AA2 - Regional Image

The Forests of TAFKAR (The Area Formerly Known as Region)

AA5 - Climate Change and Energy, AA6 - Supporting and Resourcing the Sector, AA4 - Health, Well-being and Quality of Life, AA3 - Biodiversity and Landscape, AA2 - Regional Image, AA1 - Enterprise and Industry
September 16th, 2010 by Steve Connor

 

 

I’ve been working on a plan, recently, to get some more trees in the ground. Nothing new there to anyone who has visited this blog before, but I thought it was time for an update.

 

I chair the Northwest Forestry Framework (soon to change it’s name to something more in keeping with the political zeitgeist, but more on that another time) and have been working with a whole host of people, both in the Northwest but also in the national offices of the Forestry Commission, to put forward several areas in the Northwest as possible pilot areas for a major national push on woodland creation.

 

As an area of England with a level of woodland cover well below the national average, there is scope and opportunity for large scale tree planting and development right across Cumbria, Lancashire, Greater Manchester, Cheshire and Merseyside. When you look at the statistics, we are poorly served in these areas when it comes to woodlands.

 

The good news is that each of these areas has also developed clever and canny new models for woodland creation that deliver multiple benefits and move beyond traditional public sector investment models towards partnerships with business and the voluntary sector.

 

It’s all very, ‘Big Society’.

 

Now these areas are signing up to a ‘forestry manifesto’ that I’ve been touting around the region since the start of the year. This manifesto seeks, over 40 years, to deliver a doubling in woodland cover, to have an immediate and significant impact on carbon stores, timber production, environmental resilience, green jobs, local image and happiness and wellbeing; this is a vision of an intensely productive, as well as beautiful, landscape.

 

Show me the money

 

It all sounds very motherhood and apple pie, but who is going to pay? There are a number of existing or planned investment models across the Northwest which warrant further development and replication elsewhere. These include:

 

• Woodland planting as a key aspect of PFI (Public Finance Initiative) contracts and, specifically, waste management strategies;

 

• Working with large-scale developers to create an attractive setting for investment and adding value to land-based asset portfolios;

 

• Practical business partnerships providing improved local area ‘image’, biomass resources or climate change adaptation;

 

• Woodland or green infrastructure bonds, where investors can support woodland creation by investing in a bond that provides non-fiscal benefits in lieu of interest payments as part of a CSR or sustainability strategy;

 

• Developing a suite of woodland creation opportunities alongside community interest levies/section 106 arrangements where developers support environmental works as a condition of their planning consents; and

 

• Integrated land use planning to maintain and improve water quality.

 

• Landscape-scale, economically-linked programmes to aid recovery and local economic resilience.

 

Some of the above options sound a little jargon laden, but they have the potential to help us get some trees in the ground, and that’s what I care about. Each of these investment models is either already in play across one of our counties or city regions, or is ready to be developed by one or more partners.

 

Breaking down barriers

 

From the discussions we’ve been having so far, these partners are ready to start delivering woodland creation, on the ground, if certain barriers to progress can be removed. These barriers include:

 

• The ‘Hope value’ attached to under-utilised land and the misplaced notion that new woodlands permanently remove large areas from possible future development;

 

• More flexible, short to medium term land use deals and frameworks that will allow the notion of ‘temporary’ woodland to be pursued;

 

• Clear signals on the future of carbon pricing and accounting in relation to woodland creation;

 

• The lack of a mechanism for business to report on the carbon benefits of woodland creation programmes as part of their net greenhouse gas emissions; and

 

• The consideration of effective tax regimes to encourage investment in new planting in areas of need as a way for business to play a part in ‘big society’ programmes.

 

Making it happen

 

So the exciting thing is that if we bash down a few barriers, win over some hearts and minds, and pull our fingers out, the partners in the Northwest Forestry Forum are ready to begin work piloting a new wave of woodland creation using innovative funding and delivery models such as these.

 

More trees, in the ground, delivering a huge range of benefits.

 

And the track record for delivery across the region is solid and impressive, with the Community Forests (e.g. Mersey Forest and Red Rose Forest) having already planted 12 million trees and millions more having been planted through the Forestry Commission’s Capital Modernisation Fund and Newlands programme.

 

Here are some more tangible examples of where can start planting.

 

Real life example - Mersey Belt

 

There is an immediate opportunity for an ‘Adapting the Landscape’ pilot across what has been coined the ‘Atlantic Gateway’, connecting the twin city regions of Greater Manchester and Merseyside with the Northern areas of Cheshire.

