
20 October 2008
Agriculture Committee receives plans for a greener Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland is languishing at the bottom of the European tree league. We have less woodland than almost any other country, with woods here covering a mere six per cent of the landscape, compared to the European average of 44 per cent. The message comes from the Woodland Trust, who today called upon the Northern Ireland Executive and its relevant departments to take urgent action for the future of woodland with its manifesto ‘A vision for woodland in Northern Ireland’.
The Trust wants the Executive to deliver on its commitment to double Northern Ireland’s woodland cover over the next 50 years. It also calls for protection for ancient woodland and cites the fact that many of the country’s oldest woods have been lost in recent years. In total, 273 ancient and long-established woods have been cleared since the 1960s.
Chair of the Agriculture and Rural Development Committee, William McCrea MP MLA, appeared at Stormont today to receive the Trust’s new document.
Lee Bruce, government affairs officer with the Woodland Trust, said: “Woodland greatly contributes to our quality of life by offering recreation, health and wildlife benefits. Legislative change, in the form of the proposed Forestry Act, is needed to protect, restore and expand our fragile woodland resource.” He continued: “Delivery of the Executive’s commitment to double woodland cover over the next 50 years would require more than trebling the current rate of tree planting.”1
Receiving the document, Dr McCrea commented: “As chair of the Agriculture and Rural Development Committee, I welcome the Woodland Trust’s publication. Woodland is important to so many aspects of our lives and is a vital contributor to the ecosystem upon which we are all dependent for our very survival. Crucially the forthcoming Forestry Act must guarantee that all ancient woodland is protected and where necessary restored, and that new woods are created where it benefits wildlife and people.”
The document sets out a number of proposals for the Executive’s consideration including:
• Protection for ancient woodland: Ancient woodland (land wooded since at least 1600) is a rare and precious resource covering only 0.08 per cent of the Northern Ireland landscape. It is one of our richest wildlife habitats, our equivalent of the rainforest, yet remains under threat from development. Today only 9,964 hectares of ancient and long-established woodland remain in the whole of Northern Ireland. The Woodland Trust is calling for the Northern Ireland Executive to afford absolute legislative protection for this finite resource.
• Felling licences: The Trust is calling for increased protection for all woodland through the re-introduction of felling licences. Northern Ireland remains the only country in the UK where felling licences are not employed to control the felling of woodland.
• Woodland expansion: The Woodland Trust welcomes the Department of Agriculture and Rural Development’s intention to double Northern Ireland’s woodland cover over the next 50 years. The Trust, however, wants to see a clear strategy for this expansion, including targets for the rate and location of new planting. In particular, there is a need for new woodland which buffers and protects our remaining fragments of ancient woodland, providing extended wildlife habitats.
• Access and recreation: New woodland creation, according to the conservation charity, should also be targeted where there is currently a lack of public access. Trees, woods and green spaces offer demonstrable health benefits, facilitating both physical and mental well-being.
For a copy of the document ‘A vision for woodland in Northern Ireland’ visit ‘nations and regions’ at www.woodlandtrust.org.uk/campaigns or telephone the Woodland Trust on 028 9127 5787.