Call to plant more trees in South Tyneside

Woodland cover in South Tyneside could increase by the equivalent of 35 football pitches if the Government and councils worked together to boost tree planting, environmental campaigners claim.
Environment group calls for more treesEnvironment group calls for more trees
Environment group calls for more trees

Friends of the Earth is calling on the Government to mark National Tree Week by setting ambitious tree growing targets.

The organisation mapped all existing and potential woodland in England and found that there are 18 hectares of land in South Tyneside which could be used for planting trees, without encroaching on high-value arable farmland and protected nature sites.

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This would increase the amount of woodland in the area by 8%, not including trees in urban areas such as parks and public gardens.

Only three per cent of South Tyneside’s 6,707 hectares of land are covered in woodland – much of it low grade pasture – and the environmental group the Government should support farmers to grow trees on this sort of land.

Danny Gross, tree campaigner at Friends of the Earth, said: “We're calling on Forestry Minister Zac Goldsmith to mark National Tree Week by setting an ambitious target to boost tree cover in England.

“Growing more trees would help us fight climate breakdown while enabling more people to access nature in their local area. It’s time ministers offer more funding for climate action at a local level.”

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A spokesman for Defra said: “Tree planting remains at the heart of our ambitious environmental programme which is why we have committed to increase tree planting across the UK to 30,000 hectares per year by 2025.”