Forestry & Timber News October 2021

Page 37

ENVIRONMENT AND CLIMATE CHANGE

What gets measured gets managed Tom Astor describes Gresham House’s inaugural Natural Capital audit of the investment firm’s portfolio of forest properties.

T

he role that ecosystem services and natural capital play within society is increasingly being recognised. That is not to say it is just being discovered – there is little new wisdom within this paradigm. However, the benefits arising from these assets and services, and the costs from losing them, is becoming apparent to a widening segment of the population, along with the role that private investment can play in addressing this historic market failure. Whilst the list of ecosystem services is long and varied, those which address carbon dioxide and biodiversity sit firmly at the top as the most pressing. Woodlands can provide many of these services, with carbon services more prominent in woodlands producing timber and biodiversity benefits felt to a greater extent in amenity woodlands. The carbon sequestration aspect from woodlands is relatively straightforward to assess and quantify, but beyond adhering to or exceeding the UK Forestry Standard (UKFS) guidelines, the outcome for biodiversity is more opaque. Regardless of the primary function of the woodland, the UKFS states that the structure should “manage a minimum of 15% of the forest

management unit with conservation and the enhancement of biodiversity as a major objective”. It was in the first UK Woodland Assurance Standard in 1999 so this is not a new concept, but deeply engrained within woodland management. The extent to which this structure achieves its objective, and how this is measured, is less clear.

This summer we conducted a natural capital audit of each property managed by Gresham House across the portfolio of 327 forests. This took the form of a questionnaire which was circulated to the woodland managers to complete. Six specific sections were addressed: • Property designations or certifications • Habitat indicators • Broadleaf condition • Peat condition • Public access • Invasive species.

portion of these properties are dedicated to biodiversity, and the growing interest in its value, it was decided to conduct an inaugural assessment. Anecdotally, there were numerous examples of valuable natural capital features from differing sources, but these had never been explicitly investigated and catalogued. This audit was designed to provide us with a baseline for each woodland and ultimately an overview across all our managed properties. This will provide a valuable ecological database, including a selection of species, whose presence can be used to indicate which habitats are present. In line with the mantra “what gets measured gets managed”, this data can put us in a stronger position to support the current natural capital benefits of our woodlands. More importantly, it provides a starting point to demonstrably improve them further.

Why we did it

What next

Timber production has historically been the main focal point of our properties, without the ecological value of productive woodlands having been called in to question in the past. Given that a significant

It is particularly helpful to remember that whilst these results are a snapshot of individual properties, combined they cover the spectrum of the planting era from the middle of last century to recently planted woodlands. This selection of first, second or third rotation woodlands with areas of new planting, restocking, midrotation and mature crops provide a valuable insight as to how woodlands mature and the flora and fauna that colonise them. Having a baseline picture of these properties from a natural capital perspective allows us to consider what is lacking, what can be improved and what requires protecting. Following these “whats” are the “whys”; the arising questions that then must be asked lead us to the “hows”, ultimately presenting opportunities to improve the areas identified. This audit will be repeated annually, refining the baseline study to improve the methodologies and sections to focus on. Ultimately, we will improve our understanding of the ecological state of our productive woodlands and which areas require extra attention and improvement. We will also be able to provide the data to support this and enable positive change. These lessons will allow us to not only improve the way we plan and plant new multifunctional woodlands, providing high quality timber and further natural capital benefits, but also transition existing properties, planted in an era with different objectives, to meet future requirements.

What we’ve done

Giant Woodwasp - Urocerus gigas. An indicator of a healthy deadwood habitat. Photograph taken by a Gresham House employee.

CONFOR.ORG.UK

FORESTRY & TIMBER NEWS • October 2021 37


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Articles inside

Suzuki Ignis

7min
pages 66-68

Timber supplies and the butterfly effect

2min
pages 64-65

Timber loading in summer 1915

2min
pages 62-63

Windfarm clawbacks

3min
pages 41-42

What gets measured gets managed

3min
page 37

Going Green: Unlocking valuable renewable chemicals from the by-products of forestry

7min
pages 38-40

Alternative harvester brands

9min
pages 53-57

Managing woodlands for resilience

5min
pages 34-36

Going the extra mile for sustainability

3min
page 33

A quality future for biomass

5min
pages 30-32

Climate change to feature in ‘Tree Oscars’

4min
page 23

Harnessing the power of data to boost tree planting

6min
pages 16-18

Kickstart of 25-year Norway spruce provenance planting trial

2min
pages 24-26

Countdown to COP26

8min
pages 27-29

Plant health update

5min
pages 20-22

The future of the forestry workforce

8min
pages 6-9

Continued momentum for woodland creation?

2min
page 13

Maria Bellisimo joins Confor as Policy Officer

1min
pages 11-12
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