held assumptions that water activity on asteroids only occurred in the earliest moments of solar system history. This could impact models which include the formation of the Earth. We have a relatively good ...

AI model offers accurate and explainable insights to support autism assessment

2025-09-19
Scientists have developed and tested a deep-learning model that could support clinicians by providing accurate results and clear, explainable insights – including a model-estimated probability score for autism. The model, outlined in a study published in eClinicalMedicine (a journal from The Lancet), was used to analyse resting-state fMRI data – a non-invasive method that indirectly reflects brain activity via blood-oxygenation changes. In doing so, the model achieved up to 98% cross-validated accuracy for Autism Spectrum ...

Process for dealing with sexual misconduct by doctors requires major reform

2025-09-18
The current process for managing sexual misconduct perpetrated by doctors in the UK requires major reform, say experts in The BMJ today. Mei Nortley and colleagues argue that sanctioning of doctors is inconsistent and overly reliant on subjective evidence and they call for a dedicated, evidence driven approach “that treats sexual misconduct by doctors not as a regulatory outlier, but as the grave abuse of trust it truly is.” They point to several recent high profile cases that have ...

Severe pregnancy sickness raises risk of mental health conditions by over 50%

2025-09-18
The largest study on pregnant women with excessive nausea and vomiting (hyperemesis gravidarum) has identified increased risks of numerous neuropsychiatric and mental health outcomes.  Researchers from King’s College London and South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust conducted a study involving 476,857 pregnant women diagnosed with hyperemesis gravidarum (HG) from 135 healthcare providers worldwide. The study is the first to explore an array of neuropsychiatric and mental health outcomes for women with HG.   They performed a retrospective cohort study using the TriNetX Global Collaborative Network, a network collecting anonymised electronic healthcare record ...

Early humans may have walked from Türkiye to mainland Europe, new groundbreaking research suggests

2025-09-18
Continuous landmasses, now submerged, may have made it possible for early humans to cross between present-day Turkiye and Europe, new landmark research of this largely unexplored region reveals.   The findings, published today in the peer-reviewed Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology, unveil a previously undocumented Paleolithic presence in Ayvalık and more importantly could redocument our species’ migration into the continent.   It has long been thought that Homosapien reached Europe primarily coming via the Balkans and the Levant, from Africa into the Middle East.  However, with this new discovery of 138 lithic artifacts at 10 sites, across a region ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Time to act and not react: how can the European Union turn the tide of antimicrobial resistance?

Apriori Bio and A*STAR Infectious Diseases Labs Announce strategic partnership to advance next generation influenza vaccines

AI and extended reality help to preserve built cultural heritage

A new way to trigger responses in the body

Teeth of babies of stressed mothers come out earlier, suggests study

Slimming with seeds: Cumin curry spice fights fat

Leak-proof gasket with functionalized boron nitride nanoflakes enhances performance and durability

Gallup and West Health unveil new state rankings of Americans’ healthcare experiences

Predicting disease outbreaks using social media 

Linearizing tactile sensing: A soft 3D lattice sensor for accurate human-machine interactions

Nearly half of Australian adults experienced childhood trauma, increasing mental illness risk by 50 percent

HKUMed finds depression doubles mortality rates and increases suicide risk 10-fold; timely treatment can reduce risk by up to 30%

HKU researchers develop innovative vascularized tumor model to advance cancer immunotherapy

Floating solar panels show promise, but environmental impacts vary by location, study finds

Molecule that could cause COVID clotting key to new treatments

Root canal treatment reduces heart disease and diabetes risk

The gold standard: Researchers end 20-year spin debate on gold surface with definitive, full-map quantum imaging

ECMWF and European Partners win prestigious HPCwire Award for "Best Use Of AI Methods for Augmenting HPC Applications” – for AI innovation in weather and climate

Unearthing the City of Seven Ravines

Ancient sediments reveal Earth’s hidden wildfire past

Child gun injury risk spikes when children leave school for the day

Pennington Biomedical’s Dr. Leanne Redman recruited to lead the Charles Perkins Centre at the University of Sydney

Social media sentiment can predict when people move during crises, improving humanitarian response

Through the wires: Technology developed by FAMU-FSU College of Engineering faculty mitigates flaws in superconducting wires

Climate resilience found in traditional Hawaiian fishponds

Wearable lets users control machines and robots while on the move

Pioneering clean hydrogen breakthrough: Dr. Muhammad Aziz to unveil multi-scale advances in chemical looping technology

Using robotic testing to spot overlooked sensory deficits in stroke survivors

Breakthrough material advances uranium extraction from seawater, paving the way for sustainable nuclear energy

Emerging pollutants threaten efficiency of wastewater treatment: New review highlights urgent research needs

[Press-News.org] Stakeholders meet to discuss national peatland impact plans for Finland, Germany, Netherlands