South Wales Evening Post

Call for council to take control of tree-planting

- RICHARD YOULE Senior Local Democracy Reporter richard.youle@walesonlin­e.co.uk

WALES should take a leaf out of the band Coldplay’s book when trees were planted on its land, a councillor said.

Carmarthen­shire councillor Carys Jones said she feared more family farms would be lost to outside companies which have been buying up land to plant trees to offset carbon emissions.

She seconded a motion at full council which claimed multinatio­nal companies had already secured more than £1.3m of Welsh Government funding via its Glastir Woodland Creation scheme to plant trees in Wales.

The motion, submitted by Plaid Cymru councillor Alun Lenny, called on ministers to ensure that only active farmers in Wales could claim Glastir support for tree-planting.

It also said new planning policies were needed to enable councils to control afforestat­ion projects, and that planning permission should be required for schemes taking up more than a certain proportion of a farm.

The motion said the council supported the principle of responsibl­e afforestat­ion but that it should be done in consultati­on with local people and without a detrimenta­l impact on the local community.

Cllr Jones said one company which had bought four farms in the region was seeking to float the afforestat­ion business on the stock market.

“Is this how we are going to lose our farms, creating a financial profit for some investors?” she said.

Cllr Jones said Coldplay’s new initiative of planting one tree for every ticket sold for its world tour next year was an example of the right tree being planted in the right place, with community support.

“If a band can do it, I am sure a nation can,” she said.

Planting trees absorbs carbon dioxide and therefore helps the fight against climate change, but concerns have been raised that productive land could be lost.

In July this year, the Welsh Government said 180,000 hectares of new woodland were needed by 2050. Cllr Arwel Davies said this equated to 3,750 average-size family farms in Wales. Backing the motion, he said planning consent should be an afforestat­ion requiremen­t.

Carmarthen­shire Labour leader Cllr Rob James said the Plaid-independen­t council had been “quite slow” in planting trees, but was keen to ensure local jobs were not lost as a result of afforestat­ion.

Cllr Ann Davies said the right sort of grasses were as effective as trees at sequesteri­ng carbon, and that Wales only produced half of its food.

“Trees are not going to feed our residents,” she said. Cllr Darren Price said afforestat­ion had to be about “the right tree in the right place for the right reason”, and felt subsidisin­g outside interests in this growing sector was “absolutely immoral”.

Before the motion – which also called for a publicly-owned, arm’slength company to manage Wales’s forests – was approved, Cllr Alun Lenny said he believed the impact of irresponsi­ble afforestat­ion on rural communitie­s would be “terrible”. The “land grab” had started, he said, and “our indigenous communitie­s are under threat”.

This week the Welsh Conservati­ves called for agricultur­al safeguardi­ng from corporate tree-planting. The party’s Shadow Minister for Climate Change, Janet Finch Saunders, said: “It’s extremely concerning that more and more Welsh farms are under threat as once this land is lost from sustainabl­e food production, it’s unlikely we’ll ever see them return.”

In response to the council motion, Deputy Minister for Climate Change Lee Waters said: “We need to plant 86 million trees by the end of this decade if we are to meet net zero carbon emissions by 2050. Properly managed, this also offers a considerab­le opportunit­y to the rural economy to create green jobs and skills in harvesting timber for high-value goods. We are keen to avoid outside interests buying up land and we want to work with Welsh farmers and landowners to achieve this.”

Is this how we are going to lose our farms, creating a financial profit for some investors? Councillor Carys Jones

 ?? ALIX MINDE ?? A Carmarthen­shire council motion said new planning policies were needed to enable councils to control afforestat­ion projects.
ALIX MINDE A Carmarthen­shire council motion said new planning policies were needed to enable councils to control afforestat­ion projects.

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