CAN BE
ALTERNATIVE
INVESTMENT

Opening date 1 Aug 2022, 12:01AM
Closing date 31 Aug 2024, 11:59PM
If you join the tree health pilot scheme, you’ll get a grant to help pay back some of the costs of carrying out work, for example, to remove and replace diseased trees. The scheme covers trees both in woodlands and outside of woodlands, depending on the grant you apply for.
The Forestry Commission may change, add or remove tree types or pests and diseases, grants or rates of payment, throughout the duration of the pilot. Your grant agreement will not be affected by changes the Forestry Commission makes to the pilot after you’ve signed it.
If you’re applying for trees in a woodland, the group of trees you’re applying for must:
cover at least 0.5 hectares
be at least 5 metres high, or will grow to this height
have a crown cover of more than 20% of the ground area
Trees outside of woodlands are any trees or small woods which cover an area of less than 0.5 hectares. For example, trees in hedgerows, along a road or in parks.
This grant supports a facilitator bringing together a group of people, to better understand the risks and hazards of oak processionary moth on their trees in the Established Area (see the map of the Established Area within London and the South East).
The facilitator will get financial support and advice to create a group OPM management plan. The plan will set out site-specific actions for individual group members and also area-based actions for the whole group.
If you would like to request a copy of the OPM management plan, email: thpilotenquiries@forestrycommission.gov.uk
Groups will also be supported by the Forestry Commission-run OPM workshops. Group members can learn from specialists and ask questions about how to manage oak trees with OPM and the risks they pose.
To apply for this grant you will need to:
be part of a group
make one group application
have oak trees in the Established Area that may be affected by OPM
You can apply for a grant to pay back the costs of:
your time spent acting as a facilitator for the group (for example, forming the group, creating the group’s OPM management plan, organising tree surveying)
hiring contractors to survey the group’s oak trees to identify OPM
You can only apply for these grants as part of a group application. Grants apply to roadside ash with ash dieback in and outside of woodlands.
There are no grants for felling ash with ash dieback. There are grants available to help with other costs associated with felling roadside ash, such as road closure costs.
If you need to fell ash trees, you’ll need to get a felling licence, unless the Forestry Commission confirms the ash trees are dangerous and exempt. Read about managing ash trees affected by ash dieback.
If you need to improve access to trees as you carry out work, you can apply for a road closure grant to pay for road closure costs. You’ll need to contact your local council to find out how road closures work and how much they cost in your area.
Funding for ash trees in and outside of woodlands
You can apply for grants to pay back the costs of:
a European protected species site survey to plan how to fell and restock without causing harm or disturbing protected species (if you cannot avoid disturbing protected species, you’ll need a licence from Natural England)
road closures while you fell your infected ash trees
a facilitator’s time to manage a group application
restocking and capital items to replace the trees with different tree species that are more likely to withstand pests, diseases and climate change, including items to protect them (for example, fencing and netting)
maintenance, if you’ve applied for a restocking grant (this is paid at the end of your agreement year for 3 years, to help establish new trees)
You can apply as an individual or as a group for grants for larch trees with Phytophthora ramorum in woodlands (more than 0.5ha).
If you own a group of larch trees (less than 0.5ha) infected with Phytophthora ramorum, you can apply as part of a group application. The total area of the larch trees in the group must be 0.5ha or larger.
Grants for individuals will pay back the costs of:
infrastructure and access aids to improve access to your woodlands - for example, a temporary road surface so you can remove felled trees
felling, for infected larch trees where you cannot sell the timber or recover your costs from selling it (you can only apply for this either with an infrastructure and access aids grant or if your trees are over the age of 25, or both)
chemically killing the infected larch trees, if advised by the Forestry Commission
biosecurity items, to prevent the spread of pests and diseases
rhododendron clearance
You cannot get a restocking or capital items grant as part of an individual application for larch trees with Phytophthora ramorum in this pilot. You can apply for these grants through the Countryside Stewardship woodland tree health grant.
