Applicant's guide: Woodland Creation grant from 1 January 2021
Published 9 February 2021
Applies to England
1 Introduction
We will continue to offer Countryside Stewardship agreements in 2021, 2022 and 2023.
Countryside Stewardship will eventually be replaced with the new Environmental Land Management (ELM) scheme. This will follow trialling and testing and a national pilot involving farmers and land managers. The full ELM scheme will be in place from 2024.
Signing up to a Countryside Stewardship agreement now will put you in the best possible position to join ELM. What’s more it will give you a viable, long-term source of income for providing environmental benefits as BPS payments start to reduce. If you are successful in securing a place in ELM, then you can terminate your Countryside Stewardship agreement early, without penalty, at the end of an agreement year so you can join the ELM scheme.
Changes for Countryside Stewardship agreements that commence on 1 January 2021
Countryside Stewardship agreements starting on 1 January 2021 will be made under domestic legislation. We are able to introduce a number of changes to improve on the current scheme operated under EU regulations.
These changes will only apply to new agreements starting on 1 January 2021. Agreements that start before this date will continue to operate under the EU regulations.
Our approach to checking delivery of options is changing and we will be testing this out over the course of 2020 to make sure we get it right. We have agreed the principles of our approach but will work this out in more detail as we test them. We will keep you aware of the changes as we develop them and confirm what this will mean for individual options over the course of the year.
Recoveries
If you do not fulfil your obligations under the agreement we will reduce or withhold your payment or seek recovery. In some cases, we may terminate your agreement, for example, if we find intentional non-compliance or fraud.
The Countryside Stewardship scheme
Countryside Stewardship is administered by the Rural Payments Agency (RPA) on behalf of the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra), with technical advice and support from Natural England (NE) and the Forestry Commission.
Countryside Stewardship (CS) gives incentives for land managers to look after their environment and is made up of the following elements:
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Higher Tier is for land that requires more complex management tailored to the individual site
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Mid Tier provides a range of options and capital items that together help to deliver a broad range of environmental benefits
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Capital only grants for woodlands, hedgerows and boundaries and management plans
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Facilitation Fund supports individuals and organisations working with local groups of farmers and land managers, to co-ordinate their environmental land management.
Countryside Stewardship supports Defra’s Strategic Objective of “a cleaner, healthier environment, benefitting people and the economy’.
It also supports Defra’s 25 year environment plan ‘’for our country to be the healthiest, most beautiful place in the world to live, work and bring up a family”.
The main priorities of Countryside Stewardship are:
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increased biodiversity, improved habitat and expanded woodland areas
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cleaner water and sustainable usage
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productive land and soils
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UK better protected against flooding and coastal erosion.
The Woodland Creation grant is part of Countryside Stewardship If you are a land manager, you can apply for a Woodland Creation grant to support the creation of new woodland on your land.
1.1 Woodland Creation grant manual
This manual explains what you need to do to apply for the Woodland Creation grant and explains any additional requirements and processes which you must follow.
For information about the other elements of Countryside Stewardship read Countryside Stewardship: How to apply.
1.1.1 Countryside Stewardship Woodland Creation grant Agreement
A Woodland Creation grant Agreement comprises of:
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the scheme Terms and Conditions at Annex 1
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an Agreement Document (which sets out Agreement Holder specific details)
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the supplementary documents referred to in the Agreement Document.
Mandatory elements of the Woodland Creation grant manual
The Terms and Conditions at Annex 1 refer to the mandatory elements of this manual that Agreement Holders must comply with.
The mandatory sections of this manual are:
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Section 2: Scheme overview
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Section 3: Who can apply and what land is eligible
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Section 7: Scheme requirements and procedures
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Section 8: Agreement Management.
1.2 More information
Read the Countryside Stewardship: How to apply page and the Countryside Stewardship forms page for more information specific to woodland support and the following grants:
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Woodland Management Plan
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Woodland Tree Health
2 Scheme overview
You must read and meet the requirements detailed in this section as these are mandatory for all Woodland Creation grant agreement holders.
Woodland Creation grants are available under Countryside Stewardship. You can submit an application for a Woodland Creation grant at any time of the year. If you accept an offer for a grant, you will enter into an agreement with the Rural Payments Agency (RPA).
For guidance and information on other woodland capital grants available as part of Countryside Stewardship (Woodland Management Plans and Woodland Tree Health) read Countryside Stewardship: How to apply.
2.1 Capital items available
Ten capital items are available. There is a description and essential requirements for each capital item on the Countryside Stewardship online grants finder tool. This also includes eligibility and evidence requirements.
You can find the payment rates and details about using supplements in Section 5.
2.2 Agreement period
Agreement periods are for a maximum of 2 years. During this period, you must complete all capital works. You then have a further 3 months from the end of the agreement period to submit your payment claim. You must maintain any capital items funded through the scheme in the same condition and specification set out in your agreement for 5 years from the date of your final payment (durability period).
2.3 How applications are selected
Woodland Creation grants are competitive. We score applications and will make an agreement offer to those with the highest score (depending on the budget that is available). You need to score your own application first by filling in the scoring section at annex 2 of the application form. You must send this to us with your initial application. You need to score 12 points for us to accept an initial application and to take it forward.
Once you have agreed your final application we will give it a final score. Every month we set a final threshold score based on the budget that is available. If your application has a final score equal to or greater than the final threshold score we will offer you an agreement.
The highest Woodland Creation grant scores are for applications that cover a large geographical area (the score is multiplied by the hectares of woodland you propose to create), and those that have the greatest positive impact on:
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biodiversity
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water (quality and flooding) and
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climate change read: Climate change: impacts and adaptation in England’s woodlands and Tree species and provenance for more information.
We will award additional points if you are working in a partnership at a landscape scale (involving multiple ownerships) in specific target areas.
If your application is unsuccessful you can re-apply at any time. However, you will need to change your application to increase its score so it has a chance of meeting a subsequent clearing score.