 

Such a pilot would be focused on woodland creation in and around key physical development sites and along transport corridors; on productive forestry including biomass; on leisure, recreation and the ‘visitor economy’.

 

Funding can be drawn from business through receipts from soils deposition, community interest levies, Section 106 agreements, through an easing of planning constraints if the creation of greenspace is assured and possible short-term amnesties against business tax.

 

Delivery partners would include large development businesses in the area, as well as the key Local Enterprise Partnerships and the voluntary sector in the form of community forests and Groundwork.

 

Real life example - Lancashire

 

In Lancashire there is already an innovative model for woodland creation in the form of the county’s ‘Woodlands from Waste’ programme linked to a soon to be commissioned, 25 year, £2 billion Waste PFI.

 

A partnership of Lancashire County Council, 13 Local Authorities and their commercial contractor, Global Renewables, alongside the Forestry Commission, will be planting and managing 100,000 new trees per year for the next 25 years - creating woodland on brown and greenfield sites across the area. The cost is being met through savings on landfill taxes and, in addition, is utilising a growing medium by-product of the waste treatment process.

 

Real life example - Cumbria and Lancashire

 

Water company United Utilities has pioneered a programme called the Sustainable Catchment Management Programme (SCaMP), working with farmers and land managers, local authorities, Government and other conservation organisations to influence how water catchment areas are managed and properly funded. The objective is a double win of improved water quality (under the European Water Framework Directive) as well as conservation of the natural environment. UU’s partner in the programme has been the RSPB.

 

The project has leveraged in public funding to help deliver an increase in clough woodland, with 450 hectares of upland oak woodland to be planted, some 300,000 trees being planted and 200km of fencing to allow for moorland restoration and woodland planting. It has carried out the work in two of its four estate areas: Bowland in Lancashire, and the Southern estate including Longdendale, the Goyt and parts of the Peak District.

 

Meeting Defra’s priorities

 

It may sound a bit arcane, but in the absence of any major eco bills or statements, there are still some clear signals as to what the new government’s priorities are, not least in the departmental ‘Structural Reform Plans’ which have beenpublished. How does the above outlined activity ‘fit’ with the three key priorities outlined in Defra’s structural reform plan?

 

The woodland creation opportunities highlighted can directly contribute to and foreshorten the delivery of each priority and relevant actions and milestones. Specifically:

 

Support and develop British farming and encourage sustainable food production

 

Defra’s objective is to enhance the competitiveness and resilience of the whole food chain, including farms and the fish industry, to ensure a secure, environmentally sustainable and healthy supply of food with improved standards of animal welfare.

 

Woodland creation can contribute to this objective in a number of ways. It will provide affordable measures of support for hill farmers via diversifying farm incomes e.g. through timber sales and reduced energy cost savings through woodfuel.

 

It will also help with animal husbandry, particularly in the uplands, primarily through the provision of shelter. Woodland creation will also lead to more sustainable, integrated land use where for example, higher value agricultural land holdings can be protected through woodland creation ‘upstream’ stablising soils and alleviating flooding.

 

Biodiversity and landscape

 

Defra’s objective is to enhance and protect the natural environment, including biodiversity and the marine environment, by reducing pollution and preventing habitat loss and degradation.

 

A pilot of new woodland creation in the Mersey Belt, Cumbria or Lancashire will contribute to this in a number of ways.

 

It will deliver more green spaces for local communities, new native habitats and wildlife corridors needed to help wildlife adapt to expected climate change impacts. It will help stabilise soils, improve water quality and reclaim damaged, brownfield land. In addition there will be increased tree planting by private sector and civic societies.

 

Support a strong and sustainable green economy, resilient to climate change

 

Defra’s objective is to encourage businesses, people and communities to manage and use natural resources in a sustainable manner and to reduce waste; and work to ensure that the UK economy is resilient to climate change.

 

A woodland creation pilot will directly address this objective, as the approaches above show, it can directly provide a source of carbon storage and can be deployed in partnership with the private sector.

 

Next steps

 

As you might imagine, I’m dead keen to play these arguments out to national players - especially Defra - but also to the emerging Local Economic Partnerships which have been causing such a stir in local politics over the last few weeks.

 

In addition, this proposal will be the centrepiece of our next meeting of the Forestry Forum on November 8 of this year; if you want to come along, just let me know. We need every bit of help we can get to achieve that goal we’ve set for ourselves - a doubling of woodland cover.

