Why Carbon Reduction is Only Half the Battle: The Importance of Nature Restoration

Blog - Why Carbon Reduction is Only Half the Battle: The Importance of Nature Restoration

Why Carbon Reduction is Only Half the Battle: The Importance of Nature Restoration

3 Minuten Lesezeit

We aren’t interested in buying our way out of our footprint. At Dryrobe®, our priority is active decarbonisation: making the hard business decisions required to lower absolute emissions across our entire supply chain.

But carbon reduction alone isn't enough to fix the nature crisis. While we work to reduce our carbon intensity in our operations, we also invest in high-impact nature restoration projects in the sea and along our shorelines. For us, we take actions to take our emissions intensity down, while actively protecting the wild spaces that remain through the Dryrobe Warmth Project. Here is where your support has gone this year.

Expanding our Blue Carbon Partnership 

For the second year, we’ve partnered with SeaTrees to support Blue Carbon initiatives. In 2025, our focus shifted to the Marereni Mangrove Forest in Kenya. Mangroves are powerhouse ecosystems, capable of sequestering 5 to 10 times more CO2 per hectare than tropical rainforests.

Working with local partners COBEC (Community-Based Environmental Conservation), Dryrobe® has funded the planting of over 6,500 mangrove trees. This project aims to restore 640 hectares of land previously degraded by illegal logging.

  • Three women walking away from the camera across bright white sand under a clear blue sky. They are wearing colorful, patterned clothing and balancing yellow containers filled with small plant saplings on their heads.

Protecting Our Home Waters 

Dryrobe® is rooted in the stunning North Devon coast. It’s our backyard, and we have a responsibility to protect it. Since 2025, we have supported North Devon UNESCO Biosphere and its Marine Rewilding and Habitat Restoration program.

Meaningful restoration requires data. Our funding is helping to facilitate the scientific groundwork for three critical areas of marine recovery:

  1. Several people snorkeling in clear, vibrant blue-green ocean water. They are wearing snorkel masks and breathing tubes, swimming between large, rugged rock formations on a sunny day.

Connecting the ‘Moor to Shore’ Flow-scape 

Following our previous support for local kelp restoration, we’ve deepened our commitment to the Devon Environmental Foundation (DEF). Through the 2025 Big Give Autumn Match Fund, Dryrobe® pledged £5,000, which was doubled to £10,000 in unrestricted funding for DEF’s 2026 strategy.

By providing unrestricted funds, we allow DEF’s expert board to direct resources where they are needed most. This year, they are focusing on a "Moor to Shore" approach. Rather than funding isolated spots, their strategy treats Devon as a holistic "flow-scape" recognising that restoring the moors upstream is vital for the health of our coastal waters downstream.

We are proud to align with DEF’s vision: to protect and restore 30% of Devon’s land and water by 2030.

Our investment in these nature restoration projects is powered by our commitment to 1% for the Planet, where we pledge 1% of our annual sales to environmental non-profits. These initiatives form a core pillar of The Warmth Project, our mission to protect both the natural world and the communities that thrive within it.

Published on June 16, 2026