HS2 Bill: Stop loss of ancient woodland, says Trust
Ahead of the Lords’ second reading of the HS2 Bill, the Woodland Trust makes its case for a series of amendments to save irreplaceable ancient woodland.
The Woodland Trust is calling for amendments to the HS2 Bill to ensure ‘every step’ is taken to prevent the unnecessary loss of ancient woodland, and set a template of best practice for future infrastructure provisions.
When HS2 Ltd first published its original environmental statement in November 2013, the company failed to identify all the ancient woodland that would be affected by the construction of the new high speed train line. In the time since, the Woodland Trust has identified an additional 14 ancient woodlands that will suffer direct loss. The total number of ancient woods to suffer direct loss now stands at 34. Another 29 will be indirectly impacted by noise pollution, lighting and dust.
“As HS2 is being presented as a green transport solution, it needs to show far more respect for our richest terrestrial habitat,” said James Cooper, Head of Government Affairs.
“A classic first step would have been, following best practice, to identify all the ancient woodland along the route before the publication of its original environmental statement, and then the route could have been designed differently.”
“I think it’s more about priority and rigour in methodology,” he added.
While it is now too late for major changes to the location of the route, Cooper hopes that in the context of its high political profile, these mistakes will be acknowledged as such, and that in the final stages of the Bill amendments such as tunnelling will be made to prevent further loss.
“There’s going to be a lot more infrastructure provision over the coming years,” said Cooper. “And HS2 is such a high profile infrastructure project that could set the template for others. It’s crucial to get it right this time.”
Among the measures that the Trust would like to see put in place, for this and future projects, is for companies to be held accountable for compiling a clear and transparent table showing each of the ancient woods that would suffer loss. Following that, clear reasoning as to why that loss cannot be avoided (if that is the case), and then a proposal for compensatory planting related to each loss, and how that compensation has been calculated.
He also stressed that the idea of fully compensating for the loss of ancient woodland should be removed from such calculations. HS2’s schemata involves a commitment to ‘no net loss’ of biodiversity, but given that ancient woodland is quintessentially irreplaceable - now covering only 2% of the UK - such a commitment is counterproductive.
“Ancient woods are the UK’s richest terrestrial habitat for wildlife and are home to more threatened species than any other. They represent the last fragments of the wildwood that once covered our country after the last ice age,” he said.
“You can’t replace ancient woodland, and it’s important that steps taken to compensate do give some sense of the magnitude of the loss - something in the region of a 30:1 hectare compensation rate. And this planting should be undertaken in the wider route corridor, and planted with a view to maximising biodiversity benefit and public benefit.”
Also on Cooper’s list of asks, is a commitment from HS2 that all ancient woodland will be treated equally. Currently the company makes a distinction between how Ancient Woodland and Planting on Ancient Woodland (ancient woodland sites that have been planted with conifers) is treated, but even planning guidance now recognises these two habitats as equal. The Trust will also ask for more tunnelling wherever possible to minimise unnecessary direct loss.
Perhaps most pertinent of all, Cooper insists that “the previous mistakes made in identifying ancient woodland must not be repeated in the subsequent phases of HS2.”
“If we’re looking at embarking on infrastructure projects on this scale,” he went on, “then there has to be robust accountability mechanisms put into place.
“HS2 certainly has a high political profile, and there’s a lot of focus on the financial costs. Our job is to draw attention to the environmental costs, to make sure that part of the argument is heard too.”
The Bill will go for a second reading in the Lords on Thursday where its principles will be debated, before entering the committee phase.
The Woodland Trust intends to appear before the Lords committee, and remains optimistic that the heritage of ancient woodlands will be given the respect in policy that it warrants.