 

To view the Manifesto presentation online, please click here  (You can also download the presentation from this link too.)

 

 

 

 

2009 Regional Forestry forum, 15.10.09

AA5 - Climate Change and Energy, AA6 - Supporting and Resourcing the Sector, AA4 - Health, Well-being and Quality of Life, AA3 - Biodiversity and Landscape, AA2 - Regional Image, AA1 - Enterprise and Industry
September 4th, 2009 by Faith Ashworth

The Regional Forestry Forum this year will take place on 15th October 2009, 2 – 4:30 pm

It will be held in Preston at The Gujarat Hindu Society Centre,South Meadow Lane,Preston,PR1 8JN

The Forum is of particular importance this year as we will refresh the current delivery plan and look to embed Forestry, in its widest sense, into the developing integrated regional strategy, RS2010. We will also assess progress on the current delivery plan and identify the key issues/opportunities for the sector.

The programme for the Forum meeting will follow but we hope that you will pencil this important meeting into your diaries and register your interest in attending the event through the link below.

We look forward to your involvement in continuing to develop the role of the Forestry sector in the North West.   Apologies for any cross-postings.

Location details:   http://www.ghsenterprise.co.uk/contact_ghs_centre.html

Click on the link to register:   http://www.doodle.com/8ezduam9s87a2bup

A year of impressive delivery - Newlands 2008

AA3 - Biodiversity and Landscape, AA2 - Regional Image
December 15th, 2008 by Faith Ashworth

Newlands 2008, highlights

Belfield, Rochdale
More than £1.75million of regeneration funding was invested into a 28ha brownfield site that links a number of communities close to Rochdale town centre in Greater Manchester.  By developing a number of paths, bridleways and cycle paths, outdoor play and classroom facilities and a fishing lodge, as well as considerable environmental management, the site has been transformed from a ‘no-go’ area into a well-used community asset.   The work at Belfield contributes to the economic regeneration of the area – enhancing investment by Housing Market Renewal and encouraging growth in the local Kingsway Business Park.  Newlands has also kick started some inspiring community development – local people have produced their own celebration film for Belfield, and the site is extremely well used by local schools, youth projects, community groups etc.

Investment:
An NWDA investment of £1,787,757.  Additional funding has been provided by Biffaward and ERDF
Size:
28ha
Project partners:
NWDA, Forestry Commission, Rochdale MBC (site owners), Groundwork Oldham and Rochdale and Pennine Edge Forest
Key deliverables:
community park, outdoor class room, football pitch, fishing lodge, wetland area, cycle, foot and bridle paths and gateway features

Brockholes, Preston
Brockholes, a 106ha former quarry site close to the M6 in Preston, was purchased under the Newlands programme in 2007.  However, 2008 has seen considerable activity on the site, including a RIBA design competition for the site’s visitor facilities.  Judged by a panel including Wayne Hemmingway, the competition resulted in Adam Khan Architects being selected as the scheme’s designers, following their submission of ‘A Floating World’; a design for the visitor centre that includes a community of floating buildings, making the most of the site’s wetland habitat. Brockholes is currently in the ‘project evaluation’ phase with the NWDA, and if successful, funding will be released to develop the site over the next two to three years.

Investment:
An initial investment of £800,000 was made by the NWDA to purchase the site (with additional funding from Lancashire Wildlife Trust members and the Tubney Charitable Trust). Further funding is now being sought under Newlands to develop the site.
Size:
106ha of brownfield land, and an additional 66ha of existing semi-natural ancient woodland make up the Brockholes project area.
Project partners:
NWDA, Forestry Commission, Lancashire Wildlife Trust (site owners and managers)

Town Lane, Southport
This June, over £1.78million of investment was announced for the regeneration of Town Lane in Southport, which comprising two former landfills and unmanaged grasslands located to the south east of the town centre, Southport General Hospital and an area listed in the top 70th percentile of National Index of Multiple Deprivation.
Helping to economically and socially rejuvenate 26ha of Southport’s neglected land, Newlands at Town Lane is also working within the region’s red squirrel zone, and Newlands will work towards the protection and preservation of these endangered species.  Work on Town Lane has included the large scale recycling of waste sand from a local extraction company, which has been turned into a growing medium on site.

