
A common-sense approach to shooting from United Utilities
Gareth Dockerty outlines his hopes for a common-sense approach from United Utilities to an independent review of the company’s shoot tenants.
Get information on the legal shooting season for mammals and birds in the UK.
Apply for funding for your project or make a donation today
Comprehensive information and advice from our specialist firearms team.
Everything you need to know about shotgun, rifle and airgun ammunition.
Find our up-to-date information, advice and links to government resources.
Everything you need to know on firearms law and licensing.
All the latest news and advice on general licences and how they affect you.
BASC has published its inaugural assessment of the natural capital benefits of shooting.
Natural capital is the sum of financial and social benefits we get from our natural environment. The concept has increasingly shaped both international and national environmental policies. It is at the core of the government’s England Environmental Improvement Plan and the forthcoming equivalent in Scotland.
BASC’s natural capital benefits of shooting report, compiled in 2023 in partnership with the Economics for the Environment Consultancy and Strutt & Parker, sets out the recreational value of UK shooting, alongside other benefits for society and the environment.
The report provides UK-wide and home country values under four overarching groups of benefits:
Combined together, the benefits are in excess of £1.1 billion per annum.
Commenting, BASC Head of Biodiversity Ian Danby said: “This report has revealed the widespread natural capital benefits provided by shooting for society. Shooting is providing carbon benefits through habitat creation, management and protection. It is improving health and wellbeing for the public and participants in shooting. It is providing a recreational benefit for both those who shoot and those that do not. And it is providing food and materials by supporting farm and forestry efficiency, as well as putting low fat high protein meat onto dinner tables.
“What is striking is how balanced the public benefits from shooting are. Many forms of recreation come with health and wellbeing benefits, but how many also give society a substantial carbon benefit, result in a sustainable food supply and help our farms and foresters produce food and materials? In this respect shooting is unique.
“At BASC, we are focused on enhancing those benefits so that sustainable shooting will provide more for current and future generations.”
Gareth Dockerty outlines his hopes for a common-sense approach from United Utilities to an independent review of the company’s shoot tenants.
A second day of MSP voting on the Wildlife Management and Muirburn (Scotland) Bill has seen a vital BASC amendment accepted.
A study carried out by BASC and the University of Exeter into the UK’s resident woodcock population has heralded positive results.