Trees give us beautiful landscapes and help the planet breathe by turning carbon dioxide into clean, pure oxygen. They also:
provide safe habitats for wildlife
help tackle climate change by storing carbon
create valuable green spaces that boost our health and wellbeing
stabilise soil and protect against wind damage
reduce surface water run-off and flooding
So what’s the problem?
Northern Ireland is one of the least wooded regions in Europe with only 9% of woodland cover. Lisburn & Castlereagh City Council area has the lowest levels of tree cover in Northern Ireland. Many of the trees in Northern Ireland are imported from overseas because there are very few local tree nurseries in Northern Ireland. Unfortunately, importing trees increases our carbon footprint and can introduce new pests and diseases to our already low numbers of trees in the area.
What we’re doing about it!
We launched the Lisburn and Castlereagh Journey to Sustainability in May 2022. A major element of this is The Big Tree Project, which will aim to address the significantly low amount of tree cover in the Lisburn Castlereagh area.
The Lisburn and Castlereagh Parks and Amenities Team has sown 75,000 native tree seeds to date and aims to produce a total of 250,000 native trees over the next 3 years. A significant number of trees produced will be planted within the beautiful parks and open spaces across the council area, but also in other unused areas too such as old closed landfill sites. The Parks and Amenities Team will also address supply chain issues by producing native trees that will be planted across Northern Ireland.
How you can help
There are many treemendous ways you can get involved!
Our Parks and Amenities Team has developed a native tree species nursery where you can help sow and maintain all of these new tree seedlings.
As a trained volunteer, you can help our teams remove invasive species from our woodland areas eg rhododendron and laurel. This will address biodiversity decline within fragmented habitats. It will also allow light to filter down onto the woodland floor and regenerate previous flora and fauna.
Finally we need people to help us identify and document ancient woodland within the Lisburn Castlereagh area so that it can be protected. Ancient woodland takes hundreds of years to establish and is important for wildlife, soils, carbon capture and storage, recreation, health and wellbeing.
We are committed to carrying out our activities and functions in a manner which minimises any potential negative environmental impact and also states the principles of sustainable development will be integrated throughout all council activities.
Our Tree & Woodland Strategy aims to support our commitment to combating climate change.
Within Northern Ireland, our area has the lowest levels of tree cover. With trees playing a vital role in tackling climate change and supporting wildlife, it is vital that tree cover is increased within our area.
This strategy will:
provide a framework to manage and maintain a healthy, balanced and sustainable tree population which can cope with predicted climactic changes and the impact of diseases, such as ash dieback
ensure the most efficient use of resources
decrease the risk to public safety from potentially hazardous trees
detail our specific policy on levels and standards of tree management
increase public awareness of the value of trees in the environment