Investment:
£1.78million investment from the NWDA, £225,000 from The Mersey Forest (via EU Objective One funding)

Size:
26ha of brownfield land

Project partners:
NWDA, Forestry Commission, Sefton Metropolitan Borough Council, Mersey Basin Campaign, Environment Agency, The Mersey Forest, BTCV and Groundwork Merseyside

www.newlandsproject.co.uk

New woodland is the legacy of Capital of Culture

AA2 - Regional Image
December 15th, 2008 by Faith Ashworth

Tens of thousands of new trees are to be planted in Liverpool to create a new community woodland that will form the legacy of the City’s status as European cultural capital in 2008. More than £700,000 of regeneration funding is to be invested by a partnership of Liverpool and Northwest organisations to transform 25ha of brownfield land in the West Derby area. The project is striving to create ‘the world’s most colourful woodland’, which will also be a showpiece for the city’s forthcoming ‘Year of the Environment’ (2009).  The community-led vision for Mab Lane is to create an inspiring and multi-functional green space at the heart of a Liverpool community, which aspires to become the world’s most colourful woodland. Up to 20,000 new native UK trees with be planted, alongside wildflower meadows, a community orchard, seasonal wetland areas that have all been chosen to support the conservation and enhancement of the area’s existing biodiversity, as well as to deliver maximum colour and visual impact. Over time the woodland will become a vibrant, beautiful place that local people can be proud of and one where they can exercise, relax or simply observe the nature on their doorstep.

£440,000 of investment for this project has been provided by the Northwest Regional Development Agency (NWDA) via the NWDA and Forestry Commission-partnership programme, Newlands.  Further funding has come form the Forestry Commission through their English Woodland Grant Scheme, The Riverside Group via the Big Lottery’s Changing Spaces programme, the Mersey Forest via Objective 1 (ERDF) funding and Liverpool City Council.
www.mablane.com

Forestry sector celebrates a year of culture in 2008

AA2 - Regional Image
December 15th, 2008 by Faith Ashworth

The Northwest forestry sector committed to celebrating Liverpool’s status as Capital of Culture 2008 at the beginning of the year, and the result has been long-term community projects, temporary art installations and a sector conference:

Green Spot 08
Newlands was the main partner in a large-scale environmental installation, which appeared at the Bluecoat Art Centre in Liverpool city centre during September 2008.  Green Spot, which is a ‘mini, mobile forest’, raises awareness of the importance of trees and woodlands to our urban environment; for benefits as diverse as climate change mitigation and community cohesion. Green Spot has since moved to Alder Hey Childrens Hospital, where the health benefits and effects on recovery rates that trees can offer are being highlighted by the installation.
www.greenspot08.org

‘The Spinning Trees’
In September The Mersey Forest part-funded an installation that has transformed a former brownfield site into a work of art, as part of the Liverpool Biennial 2008. Three large trees that rotate in circles within a static copse of hornbeams, have been installed next to a busy city road in Liverpool by New York-based architects Diller Scofidio and Renfro.  The artwork, entitled ‘Arbores Laetate’ or Joyful Trees is proving to be very popular with locals as well as the media, helping to raise the profile of forestry within the Northwest.
www.merseyforest.org.uk

Take a Bough
Local wood came under the spotlight with The Mersey Forest’s ‘Take a Bough’ touring exhibition of art and furniture made from local wood. Demonstrating the sustainability, versatility and beauty of the region’s trees and woodlands, the exhibition included sculptures and furniture from timber that was marked for landfill as timber surgery waste. This summer’s touring show made a successful debut at Croxteth Hall & Country Park followed by a two-week residency at Liverpool John Lennon Airport, before closing at Frodsham.
www.merseyforest.org.uk/partner_reports/reporttakeabough.asp

Form>wood
In early September, the beauty, design capabilities and sustainable qualities of wood for the built environment were celebrated at the form>wood conference. Architects from the Northwest and beyond attended the one-day conference at The Bluecoat Gallery in Liverpool to hear presentations from a wide range of speakers that included the Centre of Timber Engineering at Napier University, Norwegian design practice Helen and Hard Architects, and the Royal Institute of British Architecture 2008 Gold Medallist, Ted Cullinan. Topics and lively presentations ranged from architectural identity with timber, opportunities of working in wood to the use of greenwood and applying interior timber structures that are at one with the buildings that contain them.
The event was sponsored by the Northwest Regional Development Agency, Forestry Commission, Community Forests Northwest and the Liverpool European Capital of Culture.
www.formwood.org

Regional Forestry Framework meeting - AA2 update

AA2 - Regional Image
October 16th, 2008 by Paul Nolan

At the Forum meeting discussion on AA2 focused on the one action that has yet to get underway - Guidance for planners and developers

There is no doubt that, when the world returns to normal working order, or a new working order even, then growth and development will still be a key issue in the NW. The continued restructuring of the post industrial landscape,the advent of growth points and mechanisms such as Community Infrastructure Levy potentially still/will offer opportunities for Forestry.