2.4 What the grant cannot pay for
The grant cannot be used to pay for the cost of any of the following:
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any capital works initiated before the agreement start date
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planning application fees or other transactional fees
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agent fees or other advisory fees
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meeting legal requirements, including planning conditions
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woodland creation for short rotation coppice and/or short rotation forestry.
3 Who can apply and what land is eligible
You must read and meet the requirements detailed in this section as these are mandatory for all Woodland Creation grant agreement holders.
The Woodland Creation grant is open to land managers who are either:
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an owner occupier
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a tenant
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a landlord
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a licensor
As long as they have control of all the land and all the activities needed to meet the obligations of the grant for the full duration of the agreement.
3.1 Eligible land
3.1.1 What land can be entered into the scheme
You can include land that is not already classified as existing woodland as part of your Woodland Creation grant.
3.1.2 Ineligible land
The following land is not eligible for the Woodland Creation grant – you cannot include it on your application:
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land subject to another Rural Development scheme
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land subject to another obligation which is not compatible with Countryside Stewardship
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land not entirely within England. Parcels that are either partly or entirely within Scotland or Wales are not eligible for Countryside Stewardship, and
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land where the applicant does not have management control for the length of the agreement and is unable to have an application countersigned by the landowner.
3.2 Management control
You must have control of the land and all activities needed to meet the requirements of the capital items selected for the full period of the agreement (2 years) and for the subsequent 5 years from the date of final payment (read section 2.2 for the obligation to maintain capital items).
If you do not, you must get the written consent of all other parties who have management control of the land and activities for the full agreement period and durability periods.
3.2.1 Tenants
If you are a tenant applying for an agreement in your name, you must have:
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control of all required activities needed to meet the scheme requirements for the chosen Countryside Stewardship capital items
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management control of all the agreement land for the duration of any commitments (which may extend beyond the agreement period)
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security of tenure for the full period of the agreement.
If this is not possible, you must get your landlord to countersign your application. If you are not able to do this, you cannot include that particular area of land in your application. If you are a tenant, including under the Agricultural Holdings Act 1986, the Agricultural Tenancies Act 1995 (a Farm Business Tenancy) or equivalent, it is your responsibility to check that you do not breach the terms of your tenancy by joining Countryside Stewardship.
If the landlord takes over a Countryside Stewardship agreement from you once your tenancy has ended, they must be eligible to do so. For example, they must not be an ineligible public body.
3.2.2 Landlords
If you are a landlord and can show that you keep management control over the land and activities, you can apply for an agreement on land that you have let to a tenant. Dual use is where the applicant for this grant is different to the applicant for the Basic Payment Scheme (BPS).
You can claim BPS on land which is in a CS Woodland Creation agreement provided the land meets certain eligibility requirements. Non-agricultural land is considered eligible for BPS on the condition that both of the following criteria are met:
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The non-agricultural land was used with entitlements to claim under the Single Payments Scheme in 2008
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The land is currently in a Countryside Stewardship Woodland Creation agreement (including the five year period of obligation)
As the agreement holder, you must give your tenant a copy of the Countryside Stewardship agreement. We may ask you to provide evidence to show that you have done this. It is your responsibility to make sure that your tenant does not breach the terms of the agreement.
For more information read Guidance on woodland grant schemes and BPS: operations note 42.
3.2.3 Partnerships
If you are in a business partnership, you can apply for Countryside Stewardship. The person submitting the application must have the appropriate permission levels in the Rural Payments service on GOV.UK.
3.2.4 Licensors
If you are a licensor, you can apply for a Countryside Stewardship agreement. It is your responsibility to make sure that the licensee does not breach the terms of the Countryside Stewardship agreement.
You must make sure that the licensee is aware of the requirements of the agreement, as relevant to the licence, and include these in the licence agreement.
3.2.5 Licensees
If you are a licensee, you may be eligible in certain circumstances if you can demonstrate full management control of the land for the period of the agreement.
3.2.6 Land owned by public bodies
Land owned or run by a public body is in general not eligible for Countryside Stewardship. If you are a tenant of a public body, you will need to check with your landlord if the land is eligible for Countryside Stewardship.
Countryside Stewardship cannot pay for any environmental management that is already required through:
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payment from EU and Exchequer funds
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grant aid from any other public body
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any other form of legally binding obligation including tenancies.
This means that Crown bodies and non-departmental public bodies (NDPBs) are not eligible for the scheme. This includes those that are Trading Funds or do not receive funding direct from the Exchequer. Crown bodies include all government departments and their executive agencies. These include, for example:
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Ministry of Defence
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Forestry Commission
NDPBs are public bodies that have a role in the processes of national government but are not a government department, and are not part of one. These include:
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Environment Agency
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Natural England
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Historic England
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National Forest Company.
Parish councils and former college farms are not considered to be public bodies and so are eligible to apply for Countryside Stewardship.
The following table provides more detailed eligibility requirements for public bodies.
Landowner | Eligibility | More information |
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Government departments, executive agencies and NDPBs (for example Ministry of Defence, Forestry Commission) | Ineligible | |
Other public bodies (for example local authorities, National Park authorities and public corporations) | Eligible | Provided the work does not form part of their obligations as a public body |
Parish Councils and former college farms | Eligible | |
Tenants of eligible public bodies | Eligible | Ineligible where the work is already a requirement of the tenancy agreement. The public body must countersign the application if the tenant does not have security of tenure. |
Tenants of ineligible public bodies | Eligible | Ineligible where the work is already a requirement of the tenancy agreement. Tenants must have security of tenure for the full term of the agreement, as the public body cannot countersign the application. |
Subject to the rules above, local authorities can apply for support for the capital elements of Woodland Creation (for example tree planting and associated guards and protection) but cannot apply for the multi-year maintenance payment option (WD1) associated with Woodland Creation.
Similarly, eligible tenants of publicly owned land can apply for all capital items under the following terms:
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Tenants of ineligible public bodies must have security of tenure for both the agreement (two years) and durability periods (five years – see section 5.11). However, they cannot apply for multi-year Woodland Creation maintenance payments (WD1) and neither can the landlord.
