A Woodland Fund established by HS2 and administered by the Forestry Commission is supporting new woodland creation and Plantations on Ancient Woodland Sites (PAWS) restoration projects around the Phase One route between London and the West Midlands.
The £5 million fund has already allocated a total of £1.75 million across 35 schemes. This has resulted in the restoration of over 66 hectares of ancient woodland – including the planting of over 110,000 trees – and over 130 hectares of new native woodland, with around 220,000 trees planted.
The fund provides support for landowners in an area within 25 miles of the Phase One route. This is in addition to HS2’s existing environmental programme to plant seven million trees and create over 33 square kilometres of wildlife habitat.
HS2 biodiversity policy specialist James Hicks said: “We’re designing HS2 to be a railway that respects the natural environment by conserving, replacing and enhancing wildlife habitats with a new ‘green corridor’ along the route. This will create a network of bigger, better-connected, climate resilient habitats and new green spaces for people and wildlife to enjoy in the future.
“Over and above our required mitigation, our HS2 Woodland Fund provides important additional financial support for areas near the route to help compensate for unavoidable impacts to ancient woodlands.”
The HS2 Woodland Fund on Phase One provides funding to restore and maintain PAWS sites, including restocking with native trees and shrubs, and associated items including fencing, gates and natural flood management items. It also provides funding for creating, protecting and maintaining new native woodland through the England Woodland Creation Offer – part of a suite of Forestry Commission initiatives to support woodland creation and tree planting across England.
West Wycombe Estate in Buckinghamshire is one of the projects which has received funding to restore one of their ancient woodland sites and is now seeing the benefits. Over 15,000 native trees were planted on a site that is very well used by the public, which was previously planted with non-native Japanese Larch that had suffered from damage by squirrels.
David Hunt, forest manager at West Wycombe Estate, said: “With the funding available from HS2, it made it an obvious choice for us to opt for going back to restore native ancient woodland on the estate.
“The benefits of planting woodland on ancient sites are really wildlife conservation, biodiversity and landscape as opposed to commercial woodlands. The funding from HS2 has been really important for us, and anyone interested in this woodland can see the benefits of going back to native tree planting.”
HS2 is working to extend the Woodland Fund for Phase 2a with an additional £2 million of funding available. A £1 million HS2 Woodland Fund that was announced for Phase 2b in January 2023 will be launched following Royal Assent.
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