RFP QuestBeta
ClosedStage · contract

The Committee On Climate Change

Archetypes for transforming rural UK land-use to high-carbon, climate resilient, nature rich and economically productive systems

R&DCPV 73000000
Value£75k
Deadline11 Jan 2023
Published7 Dec 2022
RegionLondon
Timeline
Published 7 Dec 2022ClosedCloses 11 Jan 2023
Contract value in context
£75ktotal contract value
median £66k
this tender£0£561k

This sits in the upper-middle of the Research & Development band — a substantial contract for the sector. Based on 20,405 valued Research & Development tenders in our corpus.

Match for your company
Sign up free to see how well this tender matches your company — the score, the signals that align, and where the gaps are.
The brief

The CCC's advice on the level of Sixth Carbon Budget in the 2030s was accepted by Government in 2021 .

Meeting the Sixth Carbon Budget and the longer-term Net Zero target by 2050 requires contribution from all sectors of the economy, including the agriculture and land use, land use change and forestry (LULUCF) sectors.

This will require a transformation in how land is used in the UK, with land released out of agricultural production for alternative uses such as afforestation, peatland restoration and bioenergy crops.

Under the Balanced Pathway, we estimated that 9% of agricultural land would be needed to deliver these measures, rising to a fifth by 2050.

In addition to climate change mitigation, transforming land use can deliver other multiple objectives, including adapting to climate change, biodiversity, and other environmental goals.

The CCC's third Independent Assessment of UK Climate Risk (CCRA3) identified eight priority risk areas that the Committee identified as being critical for adaptation in the next two years, four of which relate to the natural environment and the use of land.

Effective action to change land use before projected climate change impacts occur must be investigated to enable land managers to protect and enhance the land's ability to maintain the delivery of essential ecosystem services.

Our analysis to date has focused on estimating the impact of land use change and management on carbon and GHG emissions at the national level (i.e.

England and each of the devolved administrations (DAs)).

In practice, the changes that are needed to mitigate and prepare for climate change will vary across different locations according to a range of climatic, economic, social and environmental factors, at the farm, catchment and landscape level.

The aim of this project therefore is to identify and quantify the impact of a set of plausible land use transitions for a number of representative rural land use 'archetypes' in England and the UK's DAs out to 2035 and 2050.

The transitions should focus on changes in land use and management that deliver increased carbon sequestration and GHG emissions reductions, and which can also contribute to climate resilience, maintenance of food production, increased biodiversity and deliver co-benefits such as access to nature.

In some cases, there may be trade-offs, and these should also be identified.

In future, the CCC expect to develop full spatial scenarios for UK land-use change that deliver across the multiple objectives.

This project does not aim to develop these spatial scenarios, but it will be used to inform any such future work. *** See specification for more information ***

Key requirements

What the supplier must deliver

01

Under the Balanced Pathway, we estimated

Under the Balanced Pathway, we estimated that 9% of agricultural land would be needed to deliver these measures, rising to a fifth by 2050.

02

In addition to climate change mitigation, transforming

In addition to climate change mitigation, transforming land use can deliver other multiple objectives, including adapting to climate change, biodiversity, and other environmental goals.

03

Effective action to change land use before

Effective action to change land use before projected climate change impacts occur must be investigated to enable land managers to protect and enhance the land's ability to maintain the delivery of essential ecosystem services.

04

In practice, the changes that are needed

In practice, the changes that are needed to mitigate and prepare for climate change will vary across different locations according to a range of climatic, economic, social and environmental factors, at the farm, catchment and landscape level.

05

The transitions should focus on changes in

The transitions should focus on changes in land use and management that deliver increased carbon sequestration and GHG emissions reductions, and which can also contribute to climate resilience, maintenance of food production, increased biodiversity and deliver co-benefits such as access to nature.

Derived from the notice text — always confirm against the original documents.

What this bid requires

Skills, tools & certifications

Detected from the notice — the capabilities and credentials this bid calls for. Click one to see who wins that work.

Buyer intelligence

Make the case to bid

Reveal who to approach at The Committee On Climate Change, and generate a go-to-market strategy from their news, accounts and people.

Source & provenance
OCID
20dce921-a16b-40e1-b574-2e64386ee841
Stage
contract · Contract
Source
Contracts Finder
Buyer ref
IT-1222
View the original notice on Contracts Finder

Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. Source data © Crown copyright.

Market context

Who wins this kind of work

The suppliers and buyers around this opportunity — drawn from official award data. Drag to orbit; click a node to explore.

Top suppliers & buyers in Research & Development

Assembling the market network…

The Committee On Climate Change’s tender network

Assembling the network…

Also open now

Similar open tenders

Contract for Production of Regional Population Needs Assessment and Local VAWDASV Assessment

City & County of Swansea

Closes 23 Jul 2026R&D
£50kValue

Nature-based interventions evidence review: ecosystem function, benefits, and nature-related risks

Natural England

Closes 17 Jul 2026R&D
£41kValue