Eco & Environment, Hampshire, New Forest | Posted on March 14th, 2023 | return to news
HRH The Countess of Wessex opens climate centre at Beaulieu
A climate centre at Beaulieu in the New Forest National Park has been officially opened by HRH The Countess of Wessex.
The Countess (who became the Duchess of Edinburgh on 10 March 2023) met some of the Countryside Education Trust’s (CET) volunteers who were planting climate-resilient crops and she was introduced to the CET’s oldest and youngest volunteers – 90-year-old Marg Verdon and nine-year-old Noah Barnard.
She also met children from Beaulieu School who demonstrated various climate games, including a food miles race.
The new climate centre was donated to the CET by the Fort Foundation, inspired by Mr E S Fort OBE and will be used to help people of all ages learn about the climate crisis.
The centre reflects Mr Fort’s long-held desire to bring education about climate change to the general public to encourage action on the climate emergency.
It will provide schools education, be a focus for courses and events about climate change and the environment for the general public, and act as a hub for local green groups.
The Countryside Education Trust, based in Beaulieu, has been delivering environmental education programmes since 1975.
Its chair, Lord Montagu of Beaulieu, said: “We are enormously grateful for this gift from the Fort Foundation and for Mr Fort’s trust in our organisation to deliver such an exciting project.
“We were pioneers of environmental education when the Countryside Education Trust was founded in 1975; now we are pioneers of climate education. Understanding that caring for the environment is an integral part of finding solutions to climate change is vital work.”
Jane Cooper, chief executive of the Countryside Education Trust (CET) said: “We are looking forward to helping people of all ages to learn more about the challenges of climate change and empowering them to act. We believe that this building will provide an inclusive base for climate education in the New Forest and beyond.”
The Fort Climate Centre has also benefited from a grant from the National Lottery Heritage Fund as part of the Green and Blue Horizons from City to Forest scheme, led by the New Forest National Park Authority.
For the CET, this has involved developing new climate-focused courses for young adults and professionals, enlarging its volunteering capacity and engaging seven interns in a variety of climate and environment projects.
“The New Forest National Park is internationally important for nature and we’re already seeing some of the impacts of climate change here,” said Patrick Heneghan, deputy chair of the New Forest National Park Authority and chair of the Green and Blue Horizons Board. “It’s vital that we increase people’s understanding about these issues and how we can all make a difference. The Fort Climate Centre is playing an important in both raising awareness and directly engaging people, particularly those from the younger generation, as well as helping us develop solutions in the Forest.”
Interns supported by the Green and Blue Horizons project spoke to The Countess about their project work.
Children from non-farming backgrounds, who form the CET after-school club, showed The Countess the animals they care for and talked about their prize-winning attendance at events to demonstrate their animal handling, such as the New Forest Show.
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