Lancashire County Council, Blackburn with Darwen and Blackpool councils have jointly received an offer of £300,000 in funding from the government’s Woodland Creation Accelerator Fund to kickstart tree planting activity, create new green jobs and boost woodland cover.  

The Woodland Creation Accelerator Fund has offered a share of £9.8 million in funding to 57 local authorities across England to drive tree planting and woodland creation activity at a local level.

A collaborative project between Lancashire County Council, Blackburn with Darwen Borough Council and Blackpool Council will receive £300,000 to plant trees and create woodlands.

Alongside the Woodland Trust, Groundwork Trust, Ribble Rivers Trust and Lancashire Wildlife Trust, the project will work directly with district councils in the area to identify the optimal sites for planting, especially in urban and peri-urban locations.

Lancashire, Blackpool and Blackburn with Darwen jointly have the ninth lowest woodland coverage in the country. This much-needed grant will fund four new posts to oversee:

  • Planting of 70ha of rural woodlands and a further 10,000 urban and peri-urban trees in 2023/24
  • Planting of 100ha of rural woodlands and a further 20,000 urban and peri-urban trees in 2024/25

Lancashire County Council's cabinet member for environment and climate change, Councillor Shaun Turner, said: "This is tremendous news.

"Our area is one of the lowest for woodland coverage and this grant will help us to address this crucial issue.

"The new Treescape officers will help us to access funding streams to create 170ha of rural woodland and plant an additional 30,000 trees in urban and peri-urban areas.

"Not only will the extra trees help to capture almost one hundred thousand tonnes of CO2, they will improve flood protection, biodiversity and air quality.

"They will also provide people with more opportunity to improve their physical and mental wellbeing."

Cllr Jim Smith, environment boss at Blackburn with Darwen Council, said: “We are delighted to be partnering with Lancashire County Council and Blackpool Council to inject new greenery into our local environment.

“This funding will provide the necessary resource to help us plant more trees across the borough, continuing towards our aim of being carbon neutral by 2030 as part of the Council’s Climate Action Plan.”

Richard Stanford, chief executive of the Forestry Commission, added: “Local authorities have set out a range of inspiring and ambitious plans which equate to more than 10 million trees being planted on public land across England by 2025.

“The Woodland Creation Accelerator Fund will provide the support and resource needed to turn these aspirations into results, marking a significant step forward in our collective efforts to treble planting rates in England.

“Growing both our treescapes and the forestry sector workforce through this fund demonstrates how protecting and restoring our natural world with trees can unlock environmental, economic and social benefits for everyone.” 

More than two thirds of upper tier local authorities in England applied for the Woodland Creation Accelerator Fund, representing a blend of urban, mixed, and rural applications.

Planting will take place across the country, in both deprived areas with lower tree cover, as well as through ambitious schemes expanding existing woodlands in rural settings.

Since the fund’s launch in June, an additional £2m has been made available through the Government’s £750m Nature for Climate Fund in response to the high level of interest in the grant, the quality of proposals submitted and the recognised need for support.