Daily Mail

Peat ban for gardeners could come in by 2024

- By Victoria Allen Science Correspond­ent

A BAN on the sale of peat compost to gardeners could be in place by 2024 under government plans.

Ministers are also considerin­g the softer options of a ‘peat tax’ to increase the price of products such as grow-bags, or labels on them to warn that peat extraction is bad for the planet.

They argue that such measures will contribute to net-zero emissions targets.

But campaigner­s say a tax ‘just scratches the surface of the problem’ and want a ban that includes profession­al growers.

Peatlands cover just 3 per cent of the Earth’s surface but contain a fifth of the carbon stored in soil, preventing it escaping into the atmosphere and fuelling global warming. British peatland is also home to rare and endangered wildlife.

Environmen­t minister Rebecca Pow said: ‘The amateur gardening sector has made huge strides in reducing peat use, and there are more sustainabl­e and goodqualit­y peat-free alternativ­es available than at any other time. I am confident now is the time to make the shift permanent.’

But Ali Morse, from The Wildlife Trusts, said: ‘A peat tax similar to the plastic bag tax simply scratches the surface of the problem. We are discussing adding a few pence on to the cost of grow-bags, when what we need is an outright immediate ban – now and not in 2024 – for both amateur gardeners and profession­al growers, to protect the environmen­t and nature.’

Under the consultati­on, peat products would be phased out in the amateur horticultu­re sector in England and Wales by the end of this Parliament – with a ban the preferred option.

But an industry body claims neither a ban nor a tax address problems with the availabili­ty of alternativ­es such as wood fibre, wool and coconut.

James Barnes, spokesman for the Growing Media Taskforce, said: ‘Positive collaborat­ion with government is the key to a horticultu­re sector without peat.’

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