High-quality Grade 1 and 2 Farmland 2020-11-26

2020-11-26

TAGS
Response quality

Questions & Answers

Q1 Direct Answer
Kerry McCarthy Lab
Bristol East
Context
The question arises from concerns about agricultural land use and potential for tree planting on Church-owned estates.
What proportion of agricultural land owned by the Church of England is high-quality grade 1 and 2 farmland?
Approximately 35,000 acres of land owned by the Church Commissioners is high-quality grade 1 and 2 farmland, representing 39% of the overall agricultural portfolio. Information on diocesan land holdings is not held by the Church Commissioners.
Assessment & feedback
Response accuracy
Q2 Partial Answer
Kerry McCarthy Lab
Bristol East
Context
Building on previous discussions, the question focuses on the feasibility of planting trees on Church-owned land that is not high-quality agricultural land.
At the last Church Commissioners questions, he said to me that he strongly wanted to see more trees planted on the Church estate, but that most of the rural estate is high-quality agricultural land and is therefore not suitable. He has just said that 39% is high-grade agricultural land. Does that not mean there is an awful lot of other land on which they could plant trees and help meet the Government's commitment to increasing woodland cover?
As I think I said at the last questions, I commend the hon. Lady for raising this issue and, indeed, for returning to it today, and I genuinely welcome her scrutiny. More than 60% of our farmland is let on secure agricultural tenancies, with the rest on tenancies under the Agricultural Tenancies Act 1995. Both of those limit our ability to intervene directly. However, we do encourage our tenants to farm sustainably and join environmental stewardship schemes to plant trees and hedgerows wherever possible. In addition, we are undertaking a natural capital assessment, which will provide a baseline and trajectory of progress towards achieving lower carbon outputs.
Assessment & feedback
The feasibility of planting more trees on Church-owned land was acknowledged but no specific commitment or figure was provided regarding the actual potential for tree planting.
Commends The Questioner Limits Ability To Intervene Directly
Response accuracy