Forestry Commission accused of funding non-native plantations that damage peatlands and imperil rare species

The natural bowl in the Northumberland hills studded with dumpy young conifers looks innocuous enough. But the English borders are the scene of an increasingly bitter battle as ambitious government tree-planting targets collide with concerns for rare plants and birds.

The government is seeking to dramatically increase tree planting to 30,000 hectares of new trees in the UK each year, with plantations sequestering carbon and helping the government reach net zero emissions by 2050.

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

‘Christmas gift’ or ‘bad timing’? Brexit deal greeted with joy and foreboding around world

Last-minute agreement assessed as either a welcome economic boost or a bad…

Met police officer sacked for requesting photo of dead man

PC Bonnie Murphy, who asked colleague Jamie Lewis to send her a…

Mark Drakeford – the anti-Boris Johnson who surprised us all | Richard Wyn Jones

After his handling of Covid, even hard-nosed colleagues marvel at the Welsh…