£7m funding package to tackle climate change at a local level

£7m funding package to tackle climate change at a local level

Climate action secretary Gillian Martin

Communities are to benefit from over £7 million to support action to reduce emissions and improve resilience to the impacts of climate change.

The funding for 2026-27 comes ahead of Scotland’s Climate Change Plan being presented to Parliament and highlights the wide range of targeted interventions being taken across Scotland to reach net zero.

It includes:

  • £6m for Scotland’s national network of Climate Action Hubs which encourage and support climate action unique to local authority areas
  • £1.05m to enable local authorities, health boards, community groups and businesses to work together to identify and plan how to mitigate climate risks such as increased flooding, coastal erosion, extreme heat and water scarcity
  • £250,000 for schools across the country for climate education programmes, including Eco Schools and Climate Ready Classrooms

A total of eight projects will also benefit from a share of £275,000 of Climate Engagement Funding a project designed to enable people to increase their understanding of the impacts of a rapidly changing climate and explore how it relates to their lives and local climate action.

Climate action secretary Gillian Martin announced the package of funding during a visit to Dronley Community Woods, which is managed by Angus Climate Hub. The project works with local schools and volunteers, planting over 4,500 new trees in 2025, and has supported five, local part-time jobs to maintain and restructure the 50-hectare site to ensure it has greater resilience to climate impacts such as flooding and drought.

She said: “For people to support climate action it is vital that they understand and see the benefits that reducing emissions and becoming resilient to the disruption climate change can bring can have on our everyday lives.

“From ensuring neighbourhoods can cope with events such as flooding and drought, to projects aimed at educating and empowering people of all ages on action to reduce emissions, this package of funding will provide even greater opportunity for communities to come together and engage in collective grassroots action.

“It will not only support them to develop projects in their local areas that’s right for them but support Scotland in meeting its target of net zero emissions by 2045.”

Angus Climate Hub manager, Kate Munro, said: “I’m thrilled we’ve secured funding for another year. The Hubs are an indispensable source of understanding and action helping communities navigate the crisis we face.

“The people of Angus already know the deep and lasting impact of climate shocks on homes, families, jobs, food security, energy and infrastructure. The climate crisis is the cost of living crisis. The magnitude of what we are living through is immense.

“Yet in the multiple crisis is an opportunity. Change comes ready or not. The work of the hub is dedicated to help the people of Angus to navigate these difficult times with knowledge, skills and practices that support more of us to thrive. This way forward is not only possible but achievable when we all work together.”

Join over 10,800 housing professionals in receiving our FREE daily email newsletter
Share icon
Share this article: