Yorkshire Post

Billions in benefits from forest plans

- MARK LAVERY NEWS CORESPONDE­NT ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

ECONOMY: Investing £500m in creating the Northern Forest over 25 years could benefit the economy by as much as £2.5 billion, according to environmen­tal groups.

Increasing tree cover in an area stretching from Liverpool to Hull would boost the economy as part of a green recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic.

INVESTING £500M in creating the Northern Forest over 25 years could benefit the economy by as much as £2.5 billion, according to environmen­tal groups.

Increasing tree cover in an area stretching from Liverpool to Hull would boost the economy as part of a green recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic, say conservati­on organisati­ons.

It has been claimed that nature-focused schemes can deliver returns several times the original investment in economic, environmen­tal and social benefits. The Wildlife and Countrysid­e Link coalition of environmen­tal groups say they have a wide range of proposed projects to help reduce flooding, plant trees and seagrass meadows, protect threatened species from juniper to bats and create habitats such as ponds and meadows.

They want the Government to invest in such schemes as part of a green recovery from the coronaviru­s crisis to create jobs and improve people’s lives and health, as well as cutting carbon emissions and tackling the nature crisis.

It will also make the UK more resilient to environmen­tal economic risks such as floods, droughts, loss of important pollinatin­g insects and climate change.

Many of the schemes groups in the Wildlife and Countrysid­e Link have lined up are ones put on hold as a result of the Covid-19 crisis or which could be brought forward as part of a Treasury stimulus package.

Schemes which the coalition say could be funded include a £300,000 project by Bristol Rivers Trust to reduce local flooding in the city, help species such as water voles and give 100,000 more access to nature.

The £2.1m Northern Forest Partnershi­p Innovation Fund was launched earlier this month, offering support for tree planting schemes of up to 50 per cent of eligible costs. With the support of the Department for Environmen­t, Food and Rural Affairs, the Woodland Trust is managing the fund, which will foster the creation of new woodlands of three hectares or more across the Northern Forest by the planting of 1m trees by March 2022.

We can grow back better from the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Dr Richard Benwell, chief executive of Wildlife and Countrysid­e Link.

Dr Richard Benwell, chief executive of Wildlife and Countrysid­e Link, said: “We can grow back better from the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“As we struggle to recover from a global natural disaster, investing in nature can make our economy more resilient to future harm from the climate and ecological emergencie­s: flood, fire, drought, harvest failure, and other risks.

Woodland Trust chief executive Darren Moorcroft said: “You can’t build a more resilient society without a resilient environmen­t. We need to reboot the economy to restore our natural environmen­t and cut carbon.”

Meanwhile, conservati­onists say investment in restoring peatlands will help boost jobs and cut carbon emissions in the wake of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Government advisers the Committee on Climate Change recently urged Ministers to fund planting trees and restoring peatland as part of its stimulus package.

The Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN) UK peatland programme director Clifton Bain said repairing damaged and drained peat bogs could deliver a range of benefits.

Healthy peatland stores carbon and is home to unusual and threatened wildlife, from carnivorou­s plants to wading birds and insects.

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