TV’s Sandi Toksvig and Clive Anderson join a Grantham-based charity’s
calls for people power in wake of repeated government failings on urgent tree
planting to tackle climate change.
The Woodland Trust is launching the UK’s largest mass tree planting campaign –
urging the public to pick up their spades and take action on climate change.
The Big Climate Fightback aims to get more than a million people to pledge to plant a
tree on the run up to a mass day of planting across the UK on November
30.
The action has been sparked after the charity had to yet again call out the Government for failing to meet its annual tree planting commitments. In England just 1,420 hectares of woodland was created against the Government aspirational target of 5,000 per year.
This is despite its own Committee for Climate Change calling for dramatic increases to stand any chance of achieving net zero emissions by 2050.
It will require a three-fold increase in current woodland creation levels.
The Bake Off’s Sandi Toksvig and TV presenter Clive Anderson are among the charity’s ambassadors lending their support to get people on board in pledging and planting .
Darren Moorcroft, Chief Executive at the Woodland Trust said the campaign was in response to calls from the public to be given a practical way to tackle the UK’s tree planting crisis: “Most people are aware of the race against time in terms of climate change and planting trees being part of the solution – they absorb harmful CO2 and produce vital oxygen.
“But we are not
planting anywhere near enough.
“The Big Climate Fightback is about inspiring people of all ages and
backgrounds and providing the chance to take
direct action – they have to simply go to our website and
pledge to plant a tree, whether it’s in their back yard, neighbourhood, school
or at a nearby planting event. It’s an easy way
for people to do their individual bit for climate change as
part of a mass movement.”
However the
charity is mindful of not confusing the message that trees are a ‘solve all‘ to
the climate crisis.
He continued: “Established in 1972 we’re long standing advocates of the
need for trees and this message is resonating with the public now more than
ever before.
“But we’re mindful too that the message of trees as a solution should not be confused as the sole answer to our climate crisis. As individuals we all need to do more, much more, to reduce our impact on the planet by cutting emissions and reducing pressure on resources “
Bake Off’s Sandi Toksvig, a television broadcaster, producer and writer urged people to pledge to plant.
She said: “Climate change is a real threat and it affects us all. But there is the simplest of all solutions. It’s green and lovely – the humble tree. It eats CO2 for breakfast and makes all our lives better. And what’s more we can all do our bit to take action now and plant one.
“I will be
pledging to plant a tree in the Woodland Trust’s Big Climate Fightback and I
urge people to get off their sofas (when they’ve watched their recording of
Bake Off of course) and plant a tree. It’s very simple and you could be one in
a million.”
Clive Anderson, television and radio presenter and president of the Woodland Trust, said: “Global warming isn’t something that might happen sometime in the future: it’s happening already. And we need to do something about it.
“Because
technology created the problem, it’s often argued humanity can look to
technology to deal with the threat of climate change. Surely, we can design a
clever bit of kit or build some sort of machine to remove CO2 from the
atmosphere and store carbon out of harm’s way? Maybe, but of
course that device already exists. It’s called a tree.
“Though to make a difference we need an awful lot of them – 1.5 billion trees, according to the Government’s Climate Change Committee, if we want to help the UK reach ‘net zero’ by 2050.
“So, let’s make this year the year we make a real difference. I’ll be doing my bit and I hope you’ll all be planting too.”
The Woodland
Trust will be hosting planting days across the UK on November 30 – the focal
event will be the Young People’s Forest in Mead, near Heanor in Derbyshire.
The charity is bidding to plant a tree for every person in the UK by 2025. All
the trees provided by the Woodland Trust will be UK sourced and grown native
broadleaf varieties such as oak, birch and hawthorn.
There are lots
of opportunities for tree planting in Grantham. Many of the roads named ‘Avenue’
hardly have a tree in them.
Ways to get involved in the Big Climate Fightback:
– People who work with young people are urged to inspire them to get involved
and plant trees.
– Businesses are urged to inspire employees to get involved.
– Communities can influence landowners like local authorities to let them plant
trees.
– The public can attend planting events hosted by The Woodland Trust and its
partners.
– Everyone can use their networks and social media channels to spread the word
– #EveryTreeCounts
For more information and to pledge to plant a tree visit: www.woodlandtrust.org.uk/bigclimatefightback
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