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Tenants of eligible public bodies must have security of tenure for the full agreement period (two years) and should have security of tenure for durability period (five years – see section 5.11). However, the landlord should countersign the agreement and must do so where the tenancy will end during the durability period. The tenant cannot apply for multi-year Woodland Creation maintenance payments (WD1) but the landlord can.
3.3 Land receiving other funding or other agreements
You cannot use this grant to carry out capital works which are required under other agreements, for example, work might be required as part of a tenancy agreement or grant schemes such as:
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Environmental Stewardship
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other grants within Countryside Stewardship
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Farming and Forestry Improvement Scheme
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English Woodland Grant schemes
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Farming Recovery Fund
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Heritage Lottery Fund
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Inheritance Tax Exemption.
You must make sure that any work proposed as part of this grant does not breach the conditions of any other agreement. We will carry out checks to make sure that capital works are not funded twice from public money.
If your application is on land which is already in an Environmental Stewardship (ES) and/or English Woodland Grant Scheme (EWGS) agreement Natural England, the Forestry Commission and RPA will check it to make sure the work is compatible. However it is your responsibility to make sure that you and the land are eligible.
3.4 Common land and shared grazing
Common land and shared grazing is eligible for the Woodland Creation grant. Commoners/graziers need to agree and name one person to sign the application. This person will then be responsible for maintaining the relevant agreement, if accepted, on behalf of all the commoners/graziers.
If your application is on common land you must read the Common land and shared grazing: supplement to the Countryside Stewardship manual which sets out the requirements, and complete the additional Common land and shared grazing form: Countryside Stewardship.
If you are thinking about applying for a Woodland Creation grant please be aware that the work may need consent from the Planning Inspectorate on behalf of the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs. Consent is required were the work would prevent or impede access or for works to the surface the land, for example:
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Putting up new fences to protect new trees, woodland planting or to encourage natural regeneration.
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Building new solid surfaced roads, paths or car parks to enable access to manage the new or existing woodland.
Consent is not required in certain situations – including erecting fencing for up-to-five years; depending on the purpose of the fencing, such as habitat restoration on moorland. However, where an exception applies you must still complete a notice of exemption and send it to the Planning Inspectorate.
If consent is needed it applies equally to new works or where the work is an extension to work with an existing consent.
To be given consent, the work you propose will need to comply with the Secretary of State’s Common land consents policy.
Read Carrying out works on common land to find out more information on the type of work that requires consent, where exemptions might apply and the application process.
3.5 Applying for Woodland Creation on land currently in Environmental Stewardship (ES)
You can apply for a Woodland Creation grant on land currently in ES. When you apply, we will check that the application will result in a benefit to the environment and will not compromise the overall ES agreement. However, you must remove the land you put into your Woodland Creation grant from your current ES scheme or your current ES must expire before we can issue a Woodland Creation agreement on the land. If you are planting only part of a field that is under an ES agreement you may need to split the land parcel first – see section 4.2.
If you need to remove ES from land parcels you will need to fill in a LTA1 form which you can get from RPA (read Annex 5 to see how to request a LTA1 form). You need to send us your completed LTA1 form before the application can go through the monthly clearing round.
Please contact your local Forestry Commission Woodland Officer for more information about this process and any implications for an ES agreement. You can find contact details in Annex 5.
3.6 Business Viability Test
We will check all applications against an insolvency register. If we assess your application as not financially viable, we may not offer you an agreement. Applications involving capital expenditure over certain limits will require additional evidence and undergo additional checks. Read 4.7.1 for more information.
4 How to apply
The Woodland Creation grant application process is set out below. It outlines the steps from building an application through to final payment claims.
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Register your land on Rural Payments service if you have not already done so and prepare your application. Application documents are available on GOV.UK.
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Submit your application to RPA by email or by post.
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RPA carry out checks to make sure your application is complete and eligible.
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A Forestry Commission Woodland Officer will visit your site, carry out consultation if required and agree any changes to your application with you.
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Send your final signed application and any necessary supporting evidence and documentation to RPA. Send LTA1 and RLE1 forms if the application includes land in an ES agreement. You do not need to send any consents with your application but you must obtain consent before you carry out any work where a consent is needed. We may ask to see evidence of this.
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Forestry Commission set the clearing score for final applications. RPA send an agreement offer to the highest scoring applications.
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You can accept or reject the agreement offer – if you accept you have 2 calendar years to complete capital works from the agreement start date.
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Send your final claim (and any consents) to RPA within 2 years and 3 months of the agreement start date (that is, 3 months after the agreement end date). You must have paid for the capital items that you are claiming for, and the payment must have left your bank account before you send us your claim.
4.1 Application deadline
You can apply for a Woodland Creation grant at any time. The grant is open throughout the year.
4.2 Register with Rural Payments
You must be registered on the Rural Payments service before you can apply for this grant. Once you’re registered, you will receive a Customer Registration Number (CRN) and a Single Business Identifier (SBI). If you use an agent to apply for you, they must also be registered on Rural Payments and you must give the appropriate permissions in the Rural Payments Service.
All land parcels listed on your application must be registered on the Rural Payments service, and have a parcel reference number (in the format AA12345678). You will be asked to provide your parcel reference numbers when you apply. To register land, you must complete a Rural Land and Entitlements (RLE1) form and provide annotated maps to clearly show where the land parcels are on your holding and send this to RPA. You can find more information about this at Register land with the Rural Land Register.
If any of the land parcels on the Rural Payments service need to be split to accommodate new woodland, you will need to fill in an RLE1 form and send it to RPA. Please note the use of marker posts or stones may be needed when splitting land parcels for woodland creation. You can find guidance on splitting land parcels including marking permanent boundaries to split land parcels at RLE1 form and guidance. You must have sent your completed RLE1 forms to RPA for action before your application can go through the monthly scoring round.
4.3 Application methods
You can submit your application by email or post.
The Countryside Stewardship Capital Grants application form and Annex 1 of the application form are available at Countryside Stewardship forms. If you cannot download the application form, please contact us.
To help you fill in the application form, use the guidance available at Capital grant application form: Countryside Stewardship.
