LRG supported the planting of 16,000 climate resilient trees across the UK in 2022-23
This year, Leaders Romans Group has committed to plant 16,000 climate resilient trees in partnership with GreenTheUK and the Royal Forestry Society. Benefits of planting these trees could increase each woodland's resilience to pests, diseases and climate change as well as enriching local biodiversity and sequestering carbon. In this report, learn more about the different tree species planted by Leaders Romans Group.
Tree Species Planted:
250 trees planted in Lancashire
On this site, a plantation with just one type of tree has been replaced with a mix of many different trees. Local wildlife will benefit from the new variety of habitats and food that will be provided all year round by these trees.
260 trees planted in Hampshire
The trees in this Hampshire woodland have been badly affected by the deadly tree disease Ash Dieback. To make matters worse, the rest of the woodland is dominated by beech trees, which are one of the species that are particularly susceptible to drought. Occurrences of droughts in the UK are expected to increase as the Climate Emergency progresses and so non-drought resistant strains of beech trees may not survive. The dead and dying trees in this woodland will be replaced with a mix of conifers and broadleaf trees that have been chosen specifically for their resistance to disease and climate change.
7,601 trees planted in County Tyrone
In this part of Northern Ireland, sitka spruce dominates as the main timber producing tree. This experimental project seeks to plant a diverse mix of different timber producing trees to see how they fair in current and future climates in Northern Ireland. This kind of experimental planting will help to inform the foresters of the future, helping them to keep a sustainable and local supply of timber. The trees planted as part of this project have been specially selected to be resistant to deadly tree pests and diseases.
750 trees planted in North Yorkshire
Quick growing trees have been planted in this woodland to provide a sustainable source of wood to make into charcoal. This high quality, locally grown charcoal will help to reduce carbon emissions by reducing the need to import timber for charcoal making to the UK from aboard. Rather than the decades it can take for other tree species to grow, the first harvest for charcoal will be available just six years after planting.
2,000 trees planted in West Sussex
This woodland in the South Downs National Park has restored with a mix of native broadleaved trees. Over the last 50 years, Dutch elm disease has killed millions of elm trees in the UK. As part of this project, disease resistant elm trees have been planted to help replace some of the trees that were lost from the landscape. Elms, alongside other broadleaf trees, such as juniper trees, will provide food and shelter for local wildlife.
4,750 trees planted in Northumberland
This woodland was devastated by Strom Arwen in 2021. Mature trees were uprooted by the storm and many trees that could have been sold for timber were smashed as they fell. These trees were decades old and the work that has gone into growing and caring for them has sadly come to very little. By supporting this project you are directly helping to alleviate the devastating effects of this storm and grow a storm resilient woodland for the future.
389 trees planted in Berwickshire
Windstorms are becoming increasingly common in the UK as a direct result of rapid climate change. The trees in this woodland were lost during Storm Arwen in 2021. They have been replaced with oak and beech trees with smaller native trees being planted around the woodland edge. These smaller trees will provide habitats for local wildlife and also direct windflow up and over the young oak and beech while they become established.
UN's Sustainable Development Goals
As a GreenTheUK partner, you support projects that are in line with the UN Sustainable Development Goals.
Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts.
Sustainably manage forests, combat desertification, halt and reverse land degradation, halt biodiversity loss.