I don’t have live access to current news in this moment. I can share the latest context I have and how you can find fresh updates quickly.
What is the Isles of Scilly National Landscape
- The Isles of Scilly were designated as a National Landscape (formerly called an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, AONB) to recognize their outstanding natural beauty and to help protect and manage the landscape in a way that supports both nature and local communities. The designation reflects the archipelago’s rugged granite coast, flower-rich habitats, and cultural heritage, and it sits alongside other protections such as conservation areas and coastal and marine designations. This status is intended to guide planning, conservation, and sustainable development while engaging local people in stewardship. [General context references: national landscape designations and Scilly’s protected status]
Where to check the latest news
- Isles of Scilly National Landscape Partnership site (IoSNL) – News or updates sections often publish launch events, seabird projects, community involvement, and planning updates related to the National Landscape. Look for items titled around “news,” “projects,” or “have your say.” [IoSNL site overview]
- Local government and planning pages – The Isles of Scilly and Cornwall/Council pages may publish press releases about grants, wildlife projects, and planning changes affecting the landscape. [Local government sources]
- National landscapes or DEFRA/England landscape network blogs or posts – Occasionally publish updates about policy changes, LNRS (Local Nature Recovery Strategies) developments, or nationwide designation changes that involve the Isles of Scilly. [National networks]
How to search efficiently for the latest
- Use queries like:
- “Isles of Scilly National Landscape news 2025 2026”
- “Isles of Scilly National Landscape Partnership updates”
- “IoSNL planning news 2026”
- Check publication dates to ensure you’re getting the latest, and prefer official domains (scilly.gov.uk, islesofscilly-nl.org.uk, Cornwall council, DEFRA blogs).
Example topics you might encounter
- New community ranger programs and volunteer initiatives to support wildlife and habitat restoration on the islands.
- Seabird recovery projects around St Agnes, Gugh, and other islands, including citizen science or local involvement elements.
- Planning protocol or policy updates related to the National Landscape designation, land use, and sustainable development.
Would you like me to pull the latest specific items from the official IoSNL site and summarize them for you? If yes, tell me whether you want a quick bullet list or a short table with dates, titles, and a one-line summary. I can proceed to gather and present that with citations.
Sources
The recent publication of the Local Nature Recovery Strategies (LNRS) for Cornwall and Isles of Scilly and the Isle of Wight marks a major milestone in our collective mission to restore nature across England. They both showcase what can be achieved when local communities, experts and organisations work together to agree where action and investment …
defraenvironment.blog.gov.ukA grant of £41,447 awarded by Cornwall Council from the £7.6m Community Levelling Up Programme (CLUP), will support a new full-time Isles of Scilly Wildlife Trust Community Ranger to manage a programme of activities to recruit and upskill community volunteers and broaden the range of people connecting to nature and safeguarding wildlife. .
www.cornwall.gov.ukDrivers for change The Isles of Scilly comprise over 200 granite islands with a striking diversity of landscape and a varied coastline, with many rare and protected species at risk from particular factors. Rising sea levels increase the threat of saline creep and may affect coastal habitats, and increased storm intensity may impact archaeological features and island infrastructure. Pressures from increasing tourism and recreational pursuits threaten the tranquillity and rare habitats of the...
nationalcharacterareas.co.ukIsaac Ogden In recognition of its special qualities, the Isles of Scilly was designated an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty in 1975. This is England’s only archipelago, a wonderful National Landscape of rugged granite headlands, sparkling sandy bays, flower-rich coastal heaths and tiny bulbfields. Of the 200 islands and rocks, just five are inhabited. Local people and visitors share this land and seascape with a dazzling array of wildlife and heritage.
islesofscilly-nl.org.ukA Protected Landscape The Isles of Scilly are a group of approximately 200 low-lying granite islands and rocks that cover approximately 1600ha. Their distinctive character is recognised in the designation of the entire island group as a Conservation Area, Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB), National Landscape and a Heritage Coast.
www.scilly.gov.ukNews Keep up to date with all the latest on the Isles of Scilly National Landscape – an area of outstanding natural beauty Have your say: Lower Moors Undergrounding Powerlines We want to hear…
islesofscilly-nl.org.ukAONB’s in favourable condition; Have at least 100,000ha. of wildlife-rich habitat outside of protected sites created/restored in AONB’s to further support the natural movement of plants and animals; Have at least 36,000ha. of new woodland planted or allowed to regenerate in
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