Grants for groups will pay back the same costs as the grants for individuals and:
felling, for infected larch trees where you cannot sell the timber or recover your costs from selling it (including for larch under the age of 25)
restocking and capital items to replace the trees with different tree species that are more likely to withstand pests, diseases and climate change, including items to protect them (for example, fencing and netting)
maintenance, if you’ve applied for a restocking grant. This is paid at the end of your agreement year for 3 years to help establish new trees
facilitation fees, for someone to manage the application on behalf of the group
You can apply as an individual or a group for these grants. Grants apply to spruce with, or at risk of, eight-toothed spruce bark beetle in and outside of woodlands.
To apply, you’ll either:
already have an infestation of eight-toothed spruce bark beetle (you’ll have an SPHN which confirms this)
own or manage spruce trees or woodlands in an area at risk of infestation, known as the ‘demarcated area’ (you can check if your trees or woodlands are located in the demarcated area)
You can get these grants to pay back the costs of:
felling trees (if you cannot sell the timber or recover your costs if you can sell it)
infrastructure and access aids to improve access to your trees, for example, a temporary road surface so you can remove felled trees
restocking and capital items to replace the trees with different tree species that are more likely to withstand pests, diseases and climate change, including items to protect them (for example, fencing and netting)
maintenance, if you’ve applied for a restocking grant. This is paid at the end of your agreement year for 3 years to help establish new trees
facilitation fees, for someone to manage the application for your group
You can apply as an individual or as a group for these grants. Grants apply to sweet chestnut trees with Phytophthora ramorum or sweet chestnut blight in and outside of woodlands.
Individual grants will pay back the costs of:
felling trees (if you cannot sell the timber or recover your costs if you can sell it)
chemical killing of trees with Phytophthora ramorum, if advised by the Forestry Commission
infrastructure and access aids to improve access to your trees - for example, a temporary road surface so you can remove felled trees
biosecurity items to prevent the spread of pests and diseases
While you cannot get a restocking or capital items grant for individual applications as part of this pilot, you can apply for grants through the Countryside Stewardship woodland tree health grant.
Group grants will pay for everything that individual grants cover and:
restocking and capital items to replace the trees with different tree species that are more likely to withstand pests, diseases and climate change, including items to protect them (for example, fencing and netting)
maintenance, if you’ve applied for a restocking grant (it’s paid at the end of your agreement year for 3 years to help establish new trees)
You can apply for individual or group grants to pay back the costs of:
felling trees (if you cannot sell the timber or recover your costs if you can sell it)
chemical killing of trees with Phytophthora ramorum, if advised by the Forestry Commission
infrastructure and access aids, to improve access to your trees, for example a temporary road surface so you can remove felled trees
biosecurity items, to prevent the spread of pests and diseases
restocking and capital items to replace the trees with different species that are more likely to withstand pests, diseases and climate change, including items to protect them (for example, fencing and netting)
maintenance, if you’ve applied for a restocking grant (it’s paid at the end of your agreement year for 3 years to help establish new trees)
facilitation fees, for someone to manage a group application
The Tree Health Pilot SPHN advice and support package is a fixed, standard cost package of £475.00.
The Tree Health Pilot SPHN advice and support package includes:
Funding for an agent consultation (x4 hours). The agent must meet the requirements as stipulated in the Tree Health Pilot scheme manual.
Funding to complete a biosecurity management plan (included in cost of agent consultation)
Biosecurity training (FC webinars)
Funding to purchase a personal biosecurity kit, including the following items:
Long-handled, stiff bristled brush
Boot pick
Container/bucket big enough to fit a boot in
Cleankill (disinfectant)
Water container (2-5 litres)
FC signage for biosecurity
The tree health pilot scheme is for people in certain regions of England who manage specific trees or woodlands infected by specific pests and diseases.
You can apply as an individual or on behalf of other people for a group grant (for example, if you’re from a local council, a charity or you’re a land agent).
You’ll usually be invited to take part in the pilot because you’ve been contacted by a Forestry Commission woodland officer. This will be because you have a specific tree, pest or disease on your land. For example, you might have been given a Statutory Plant Health Notice (SPHN) for trees infected by one of the specified pests or diseases.