If you submit by email, as long as the application form is sent by someone with the correct permissions (and an email address that is registered on Rural Payments for that person) you do not need to print the relevant section(s) and form(s), sign and scan the documents back into your computer.
4.4 Prepare a map to accompany your application
You must complete your map to a required standard. Please read How to complete the Countryside Stewardship Capital Grant application form.
4.5 Getting consent
You must check each capital item you are applying for to see if any consents are needed. You are responsible for arranging all relevant consents, permissions, exemptions and any written advice needed for your application as set out in section 6.2.4. We may ask to see this evidence.
4.5.1 Planning Consent
You will need to check if any permissions or consents are needed before you begin any work. Your local planning authority can give you informal advice on whether a proposal needs planning consent. There is also general guidance on planning available at Planning practice guidance.
You will need to check with the local planning authority and relevant highways authority (if relevant), if permitted development rights apply to any woodland infrastructure (FY2) you wish to include in your application. This will determine if full planning consent is needed and which authority (Local Planning Authority or the Forestry Commission) will be responsible for a decision on whether consent is needed under the Environmental Impact Assessment Regulations. You will need to send evidence of the planning authority’s position on roads with your application.
Site of Special Scientific Interest (including National Nature Reserves)
One-to-one technical advice for Woodland Creation grants is not available from Natural England, except in relation to any land in a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) which is contained in the application. Work on land in a SSSI will need consent and you should contact Natural England as early as possible when you are getting your application ready.
Scheduled monuments
Your local Historic England officer can provide advice on any management or changes needed to maintain or bring the monument into favourable condition. You may also need Scheduled Monument Consent from the Government (advised by Historic England) for some of the chosen work (such as fencing and gateways). In these situations you must speak to Historic England to see whether consent is needed, or how to go about works to avoid or reduce negative impacts on the Scheduled Monument.
If your proposals relate to any of the following, Historic England can advise whether they are likely to be acceptable:
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registered parks and gardens
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registered battlefields.
4.5.2 Other consents
You may need to apply for other consents even if you do not need planning consent. If you do, you must keep this evidence as we may ask to see it. Examples of areas where consent is likely to be needed includes where the work affects:
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protected species (as defined by the Wildlife & Countryside Act 1981)
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registered parkland
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registered battlefield
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watercourse or highway areas subject to a Tree Preservation Order – a licence may be needed for any changes to trees and hedges.
If your application includes Capital Item Leaky Woody Dam (items RP32 and RP33) it will need approval from the Environment Agency or Lead Local Flood Authority. You can find more information about this in Annex 4.
4.5.3 Other considerations
When you carry out work under the agreement, remember that you must not breach any other rules or laws, such as:
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break byelaws
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obstruct public rights of way
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block or restrict access to ‘open access’ land
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affect oil or gas pipelines
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breach your cross compliance requirements in relation to any other existing commitments you hold, where applicable, for example if you claim BPS payments.
4.6 Complete and submit your application
A complete application is made up of the following which you need to submit to us:
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an application form
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an application annex
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the application map as at section 5.5
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a Countryside Stewardship: land ownership and control form, if applicable
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any other supporting documents we ask for.
The forms are available at Countryside Stewardship forms.
You do not need to send the following with your application, but if required, you will need to have permission or consent in place before you carry out any work. You will need to submit this evidence when you make a claim for this work.
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Any relevant consents, permissions, exemptions or any written advice.
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Any evidence you need to support your application (see sections 7.3 to 7.5), including photographs and any other evidence required for each capital item as described on the Countryside Stewardship grants finder tool.
4.7 Before you submit your application
Read this Countryside Stewardship manual and the Terms and Conditions at Annex 1 and
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double check the details in your application form are correct
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read the declaration, undertakings and warning carefully
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sign and enter your name in block letters, your capacity (for example, sole trader, company director, agent and so on) and the date of your signature
The party/parties that sign the paper application must have full authority and capacity to represent and bind the applicant.
Make sure any counter signatories’ (for example, landlords’) declarations, undertakings and signature(s) are provided (if applicable).
4.7.1 Business viability test
For applications including capital expenditure of over £50,000, you must submit a statement from a chartered accountant. This is to confirm that the business or SBI has the resources from trading profits, reserves or loans to undertake the work in the proposed agreement schedule.
Where confirmation from an accountant is needed, the accountant will need to provide a letter on headed paper which confirms at least the following:
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they are a chartered accountant
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they act as the accountant for the applicant
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they can confirm that you as the applicant have sufficient finances to complete the capital works in your application and how these funds will be sourced, (for example, savings, loan and so on)
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their understanding of the total value of the capital works in the application.
If your application includes more than £500,000 of capital items, we will also review 3 years of your relevant business accounts or other evidence. This is to confirm that you have the administrative, financial and operational capacity to meet the agreement requirements.
4.8 Submitting your application
You can email your application and supporting information to: ruralpayments@defra.gov.uk or post it to:
Rural Payments Agency (CS),
PO Box 324,
Worksop,
S95 1DF.
Title your email ‘Countryside Stewardship, document type, year, SBI number’, for example Countryside Stewardship, Woodland Creation grant application, 2020, [SBI].
We also recommend that you:
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get proof of postage for these and any other documents you send to us
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keep a copy of your completed application form and map.
4.9 After applying
Once we receive your application we will check it to confirm that:
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it meets the eligibility requirements in section 3
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you have filled in all the necessary details on the application form
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you have completed the map.
You can find more information about entering into an agreement at section 6.1.ind out how to apply and the evidence and consents you’ll need.
5 How it works
This section provides information about the main elements of the CS Woodland Creation grant.
A Forestry Commission Woodland Officer will assess your application to make sure that the proposed tree planting is appropriate.
To support this you will need to prepare a Woodland Creation plan.
5.1 Prepare a Woodland Creation plan
The plan forms part of the Woodland Creation annex which you send as part of your application. Your Woodland Creation plan must meet the UK Forestry Standard (UKFS) and associated guidelines.
