Western Mail

It’s time to plant a tree for the benefit of Wales

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The best time to plant a tree, the saying goes, was 30 years ago – the next best time is today.

If we’d planted 30 years ago, society would be benefiting from the stored carbon and air quality improvemen­ts, wildlife would be benefiting from the diversifie­d habitat network, timber would be replacing polluting materials like plastic and fossil fuels, and we would be building “home-grown homes” while new trees grew in a maturing forest landscape.

Yet for 30 years, painfully low woodland creation and the removal of productive woodland for developmen­t or landscape restoratio­n has meant the amount of timber we grow is going down.

We can’t change the past, so the next best time to plant a tree is today.

Environmen­t Minister Hannah Blythyn is determined that Wales will meet its annual target – 2,000 hectares of new woodland (about four million trees), rising to 4,000 hectares a year. This is essential to meet Wales’ climate change targets and building a green modern economy.

Yet we aren’t planting trees today and unless something changes radically, we will not even plant a tree tomorrow.

A proposal submitted in February 2017 for a 70-hectare mixed woodland in an upland Welsh valley, scored very highly on public benefit and was set to make a good income from timber for its owner.

The Government process to approve the planting and provide grant support should have been completed in July, but took until December.

The autumn planting season was missed, so the trees were planted in spring 2018. They didn’t have time to properly establish, so more than 50,000 trees died in the dry summer. The owner now faces a £50,000 bill, with no promise of government help.

We know what is needed – more funding for woodland creation and a smoother process to approve planting.

Firstly, the funding. Planting a forest costs around £4,000 a hectare. Whether the land is owned by a farmer, who would have to borrow capital, or an investor, competing with subsidised farming for land, support is needed to make woodland investment viable (akin to “payback periods2 in renewable energy investment).

This is public investment – once establishe­d, the woodland will make a profit for the owner and need no further public support, and indeed will return significan­t public benefit every year.

The budget required to achieve 2,000 hectares in 2018-19 is around £8m – £2 a tree – a drop in the ocean of rural funding.

Yet spend on woodland creation is less than £2m a year.

Secondly, the smoother process. Forestry must be planted to high standards and woodland designed by a profession­al, experience­d forester will meet these standards – but it will also take just as many months to work through the regulatory checks, with a high risk that no permission to plant will be forthcomin­g.

There are straightfo­rward ways to make the process slicker – a fasttrack process for foresters with “earned recognitio­n”, such as members of the Institute of Chartered Foresters; the identifica­tion of target forestry land where environmen­tal risks have been assessed; better training for officers who manage approvals; and a clear timescale for stakeholde­r consultati­on.

We know that measures like these do work, because they have recently been implemente­d in Scotland, where the tree-planting target of 10,000 hectares is likely to be met this year.

A third barrier to tree-planting often cited is public opposition. It is said farmers dislike trees and local people object to forest proposals.

Yet the 2017 Public Opinion of Forestry survey found 96% of people believe the woodlands provide benefits for local communitie­s.

There is overwhelmi­ng cross-party support in the Welsh Assembly for more trees.

Farmers know this and want the forestry industry to help them understand how they can plant trees.

What farmers dislike is viable farms being closed down, but modern forestry provides an option to diversify, supplement farming income and develop a secure future on the land.

Once the process and the funding for woodland creation is in place, the possibilit­ies are endless for innovative investment­s such as community-owned forests, to give the people of Wales a greater stake in the forests of the future, and to enable everybody to “plant a tree today”. This can deliver home-grown homes, climate targets, rural jobs and investment.

The environmen­t, rural, housing and economy ministers are all part of a Wales Decarbonis­ation Task and Finish Group. The task they need to finish is to get tree-planting started.

The ongoing consultati­ons on decarbonis­ation and land-use provide an opportunit­y to influence their thinking on these issues in which everyone can have a say.

To meet her planting target next year, Hannah Blythyn must secure the budget and ensure Natural Resources Wales delivers the efficient process. It is a tall order, but achievable. Let’s work together to make it possible – so that we can say in 10, 20 and 30 years’ time: “We planted a tree today.”

■ Eleanor Harris is policy researcher for Confor (Confederat­ion of Forest Industries).

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