Climate change
Climate change
Our message is clear: native woods and trees are one of the best ways to tackle the climate crisis. Explore the facts and find out what you can do to help.
Trees help fight climate change, save wildlife and improve our health. We all need trees.
Trees are our lungs. Trees are our guardians. Trees are our health service and wildlife champions.
We desperately need trees, yet after centuries of damage and deforestation, just 13% of our land area is forested.
This has to change, and it has to change now. The UK must plant 1.5 million hectares of additional woodland by 2050 to meet its carbon neutral target - if we miss that target, the impact could be irreversible.
of UK tree cover is ancient woodland
of woodland wildlife species in decline
of our land area is forested
Climate change, wildlife loss and pollution are very real threats and are already affecting the UK. Trees are part of the solution – a wildlife super habitat and climate superhero that can help us to save nature, people and our planet.
Trees don’t just mitigate carbon, removing it from the atmosphere, they also sequester it – absorbing carbon dioxide during photosynthesis and then locking it up for centuries. Much of this carbon is stored in the leaves, which transfer it to the woodland soil when they fall from the tree and rot down.
Trees near waterbodies can also be useful flood defences in an age where climate change is increasing flooding. Trees massively reduce the amount of rainwater entering watercourses, which in turn lowers the likelihood of a river bursting its banks and flooding low-lying areas.
Climate change
Our message is clear: native woods and trees are one of the best ways to tackle the climate crisis. Explore the facts and find out what you can do to help.
Trees woods and wildlife
Trees and woods play a vital role in reducing flooding by slowing down the flow of rainwater, absorbing rainwater, and reducing erosion.
Trees woods and wildlife
Trees are one of the best natural climate change solutions. Find out how they lock up carbon and how many the UK needs to reach carbon net zero by 2050.
Climate change isn’t the only crisis we’re facing. We’re also living through a biodiversity crisis. Moths, birds, bats, dormice, butterflies, fungi – they all depend on woods, trees and hedges to feed, breed and thrive. But with 53% of our woodland wildlife species in decline, and woodland butterflies in particular plummeting by 58% since 1990, the figures speak for themselves.
Trees woods and wildlife
Woodland is home to a wealth of wildlife. If we don't protect what we have left and plant trees for the future, we'll lose more than just trees.
Trees woods and wildlife
Our fantastic oaks support more life than any other UK native tree. Discover which species live and feed on oak, from foxes and fungi to bats and beetles.
Blog
James Martin • 16 Aug 2018
Trees boost our physical and mental health in so many ways. As well as keeping our atmosphere rich in oxygen, they filter pollutants from the air, shade our streets when it’s hot and even improve our immunity. Research has shown that chemicals called phytoncides, released by plants and trees, strengthen our immune, hormonal, circulatory and nervous systems when we breathe them in.
Trees also improve our quality of life - offering relief from the symptoms of anxiety and depression.
Trees woods and wildlife
Along with improving our quality of life, woods and green spaces can help make us physically and mentally healthier.
Visiting woods
With more than 2,000 woods to discover, there’s an adventure to be found near you.
Visiting woods
Taking a walk in the woods is the easiest way to enjoy the outdoors and get closer to nature.
Trees and farming go hand in hand. Trees shelter livestock from our increasingly wild weather and offer them shady spots for respite from heatwaves. Trees also improve soil health and prevent soil erosion, with those along or near watercourses helping to protect waterbodies (and their wildlife) from the pollution in farm run-off.
Plant trees
Integrating trees in arable crops and livestock systems makes agroforestry a win-win for sustainable food production and the natural environment.
Plant trees
If you’re looking to plant trees, we have the trees, grants and funding schemes to help.
Plant trees
Find out how river woodland planting can increase river health, help prevent flooding and boost biodiversity.
Trees can reduce both outdoor and indoor pollution by an incredible 50%. With urban communities disproportionately affected by pollution-related sickness and deaths, incorporating more trees and woods into urban areas is absolutely crucial.
Trees woods and wildlife
Street trees and local woods add colour, life and pollution protection to towns and cities. Find out more about them and what urban wildlife they support.
Protecting trees and woods
They green our cities. They clean our air. They fight the effects of climate. They even increase property values. Find out what they do for people, wildlife and the economy.
Trees woods and wildlife
Air pollution can have a serious impact on our health, global climate and biodiversity, but trees can help.
With climate change already affecting the UK, wildlife disappearing at a terrifying rate, and more of us struggling to access green space than ever before, the UK needs more trees. But how do we do it?
We may only be left with a fraction of the woodland that once covered the UK, but we can't forget about it. We must protect our existing trees and precious pockets of ancient woodland.
Many of our woods are damaged, neglected and mistreated, but all isn't lost. With the right restoration, we can bring them back from the brink and help them to thrive once more.
Alongside restoring existing woods, planting new trees to increase woodland cover and encouraging trees to regenerate on their own will bring crucial benefits for wildlife, people and our landscape.
Trees are one of the best ways to tackle the climate crisis, support nature and create a healthy, happy society. To do that, we need a bold vision - to increase tree cover and transform our existing woods by 2030.
Our vision is optimistic: a world where woods and trees thrive for people and nature. Find out how we plan to achieve this over the next decade.
Explore our goalsAbout us
We fight to protect woods and trees, preventing the loss of irreplaceable habitat, nature and carbon stores for a healthier future for everyone.
About us
We bring damaged ancient woods back to life, restoring irreplaceable ecosystems to improve landscape resilience so that nature and people can thrive.
About us
We create wildlife-rich woods and plant native trees to benefit nature, climate and people now and in the future.