Article 4FT7V What ‘rewilding’ really means for forestry and heather moorland | Letters

What ‘rewilding’ really means for forestry and heather moorland | Letters

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Plantations are an excellent way to combat climate breakdown, writes Andrew Weatherall, of the National School of Forestry. And Rachel Kerr says heather moorland is rarer than rainforest and the underlying peat is more effective at carbon storage than trees

The Forestry Commission was established 100 years ago to create a "strategic reserve of timber" after Lloyd George stated "Britain had more nearly lost the war for want of timber than of anything else". The UK is 50% self-sufficient in food, but only 20% self-sufficient in wood, so we still want timber more than anything else.

Any call to redirect subsidies to restore woodlands is welcome (Use farm subsidies to rewild quarter of UK, urges report, 21 May). The Rewilding Britain report states: "Commercial conifer plantations should not be eligible, except where they are removed and replaced with native woodland." This approach is understandable if the aim is to increase habitat for wildlife. However, plantations are an excellent way to combat climate breakdown, because the growing trees sequester carbon and the forests store it, just like in more natural woodlands, but harvested wood products also provide a carbon substitution effect when used instead of concrete or steel.

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