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FROM THE COMMONS
Saving
our woodland
for future
generations
by QUENTIN DAVIES M
P |

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MOSTLY, I visit constituency-based organisations in my constituency
and see my constituents there on Fridays or over the weekend. But
sometimes, and I am always delighted, they come down to Westminster.
On Tuesday, Woodland Trust gave a reception in the House of Commons for
Parliamentarians. I was pleased and proud that colleagues at Westminster
had a chance to hear from the Trust directly of the good work they do.
The Woodland Trust, which is based at Grantham, is a non-profit making
organisation with 160,000 members and a budget of £21 million a year,
most of which is spent on planting trees, managing woodlands,
encouraging public access to wooded areas and providing information and
education campaigns in support of the environment. Their operations are
all over the country. Locally they have planted and manage 150 acres of
woodland in South Kesteven between Londonthorpe and Belton.
Among the Woodland Trust’s recent successes was the national Christmas
Card recycling scheme.
It proved to be a triple whammy for the environment. Ninety-four million
cards were recycled, and that’s a lot of trees in the world that didn’t
need to be cut down to provide paper for new cards. Secondly, it avoided
all those cards going into landfill, or generating carbon dioxide being
burnt. Thirdly, the scheme in one year made enough profit to pay for a
further 22,000 trees to be planted (that’s roughly 44 acres of new
woodland and therefore carbon absorption capacity for the future). If
they can do that every year, it will make a major difference.
A total of 130 people work in the trust’s headquarters. Those I met on
Tuesday, and those I have met before, are bright and motivated. They can
all hold their heads high doing a profoundly useful job.
We live in an overcrowded country. Many people see too little of nature,
and spend too much time indoors or breathing the polluted air of
inner-city streets.
Merely stating these facts doesn’t get anyone very far. Someone needs to
do something about it.
The Woodland Trust are doing just that. Well done – and keep up the good
work!
See more about
The Woodland Trust
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Quentin Davies has been the
Member of Parliament for the Grantham and Stamford constituency,
which includes Bourne, since 1997 (and for Stamford and Spalding
before that). In 1998, he received the Backbencher of the Year
award and is a former Shadow Secretary of State for Northern
Ireland. |
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