On your Woodland Creation plan you need to record the objectives for the new woodland and give key details such as the tree species you plan to plant and their abundance, percentage open space and the planting density. The planting density (measured in ‘stems per hectare’) varies depending on the species choice and objectives of the proposed agreement.
Please note:
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In your Woodland Creation plan you need to give the reasoning for the capital items that support the tree planting (TE4), for example, protection requirements.
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To receive support under the Woodland Creation grant, the planting density must reach a minimum of 1,100 stems per hectare. There can be exceptions (for example 400 stems/ha for woodland creation specifically to encourage black grouse, and greater densities, with variable spacing, near watercourses), but you must agree the planting density proposed with the Forestry Commission Woodland Officer
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Your proposed woodland must contribute to either biodiversity objectives and/or water objectives and you will need to describe the objective(s) for woodland creation (for example, planting for water, planting for biodiversity or planting for both objectives) in your Woodland Creation plan. You can find guidelines on planting for biodiversity and water in Annex 1 of this manual.
You will also need to record information on any constraints to woodland creation in the Woodland Creation plan and show how you have considered these in the woodland’s design. To do this you will need to acknowledge and consider environmental sensitivity, protected species and designations in and around the proposed site and any impacts the proposed scheme may have.
You need to make sure the capital works in your application will not damage important features such as priority habitats and historic or archaeological features on or next to where the work will take place. This may mean you need to speak to neighbours and interested parties to explain the work. You should consult with neighbours and interested parties before you send your initial application.
We also encourage you to speak to local archaeological organisations to get supporting advice for your application. Previously developed Historic Environment Records (HER) which were used to inform Farm Environment Plans or Historic Environment Farm Environment Records (HEFER) for previous CS Higher Tier applications may also provide information on any historic features you need to consider in your application.
If you are in a National Park you may be able to receive free advice from your local National Park Authority.
A Forestry Commission Woodland Officer will check these details when they review your application. This information will mean the Forestry Commission can assess the proposal under the Environmental Impact Assessment (Forestry) (England and Wales) Regulations 1999. You can find more information about this online at Environmental Impact Assessments for woodland. The check we carry out at this stage does not confirm the details are correct. We (or the Forestry Commission Woodland Officer) may ask you for more information at a later date or recovery money we’ve already paid you if we find an issue.
5.1.1 Woodland Creation Planning Grant
If your woodland creation scheme is over 10 hectares in area with a planting mixture that includes a significant productive element (that is, 70% of the tree species are ‘productive’) it may be eligible for a Woodland Creation Planning Grant (WCPG). WCPG contributes towards the costs of gathering and analysing the information land managers need to consider to make sure their proposals for productive multi-purpose woodland take account of any impacts on: biodiversity, landscape, water, the historic environment and local stakeholders.
Under WCPG you must produce a UK Forestry Standard compliant plan for creating the woodland that shows how you have taken into account any constraints and opportunities.
WCPG is not part of Countryside Stewardship and has a separate application process. If you have applied for WCPG you must have the WCPG Stage 1 checklist approved by the Forestry Commission before you apply for a Woodland Creation grant under Countryside Stewardship. The Woodland Creation design plan you produced under WCPG must be approved before you send the final application for the Countryside Stewardship Woodland Creation grant. You can find more information at Woodland Creation Planning Grant.
5.2 Planting area thresholds, open space and tree specifications
To be eligible for a Woodland Creation grant, your application must meet the thresholds in the table below. To use the lower threshold you need to write to us to explain the exceptional circumstances which apply in your case before you submit your application. If we accept the circumstances are exceptional we will confirm that you can use the lower threshold.
General eligibility threshold | Lower threshold Only applicable in exceptional and fully justified cases. Planting as part of measures for water quality or flood prevention. | |
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Minimum area per application | 3 hectares | 1 hectare |
Minimum block size | 0.5 hectares | 0.1 hectares |
Minimum width | 20 metres | 10 metres |
You must limit integral woodland open space to 20% of the total woodland area and the individual areas of open space cannot exceed 0.5 hectares or 20 metres in width. We will not consider open areas larger than this as ‘woodland’ or as part of the woodland. Open space includes woodland tracks, rides, way leaves and other permanent open areas.
In order for a species to be eligible under Woodland Creation it must have at least one woody stem that is capable of achieving a total height of five metres on a given site. In certain situations natural site constraints may limit the height of species and this will be taken into account.
The following species are not eligible and cannot be funded under this grant:
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Gorse (Ulex europaeus)
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Rhododendron (Rhododendron spp.)
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Sea buckthorn (Hippophae rhamnoides)
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Laurel (all members of the Lauraceae family and cherry laurel)
5.3 Choose capital items, land area and planting specifications
The capital items you can use for Woodland Creation are listed in the table below. If you want to apply for a capital item other than TE4 (for example TE5, FG1, FG2, and so on) you can only do this if you are also applying for capital item TE4 on the land parcel in question.
You must use Annex 2 of the application form (‘Woodland Creation annex’) to record the capital items you want to include in each land parcel (for example number of trees, shelters or length of fencing). Capital Item FY2: woodland infrastructure is an agreement level item and you need to also record that in Annex 2 of the application form including details of road specification and quotes.
You can choose items from the capital items listed in the below table. Each has a payment rate which is the value of a one-off payment that will be paid towards the cost of that item or activity. Once you have an agreement you must maintain your capital items for 5 years from the date of final payment. Read Countryside Stewardship grants for full details on each capital item.
