The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Consider branching out and reap benefits of tree-planting

- Stuart Goodall ■ Stuart Goodall is chief executive of Confor: promoting forestry and wood.

COP26 in Glasgow is less than four months away and as North America experience­s record temperatur­es, it’s a good time to reflect on how rural Scotland can play its part in tackling devastatin­g climate change.

In doing so, I believe it’s vital that we think rural and not sectoral.

For example, how can farming and forestry work together more closely and effectivel­y?

At times like this I think back to this quote: “In Scotland, if you plant trees on farmland, it is somehow seen as a failure.

“My focus is to help change the mindset of the farming community, to see forestry as an asset, not a failure of the business model.”

Those words were spoken in 2017 by then North-east Scotland MSP Peter Chapman – and they have stuck with me not just because I agree, but because of the person who said them.

Peter Chapman is a wellknown figure in north-east farming, and it would have been easy for him to stay away from what was, and sometimes still is, a contentiou­s issue.

But he saw the clear benefits of more closely integrated forestry and farming, both for farmers and for Scotland as a whole.

Trees aren’t every farmer or land manager’s cup of tea, but it’s an opportunit­y I would always urge them to think about.

With 75% of farmland in Scotland classified as Less Favoured Area (LFA) and with uncertaint­y over future funding models for rural activity, diversifyi­ng a rural business to include an area of tree planting can

deliver clear long-term benefits.

As well as tax efficiency and a new income stream, the trees can often be planted on part of a farm where the land is not especially productive – and the woodland can grow to provide shelter for livestock, improving animals’ health and welfare and reducing feed costs.

The world wants wood (I’m still waiting for my new fence after 10 weeks’ delay) so markets are getting stronger with new low-carbon uses of wood fibre being developed all the time. The Scottish Government has recognised the increased use of wood

in its plans for net-zero emissions by 2045.

And thinking net-zero and COP26, tree planting can address your carbon footprint, and markets for that carbon are increasing, potentiall­y providing new income streams.

Government grants are available for farm woodland creation and the Scottish Forestry website lays these out very clearly – including a specific ‘Sheep and Trees’ package for hill and upland farms.

More informatio­n is online at forestry.gov.scot/ support-regulation­s/farmwoodla­nds, alongside links to examples of farmers who have planted

areas of trees on their land. The diversity of species in modern productive forestry and the rigorous standards applied to them is a strength and an opportunit­y.

As Confor’s report on biodiversi­ty shows, you can combine diversific­ation of your enterprise with new habitats for wildlife.

And, as with carbon, work is ongoing to develop markets for the wildlife, flood management, water quality and other benefits of managed woodland – socalled ‘natural capital’, which could bring further income opportunit­ies.

The modern face of forestry in Scotland

includes a wide mixture of species.

For a great example of what this can look like, Atholl Estates has made a short video about woodland creation at Struan Point, just north of Blair Atholl, which describes the “mosaic” of woodland created on the site – from a protected birch wood to an area of productive spruce planting – and the wide range of benefits delivered.

The video is available to view on Atholl Estates’ Youtube page.

The diversity in modern forestry is a topic we’re picking up with the Scottish Government.

There is a new ministeria­l team in place at Holyrood and a focus on a green recovery from Covid which will promote sectors that create jobs and tackle climate change.

When I met Mairi Mcallan MSP, who covers forestry as part of her new Environmen­t, Biodiversi­ty and Land Reform portfolio, I focused on the positives of what tree planting and wood use can do for our environmen­t, economy and society.

Our meeting came soon after a new piece of academic research by Bangor University, which showed that productive forestry can deliver significan­tly more net carbon benefits than more natural broadleaf systems in the same time period – up to two and a half times more in some cases.

While modern forestry has broader aims than carbon and is more mixed in its use of tree species than the model used in the study, this academic research demonstrat­es clearly the climate change benefits of an industry that also adds £1 billion in annual value to Scotland’s economy and employs well over 25,000 people – numbers that we know are growing each year.

As Peter Chapman recognised, modern forestry is very much a potential asset to farmers.

If anyone would like to talk to Confor, please contact me or our national manager for Scotland, Jamie Farquhar at stuartg@confor.org.uk and jamie@confor.org.uk

Our doors, and our email baskets, are open.

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 ??  ?? POSITIVES: Tree-planting can create a new income stream, provide shelter and address farmers’ carbon footprint.
POSITIVES: Tree-planting can create a new income stream, provide shelter and address farmers’ carbon footprint.

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