Cabinet Member for Infrastructure and Environment Councillor Carolyn Renwick (front right) and Woodland Creation Adviser Iaian Stafford (front left) with members of the tree-planting team.
Derbyshire’s Heartwood Community Forest aims to make communities, farms and businesses more attractive and naturally diverse – enabling them to increase biodiversity and make their own contribution to tackling climate change. It will also benefit the wider environment and people’s health and wellbeing.
We’re leading this ambitious programme and grant scheme which will create a new forest of thousands of trees across eastern and southern Derbyshire and Derby bringing communities in more urban areas closer to nature.
The grants will support landowners by covering 100% of the costs for all aspects of woodland creation, and their ongoing maintenance for up to 15 years.
Between now and the end of the first planting season at the end of March, around 47,000 trees will be planted on 43 hectares of land across 17 sites, ranging from a major business park by the M1 to a canal side wharf in Pinxton and country parkland in Shipley, Grassmoor and Langwith.
A target of 130 hectares of land has been set for the next planting season starting in October 2025, and we want anyone with land suitable for tree planting, where it’s small or large, to get in touch.
Speaking at the site of last week’s tree planting scheme at Hepthorne Lane, near Grassmoor Country Park, Councillor Carolyn Renwick, our Member for Infrastructure and Environment, said:
“I’m delighted to join the team here in Grassmoor today during the first planting season for Derbyshire’s Heartwood Community Forest.
“We’ve set ourselves ambitious planting targets and while we’re off to a great start, we really need private landowners, farmers and communities with even the smallest parcels of land to come forward and find out more about our generous, hassle-free tree planting grants and support.
“Whether its people wanting to enhance their land, businesses looking to go green or communities who want to improve their green spaces, Derbyshire’s Heartwood Community Forest is an opportunity for landowners of all kinds to improve the natural environment and help tackle climate change.”
You can find full details about the initiative on the Derbyshire Heartwood Community Forest page. It supports our Million Trees ambition to help facilitate the planting of a million trees across Derbyshire by 2030.
Derbyshire’s Heartwood Community Forest is funded by the England's Community Forests Trees for Climate Fund, supported by Defra.
If you want to introduce more greenery to a public space, add shade to a park or grow trees in your school grounds, join our free webinar on Tuesday 25 February from 6-7pm and find out more.