Wetlands are among the most valuable ecosystems in Europe, with a wide range of benefits for both the environment and society. At the same time, wetlands in Europe face systemic degradation driven by drainage, infrastructure development, and climate change. The joint white paper led by IUCN NL, draws on the evidence of several EU-funded initiatives to synthesize policy recommendations for wetland conservation and restoration in Europe.

Headerphoto: Weerribben-Wieden National Park © KNEIA

Advancing wetland restoration

Wetlands provide an opportunity for both the European Union and its Member States to advance large-scale nature restoration in support of climate, water, and biodiversity objectives. The EU policy landscape is placing emphasis on ecosystem restoration.

This white paper draws on findings and experiences from multiple EU-funded projects and wetland types across Europe, including REWET, WET HORIZONS, ALFAwetlands, Restore4Cs, ForPeat, Interreg Wetland4Change, and Palus Demos. It highlights how in the current policy landscape, prevalent barriers to implementation can be overcome through prioritizing four policy areas.

© KNEIA

Policy recommendations

Despite policy ambition and the urgency of wetland conservation and restoration, effective and large-scale implementation across Europe remains limited. This is primarily due to structural barriers: fragmented governance, misaligned incentives, insufficient financing, uneven implementation capacity, gaps in monitoring, and insufficient participation and social legitimacy.

This paper identifies four priority areas for policy action:

REWET: a laboratory on European scale 

REWET is a laboratory for the restoration of wetlands on a European scale. In the REWET project, funded by the European Union, NGOs, universities, companies and institutions joined forces to study the full potential of wetland areas. With information from seven open laboratories, we are developing a comprehensive understanding of how European wetlands can best contribute to climate mitigation and adaptation. 

Want to know more? Contact

Hannah Porada
Expert Environmental Justice
Caspar Verwer
Senior Expert Nature Conservation