Sustainability

Morgan Sindall and Blenheim Estate create new forests

Published by
Nicky Godding

In partnership with Morgan Sindall Group, Blenheim Palace is creating nine new woodlands, planting more than a quarter of a million trees to transform the land as part of an ambitious series of sustainability initiatives.

The project will be delivered in conjunction with Grown In Britain, an independent not-for-profit that the Morgan Sindall Group helped set up in 2011, focusing on revitalising and investing in woodlands and certifying British wood products.

Chief Executive John Morgan.“This exciting project is about more than our quest to achieve net zero – though that remains our very valid goal. This is about creating a legacy with an environmental net gain and the creation of substantial natural capital, across the board.

“Our woodlands will provide measurable, demonstrable gains in terms of soil, air and water quality, not to mention the wellbeing benefits for all those who can come and enjoy the forest as it grows.”

Estates Director Roy Cox said: “One of our strategic aims in the next five years is to not only offset our own carbon to be net zero, but also to help others do the same.

“This partnership with Morgan Sindall is a first for us and is incredibly exciting in terms of both scale and what it will deliver in improving our estate, the environment and surrounding communities,’’ he added.

Though forests offer numerous benefits – including absorbing and storing carbon from the atmosphere, regulating temperature and cleaning the air, the UK is one of the least wooded areas of Europe, with less than 12% woodland cover compared to around 44% for Europe.

Morgan Sindall will help fund, design and create the woodlands, in collaboration with Cotswolds-based forestry company, Nicholsons.

The woods will incorporate 28 carefully selected varieties of trees – including Hornbeam, Lime, Sycamore, Wild Cherry, Oak, Norway Maple, Alder and Beech in the mixed woodlands with an understorey of woody shrub species including Hazel, Hawthorn, Viburnums, Euonymus and Dogwoods to create a diverse and self-sustaining eco-system. Experimental species will also be included to assess climate resilience and a small percentage of conifer planted to provide winter habitats for wildlife.

The project has been welcomed by Oxford University’s Professor of Biodiversity, Kathy Willis, principal of St Edmund Hall, said: “This project demonstrates an understanding of the need for considered, long-term thinking around our woodlands and an appreciation of the crucial role they play in creating spaces that contribute to creating natural capital and enhancing human wellbeing,” she said.

This project, funded by Morgan Sindall, represents the first scheme planted under the Forest Canopy Foundation (FCF) – a not-for-profit collaboration of private sector forestry companies who have joined forces under the Foundation’s umbrella to demonstrate technical rigour and quality in woodland creation.

Partnering with Grown in Britain for independent auditing of both expert providers and woodland schemes, the collaboration measures all-natural capital assets – such as cleaner water, air and richer soil - seeking to share and deepen understanding of the worth of woodland creation.

Liz Nicholson, of the FCF, suggested that Morgan Sindall’s investment was pioneering and would blaze a trail for others to follow. The Foundation is working on valuing natural capital to enable companies to invest in environmental projects in a measurable way, developing mechanisms to report ESG investment at board level.

Nicky Godding

Nicky Godding is editor of The Business Magazine. Before her journalism career, she worked mainly in public relations moving into writing when she was invited to launch Retail Watch, a publication covering retail and real estate across Europe. After some years of constant travelling, she tucked away her passport and concentrated on business writing, co-founding a successful regional business magazine. She has interviewed some of the UK’s most successful entrepreneurs who have built multi-million-pound businesses and reported on many science and technology firsts. She reports on the region’s thriving business economy from start-ups, family businesses and multi-million-pound corporations, to the professionals that support their growth and the institutions that educate the next generation of business leaders.

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