Code | Capital items for use in Woodland Creation | Payment Rate | Aim | Additional notes | Mandatory or optional? |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
TE4 | Tree planting | £1.28/tree | To supply, plant and weed young trees and protect with a 0.6m spiral guard | Spiral not needed in some circumstances – this needs to be agreed with the Forestry Commission Woodland Officer | Mandatory |
TE5 | Individual tree shelter | £1.60/unit | To protect young trees with a tree shelter | This supplement can only be used with TE4. Shelter height to be agreed with Forestry Commission Woodland Officer | Optional |
FG1 | Fencing | £4/m | Method of stock control, to help habitat management or protect environmental features | This item can be used with the item TE5 where appropriate and agreed with the Forestry Commission Woodland Officer. | Optional |
FG2 | Sheep netting | £4.90/m | Exclude sheep to protect environmental features | This item can be used with the item TE5 where appropriate and agreed with the Forestry Commission Woodland Officer. | Optional |
FG4 | Rabbit fencing supplement | £2.50/m | Supplement to fencing (FG1), sheep netting (FG2), or deer fence (FG9) to exclude rabbits to help protect environmental features | This supplement can only be used with one of the following capital items; FG1 (Fencing), FG2 (Sheep Netting), FG9 (Deer Fencing). This item can be used with the item TE5 where appropriate and agreed with the Forestry Commission Woodland Officer | Optional |
FG5 | Fencing supplement - difficult site | £1.24/m | Supplement to fencing (FG1) to cover the extra costs of fencing on a difficult site | This supplement can only be used with one of the following capital items; FG1 (Fencing), FG2 (Sheep Netting), FG9 (Deer Fencing). This item can be used with the item TE5 where appropriate and agreed with the Forestry Commission Woodland Officer | Optional |
FG9 | Deer fencing | £7.20/m | To protect newly created woodland from deer browsing | This item can be used with the item TE5 where appropriate and agreed with the Forestry Commission Woodland Officer. | Optional |
FG12 | Wooden field gate or wooden wings | £390/gate | Facilitate stock management and keep livestock out of watercourses. | When used in combination with the item FG9, the gate (FG12) must be deer proof. | Optional |
FG14 | Badger gate | £135/gate | Provide badgers unrestricted access to either side of a newly erected fence, which crosses known badger routes | This supplement can only be used with one of the following capital items; FG1 (Fencing), FG2 (Sheep Netting), FG4 (Rabbit Fencing supplement), FG5 (Fencing supplement difficult sites), FG9 (Deer Fencing) | Optional |
FG15 | Water Gates | £240/Gate | Use across streams in conjunction with other stock control options to keep livestock and deer out of new planting | This item can only be used on fence lines across streams, with other stock or deer control items | Optional |
BN13 | Top Wiring – Stone Wall | £3.60/m | Where there is already a wall protecting a site this item can be used to provide additional height for deer/ large mammal protection | To be used on top of walls to keep out stock and deer from new woodland planting where appropriate and agreed with the Forestry Commission Woodland Officer | Optional |
RP32 | Small Leaky Woody Dam (1-3m) | £461.39/dam | To be used as part of a scheme designed to reduce flood risk and with the approval of the Environment Agency and/or Lead Local Flood Authority | To support this item, PA2 Feasibility Study can be used. This is a standalone item and can only be used with written permission which you got from Natural England before you applied for Woodland Creation. | Optional |
RP33 | Large Leaky Woody Dam (3-5m) | £764.43/dam | To be used as part of a scheme designed to reduce flood risk and with the approval of the Environment Agency and/or Lead Local Flood Authority | To support this item, PA2 Feasibility Study can be used. This is a standalone item and can only be used with written permission which you got from Natural England before you applied for Woodland Creation. | Optional |
FY2 | Woodland Infrastructure | 40% of actual cost (based on the selected quote) | To be used to support the planting and maintenance of new woodland | This item may need planning permission and if you must send evidence of this with your claim. | Optional |
You can find more information on woodland infrastructure (FY2) in Annex 3 and for more on indicative designs for small and large leaky woody dams (RP32 and RP33) in Annex 4.
5.4 Woodland Creation payments
The payment that you receive will depend on the capital items or option you have selected. The payment is a contribution towards the costs of carrying out the work.
Payments under Woodland Creation are subject to a cap that limits the amount that can be paid. The cap is taken as an average per hectare across the whole application. The payment cap is £6,800 per hectare. If you use the excel spreadsheet version of the Woodland Creation application annex, this will be calculated automatically.
If the average value of your application per hectare is more than £6,800, you will need to work with us to reduce the average value of your application by reducing the number of capital items to £6,800 per hectare.
You will need to work with your Forestry Commission Woodland Officer to make sure you understand what you need to do to prepare a credible woodland creation scheme (that is, that you have included all necessary tree protection measures) and how this relates to the payment cap.
In addition to costs for planting and protection, you can receive 40% of actual costs for capital item woodland infrastructure (item FY2) and fixed costs for small and large leaky woody dams (items RP32 and RP33). These items are not subject to the cap of £6,800 per hectare but your Woodland Creation plan needs to set out the reasons for including these items in your application.
5.5 Score form
You are responsible for filling in the score form in Annex 2 (‘Woodland Creation Annex’). Points are available for the following objectives:
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biodiversity (priority habitats and priority species)
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water (quality and flood risk)
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‘cross-cutting’ (including climate change mitigation, adaptation and partnership working)
The size of the application affects the score - a larger area of planting gets a higher score as does an application which scores under multiple objectives.
Each initial application needs to reach a minimum threshold score of 12 points to be eligible for further processing and must achieve points against biodiversity and/or water. Cross-cutting objectives (for example, climate change) can also achieve points, but each application must score against biodiversity and/or water as a minimum.
Because scoring is based on area you will need to identify the area within the priority areas for biodiversity or water. You can check this using the Forestry Commission map browser and Land Information Search (LIS). Scoring also takes into account the design of the woodland.
You can find information on how to design woodland that is priority habitat, reduces flood risk or improves water quality on the Forestry Commission National Archives.
5.6 Prepare a map for your application
You need to provide a map which shows all areas of proposed woodland creation and associated capital items with your application. If your application is successful and we offer you an agreement, the map you sent with the application will become the “Agreement Map” so it needs to be clear, legible and meet the standards set out below (see 5.6.1).
How to create a map
You can create the application map yourself (as long as it meets the standards in 5.6.1), or you can request one from the Forestry Commission map request service (www.gov.uk/government/publications/map-request-form-forestry-commission).
The agreement map needs to reflect the details recorded in the Woodland Creation annex, showing:
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all land parcels
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the location of capital items applied for
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other relevant information outlined in section 5.6.1.