If you’ve not been contacted by a Forestry Commission woodland officer and you read this guidance and think you’re eligible, you can express your interest to take part in the scheme.
If you are applying as an individual to take part in the tree health pilot scheme, you must be a:
landowner
occupier
tenant
landlord
licensor
To take part in the pilot scheme, the trees or woodlands you, or your group (if relevant), manage must have one or more of the following:
oak with oak processionary moth (OPM) in the Established Area (see
map of the Established Area) within London and the South East)
ash with ash dieback
larch with Phytophthora ramorum
spruce growing in the high-risk eight-toothed spruce bark beetle (Ips typographus) area (see map of demarcated area)
sweet chestnut with Phytophthora ramorum or sweet chestnut blight
The trees or woodlands you manage must be based in one of the following regions of England:
North West
West Midlands
South East and London
Priority may be given to applications within:
the eight-toothed spruce bark beetle (Ips typographus) demarcated area
the OPM established area
specific areas of outstanding natural beauty (Arnside and Silverdale, Malvern hills, Shropshire hills, and all of the Lake District National Park)
If you’re not sure which region your trees or woodlands are located in, check the Area and Woodland Officer boundaries map.
To be eligible for the Tree Health Pilot SPHN advice and support package the applicant must:
hold a current and valid Statutory Plant Health Notice (SPHN) for one of the following:
Larch with Phytophthora ramorum
Sweet chestnut with Phytophthora ramorum
Sweet chestnut with sweet chestnut blight
Spruce with eight-toothed spruce bark beetle (Ips typographus)
for trees in one of the following regions of England:
North West
West Midlands
South East and London
The applicant must submit their application for grant funding no later than two months prior to the compliance date stated on their SPHN.
If you already get funding from other agri-environment or woodland schemes, you can still take part in the tree health pilot scheme. The activities for the pilot must be different to the activities you’re already getting funding for. You cannot get paid twice for the same work or activities.
Do not spend money on any pilot activities before you have signed a grant agreement. If you do the work before the agreement is signed, you will lose the opportunity to get a grant.
The main objectives of the Tree Health Pilot are to successfully expand the existing CS Woodland TH grant, to gather vital knowledge to support a full launch in 2024, and to ultimately increase funding accessibility to as many types of trees, land, and woodland owners/managers as possible. By helping eradicate and manage pests and disease, thriving treescapes can provide a range of environmental and economic benefits to us all. The THP is designed to help bolster the health and sustainability of our trees, woodlands and forests and support those who manage these important areas.
The three-year pilot is being launched in preparation for the roll out of the new Tree Health Scheme in 2024. The pilot will build on three-years’ worth of co-design with end-users, and test and refine novel elements of the full scheme. It will do this by:
Piloting the interventions and assumptions generated from previous co-design in the ‘real world’ through grants, advice, and guidance
Evaluating the success of these policy interventions through a monitoring and evaluation framework that will feed into the design of the full scheme
The pilot will be testing two main interventions:
Felling and treatment to slow the spread of pests and diseases and protect the wider treescape (expanding and building on the scope of the CS Woodland TH Improvement offers)
Restocking for resilience to enable treescape recovery (expanding and building on the scope of the CS Woodland TH Restoration offers)
The Pilot runs from August 2021 to August 2024.
The Forestry Commission will contact you within 2 to 6 weeks of receiving your completed application form. This is to tell you whether your application was successful and the amount of funding you can claim.
If your application is successful, the Forestry Commission will send you an agreement offer and enclose a declaration. You must sign and return the grant offer and terms and conditions by email or post by the date requested, to accept the grant offer.
If you want to take part in the tree health pilot scheme and think you’re eligible, you first need to fill in the expression of interest form:
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/tree-health-pilot-scheme-expression-of-interest-form
Based on the initial assessment and site visit, the Forestry Commission will advise you whether or not you should submit a full application.
If you want to make a full application for the tree health pilot, after your initial assessment and site visit, you can request an application form to fill in. To request a form, or for more information about how to apply, email: thpilotenquiries@forestrycommission.gov.uk
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