New strategic partnership to accelerate the delivery of nature positive and climate resilient solutions
海角视频 and Kew Reach are joining forces to accelerate the delivery of science-led, nature positive and climate resilient solutions across the built environment and landscape restoration sectors.
Through this partnership, 海角视频 and Kew Reach will combine complementary expertise to drive impactful, evidence-based approaches that enhance biodiversity, restore natural systems, and create sustainable places for people and nature to thrive.
It brings together 海角视频鈥檚 globally recognised engineering, sustainability, environmental and design expertise 鈥 including its established in-house ecology and nature and biodiversity practice 鈥 with Kew Reach鈥檚 specialist ecological and restoration capabilities, underpinned by the Kew Method and world-leading science. This partnership creates a strong, complementary platform to address complex environmental challenges and deliver measurable outcomes for biodiversity, climate adaptation and sustainable development.
A partnership grounded in complementary expertise
Kew Reach, drawing on the botanical and ecological research heritage of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, translates scientific insight into practical, implementable solutions that restore ecosystems, enhance biodiversity and embed resilience at landscape and urban scales. Its particular strengths lie in landscape-scale restoration, the application of deep plant and ecosystem science, and linking restoration outcomes to long-term resilience and ecosystem services (e.g. Carbon) through the Kew Method.
海角视频 brings an innovative ecology practice supported by multidisciplinary engineering and sustainability expertise. Our integrated teams of ecologists, environmental specialists and engineers embed habitat restoration, measurable biodiversity gains and climate鈥憆esilient nature鈥慴ased solutions into planning, infrastructure and development projects worldwide. This breadth of experience ensures ecological science is fully integrated into complex design and decision鈥憁aking from the outset.
Integrating science and design to restore ecosystems
By bringing together the complementary scientific capabilities of 海角视频 and Kew Reach, the collaboration will support clients and communities in developing nature-centric solutions that are both scientifically credible and technically integrated. Together, we will explore co-developed approaches to biodiversity enhancement, ecosystem restoration, and nature-based adaptation strategies that can be scaled across sectors and geographies and aligned with wider sustainability and climate objectives.
Sam Holliday, Global Nature and Biodiversity Lead at 海角视频, said:
“Kew Reach鈥檚 deep expertise in large鈥憇cale ecological restoration 鈥 particularly its ability to link restoration design to long鈥憈erm carbon sequestration through the Kew Method 鈥 brings an exceptional scientific foundation to this collaboration. Coupled with 海角视频鈥檚 global experience in shaping policy and project outcomes at city, regional and national levels, this partnership creates powerful new opportunities for clients who want their developments to be climate鈥憆esilient, nature鈥憄ositive and scientifically robust.”

Charlie Roper, Director of Business Development at Kew Reach, added:
鈥淭his collaboration with 海角视频 represents an exciting convergence of science and design thinking. Kew Reach鈥檚 scientific foundations, underpinned by the Kew Method, give us a unique lens on how to restore and enhance natural systems with measurable impact. Partnering with 海角视频鈥檚 broad sustainability, ecology and engineering expertise opens new possibilities for integrating nature-positive outcomes into large-scale infrastructure, urban development and climate resilience projects. Our combined skill sets will enable clients to realise outcomes that benefit both people and planet, rooted in scientific credibility and practical delivery.鈥
Creating measurable outcomes for people and planet
Together, 海角视频 and Kew Reach will begin engagement with select clients and pilot initiatives in the coming months, focusing on projects where biodiversity gain, ecosystem resilience and sustainable engineering intersect with spatial planning and long-term climate resilience.