Supporting maps for the Woodland Creation plan can contain more detailed information about the woodland creation, for example, stocking density, species, rides (read section 5.6.1 for more information). Supporting maps should be based on OS based maps and/or Geographical Information System (GIS)-generated digital maps. Maps must be based on a scale of 1:2,500 or 1:5,000 or for large schemes 1:10,000.
If you send a map that does not meet these requirements or the minimum standards outlined in 5.6.1, we will send you a new base map. You will need to complete this map to the minimum standard.
If you use the Forestry Commission map request service, you can highlight any existing Environmental Stewardship (ES) agreements on the land parcels proposed for tree planting. This means we can discuss initial eligibility issues with you. There will be more detailed eligibility checks undertaken throughout the application process.
You are responsible for providing updated maps if there are any changes agreed to your application.
5.6.1 Minimum mapping standards
When creating your application map (or marking capital items on the base map provided) you must comply with the following rules:
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The map (or maps) must be based on a scale of 1:2500 or 1:5000 or for large schemes 1:10000
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The map (or maps) must show the whole land parcel on which the capital items to be included are located
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The map (or maps) must show the location of the proposed capital works (mark the capital items with a coloured pen and list the capital item code(s) next to them).This includes proposed planting areas
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The map (or maps) must show any proposed areas of open space within the proposed planting areas
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The map (or maps) must show fence lines – stating which type of fence (code) you are applying for
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The map (or maps) should have a number (1, 2, 3, and so on). Include this map number and also the total number of maps, for example 1 of 3
You must also:
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Write your Single Business Identifier (SBI) – consisting of 9 digits, the application year and agreement title (as detailed on the application form) on the top right of the map
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Write the name of business or applicant – this should be the name (beneficiary) that is registered with us for the SBI, on the right hand side of the map
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Write a 6 figure OS grid reference for the centre of the map on the bottom left of the map, if there are no numbered OS grid lines
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If you make a mistake, strike through it. Do not use correction fluid on your map.
If you send a map that does not meet these standards we will send you a base map to mark up and return.
5.6.2 Additional Maps
You can and should provide additional maps to support your Woodland Creation plan. These maps should be based on an appropriate OS map (you can use the Forestry Commission map request service if needed) and include the following items:
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planting design - showing species
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water courses and open water
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access tracks to be created and maintained
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open ground map - showing and identifying features that justify/support internal open space for example, Public Right of Way, rides/tracks, wayleaves and so on.
You can see examples of a Site Appraisal Plan and Concept Design Plan at Create woodland: overview.
If you are including capital item FY2 in your application you must include a map showing the route of the proposed infrastructure, following the standards in section 5.6.1.
5.7 Authorising an agent
You can complete the application and claim forms yourself or authorise an agent. If an agent will be acting on behalf of the business to complete an application and/or claim forms, you need to give them the appropriate permission levels within the Rural Payments Service. If you have previously authorised an agent using the paper agent authorisation form you must now use the Rural Payments service to set the appropriate permission levels for the agent.
There is information on permissions in Rural Payments.
5.8 Why applications may be rejected
We may reject your application at any stage if:
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you do not provide the information and evidence needed for a complete application
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the application:
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does not meet eligibility criteria
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at initial submission, does not achieve minimum score (12 points)
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after final submission, does not score highly enough to be prioritised against the available budget in the clearing round
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does not meet the UK Forestry Standard and associated guidelines
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is likely to cause harm to the environment.
We will also reject your application if you do not provide all necessary supporting evidence within the required timescale or we find an issue at a later date, for example we find a potential environmental issue after the agreement has gone live.
5.9 Woodland Creation Maintenance payments
To support the successful establishment and on-going maintenance of new woodland, the CS Higher Tier option Woodland Creation Maintenance Grant (WD1) offers a multi-annual payment of £200 per hectare for a period of 10 years.
You may be eligible for this option provided you have met the objectives of the Woodland Creation Capital agreement and the final claim has been paid. Woodland Creation Agreement Holders are subject to maintenance requirements on their newly planted woodland for 5 years from the final payment for capital works regardless of whether or not they apply for WD1.
If you are eligible, in the spring after you have made your final claim under the WCG agreement we will invite you to apply for WD1. You can find more information on the Woodland Creation Maintenance Grant in section 6.
If there is a change in land ownership or other change in land management control (for example, you sell the land under a Woodland Creation grant agreement) you cannot transfer the Woodland Creation grant agreement (read section 8.7). However, the new land owner may apply for woodland maintenance payments if they are eligible. If any of the capital items in your Woodland Creation grant agreement are not maintained during the durability period (read section 5.13) we may recover monies from you, even if the new land owner enters into a woodland maintenance agreement.
Let us know when you sell the land and when you have made your final claim. That way we will know the planting is complete and can invite the new land owner to apply for the woodland creation maintenance grant.
5.10 Restrictions on agricultural activity in woodland areas
You cannot use any land subject to a Woodland Creation agreement for any agricultural activity, including grazing, for a period of at least 5 years following the final capital payment or the period of any maintenance payments – whichever is longer. Once the Woodland Creation agreement starts the land is considered non-agricultural (regardless of when the trees are planted) because this is the point at which land is set aside for non-agricultural use. At this point you must submit an RLE1 form to notify the Rural Payments Agency (RPA) and register the land as a permanent non-agricultural area with an effective date of 1 January the following year.
Providing you meet all eligibility requirements, you can continue to claim Basic Payment Scheme (BPS) on land in the Woodland Creation grant agreement and until the end of any subsequent 10 year Woodland Creation Maintenance agreement. If applicable, you will be required to take action to continue to correctly claim BPS after tree planting. You can find more information on claiming BPS with Woodland Creation and Woodland Creation Maintenance in section 8. Read general advice on how woodland grant agreements affect BPS eligibility in Guidance on woodland grant schemes and BPS: operations note 42.
5.11 How we process your application
Before you can submit your final application the following must take place:
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A Forestry Commission Woodland Officer must visit your site to review the application with you. They will check that the woodland design is appropriate and meets the UK Forestry Standard and check that the items you applied for are suitable.