We agreed that we had to work within the emerging framework of Green Infrastructure policies, but we know that the most multifunctional habitats are woodlands (don’t we?) so we can be sure that trees and woodlands have a key role to play in delivering Green Infrastructure plans.

So… over the next year we will look to develop this action working with 4NW and other partners  - offers of help gratefully received. We will be calling together a task group to get ideas, good practice etc. so look out on this blog for info on that meeting.

In the next year we also aim to look at developing the action around Forest Parks  - can we identify more areas that can be “improved” to offer venues for tourism, leisure activities etc. We have identified 5 in the Mersey Forest area so far.

The criteria for the Forest Parks so far have been

  • More that 300 ha of interconnected woodland
  • Good accessibility
  • Relatively (?) close to people - I know that is not very precise!
  • Opportunities for development of recreation infrastructure
  • Willing landowners !

We can probably do a GIS hunt for areas that satisfy the first 3 criteria, or maybe we need to get some agreement on what a forest park is and what it’s purpose is? 

In terms of Actions that have been delivered

Previous blogs have mentioned Capital of Culture and the land Regen network - they are done and dusted now!

Newlands 1 and 2 are underway  (http://www.forestry.gov.uk/newlands)

Green Infrastructure planning is now well established - it does seem like we have come along way from the initial GI conference in Jan 2005 when there was no mention of GI in the region to now when it is becoming a well known concept that is finding its way into regional, sub regional and local policies. (www.greeninfrastructurenw.co.uk)

AA5 - Climate Change and Energy, AA6 - Supporting and Resourcing the Sector, AA4 - Health, Well-being and Quality of Life, AA3 - Biodiversity and Landscape, AA1 - Enterprise and Industry, AA2 - Regional Image, Uncategorized
October 15th, 2008 by Paul Nolan

Update from Regional Forestry Framework Forum

 Feedback from the Forum was generally very positive with 88% responding that the event was good or excellent

  

QUESTION POOR ADEQUATE GOOD EXCELLENT

There were also positive responses about people wanting to be involved in the future refresh of the Framework and hearing more about it. There was a large response of “don’t know” to the question about whether the Framework has made a difference - something that has to be addressed in the refresh.

 

  YES NO DON’T KNOW

AA2 - Regional Image
July 29th, 2008 by Paul Nolan

The Land Remediation Network is an important success for the Regional Forestry Framework. The group is coordinated by Envirolinknw (Mark Whitworth and Pia Wagner)

The group now has over 80 members.

The next group meeting is on 10th September focussing on new technologies for land reclamation.

For more info about the network visit

http://www.envirolinknorthwest.co.uk/Envirolink/LandRemediation-sig.nsf?OpenDatabase

Information on how to contact Mark Whitworth is also available on that site

Take a Bough

AA2 - Regional Image, AA1 - Enterprise and Industry
July 29th, 2008 by Paul Nolan

 ”Take a Bough” has been organised to demonstrate how locally sourced wood can transformed into works of art. The exhibition forms part of the Regional Forestry Framework contribution to the Capital of Culture celebrations, through The Mersey Forest partnership. 

The Mersey Forest timber network has developed the project, assisted by Garry Olsen ( of “One Tree” project  fame).

The exhibition has been at Croxteth Hal and  is currently at Liverpool John Lennon Airport before going on a month long exhibtion at Castle Park gallery in Frodsham.

The attached link provides more information on the pieces in the exhibition, the artists and makers  and the exhibition itself.

 The project links well with the Regional Forestry Framework under both Action Area 1 and 2.

 Link to more information

 www.merseyforest.org.uk/takeabough.asp

Land Remedaition Network

AA6 - Supporting and Resourcing the Sector, AA2 - Regional Image
February 1st, 2008 by Paul Nolan

When the land remediation network was launched one of the issues raised by members was that they felt more could be done to provide information about tenders and how procurement works for some of the major woodland creation and land remediation programmes such as Newlands.

This was a particular concern of “traditional” forestry busiensses, who perhaps are missing from some tender lists, procurement panels etc. So this a chance to learn all about it and hopefully generate more business for the Forestry sector.

 Envirolink have organsied a seminar to address this issue on 20th Feb 2008

Attached is a flyer for the event