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The Forestry Commission will publicise the proposals on a Public registers and consultation on forestry projects to make sure the local community knows about and can comment on the proposals to create a new woodland.
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Consultation with any statutory consultees (organisations which must be notified or provide consent for the tree planting).
This means it will take at least 5 months for us to process your application. Timescales vary because each application is different, but we will process your application as quickly as possible. An application which involves the amendment of an existing Environmental Stewardship agreement, which requires consent or agreement from other parties because of potential impacts on designated sites and which includes the woodland infrastructure option (FY2) can take longer. During peak periods of work – such as when Forestry Commission Woodland Officers are negotiating Higher Tier applications from May to September, it may take longer for us to process your application.
The more preparatory work you can do to provide a detailed woodland creation plan based on prior engagement with key stakeholders the better as it will help us to process your application. Contact your Forestry Commission Woodland Officer as early as possible to receive advice and guidance to develop your application and understand how long it will take for us to process it. Site visits needed as part of the application process can be carried out before you send your initial application. We recommend a joint site visit between you, Forestry Commission and any relevant statutory bodies if the application may need consent or agreement from other parties.
If you want to include the woodland infrastructure (FY2) item in your application you must confirm whether permitted development rights apply to the proposed road with your local planning authority (and relevant highways authority, as needed) as early as possible. You need to keep evidence that you have done this and send it with your claim. Where planning permission is required you will need to have this consent before you do the work and provide evidence of this when you submit your claim for FY2.
If you are applying for FY2 you will also need to provide three quotes for the work. You must send this with your final application. If you provide this information earlier it will help us process your application quicker.
If your application is successful we will offer you a Woodland Creation grant agreement once we have completed the final checks, ranked your application and set the clearing score (see section 3.9). If your applicant is unsuccessful we will let you know after we have ranked it.
5.12 Your agreement start date
Your agreement will start on first of the month after the clearing score has been set (see section 3.9), However, so you can maximise the period of the planting seasons after you have ordered plants you can defer the start date of your agreement for up to 6 months (after you submit your final application).
It is likely to take at least 4 to 5 months for your initial application to reach the point when you can submit a final application.
For example an agreement offered following an initial application made in October 2019 and fully processed within 5 months would be issued with a start date of 1 March 2020. This start date would need the work to be completed by 28 February 2022. To provide time to order the plants and then maximise the planting periods after this, the agreement start date could be deferred from the point of final application by 6 months. In this example if the final application is submitted in January 2020 the agreement start date could be deferred until 1 August 2020, this would provide the full 20/21 and 21/22 planting seasons to complete the work.
You can ask to defer your start date in your application annex. If you do, we will try to defer it. You should discuss the likely start date with your Forestry Commission Woodland Officer.
5.13 Agreement period
Your Woodland Creation grant agreement will run for a maximum of 2 years from the start date of your agreement, during which time you must complete all capital works. You must maintain any capital items funded in the same condition and specification set out in the Woodland Creation grant agreement for 5 years from the date of final payment. Section 3.2 explains how this ‘durability requirement’ applies if you are a landlord or tenant. The exception to this durability rule is the capital item leaky woody dams (RP32 and RP33) which have to be maintained for 2 years from the date they are claimed for.
A Woodland Creation Maintenance Grant agreement (option WD1) is separate and runs for 10 years from that agreement’s start date.
6 Applying for Woodland Creation Maintenance payments (WD1)
You may be able to apply for the multi-annual Higher Tier option Woodland Creation Maintenance Payments (WD1) to support the maintenance of your newly created woodland resulting from the Woodland Creation grant agreement.
You may be able to apply for the multi-annual Higher Tier option Woodland Creation Maintenance Payments (WD1) to support the maintenance of your newly created woodland resulting from the Woodland Creation grant agreement. Unlike Woodland Creation where you select from a range of capital items, WD1 is the only option you can apply for.
The grant offers a multi-year annual payment of £200 per hectare to support the successful establishment and on-going maintenance of new woodland. You will need to:
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keep all newly planted trees weed-free for 10 years
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replace any trees that die
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maintain fences, tree shelters or spiral guards
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maintain areas of open space
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remove individual tree protection in year 10
6.1 Agreement period
The multi-year Higher Tier option Woodland Creation Maintenance Payments (WD1) is for a period of 10 years. You must submit a claim form each year and we then make an annual payment. If you are successful, the agreement will start on 1 January of the year following your application and end on 31 December of the tenth year.
6.2 Applying for Woodland Creation Maintenance Payments (WD1)
Read section 3 for more information on eligibility. The Terms and Conditions of any agreement will require you to comply with the mandatory elements set out in this manual.
6.2.1 When to apply
This grant is only available when you have completed your capital works under your Woodland Creation grant agreement.
We will send you an application pack for a Woodland Creation Maintenance Payments agreement if you meet the following eligibility requirements:
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The objectives of your Woodland Creation agreement have been met and the final claim has been made.
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The land is not owned by a public authority, this includes land owned by the state, the Crown, county councils, district councils and local authorities. Land that is not eligible for these payments is listed in section 3.
Send your application to RPA (see Annex 5 for address details). This is a standalone Higher Tier application, the deadline for submission will be different to other Higher Tier applications (such as Woodland Improvement). We will tell you the deadline in your application pack.
6.2.2 How to apply
Fill in the Woodland Creation Maintenance application form and accompanying Annex 5. You will need to state the total area on which you are applying for the Woodland Creation Maintenance Payments. This area can include up to 20% open space.
You will also need to provide a map showing all areas of proposed Woodland Creation Maintenance with the application. Your application pack will contain a base map showing the area where you are applying for the grant.
If your application is successful and we offer you an agreement, the map you supplied with your application will become the Agreement Map so it must be clear, legible and meet the following standards:
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Show the location of the proposed work with the option code WD1 listed next to it.
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Show any areas of open space within the area proposed for grant support. Integral open space must be limited to 20% of the total woodland area and individual areas of open space must not be more than 0.5ha or 20m in width. Anything over this is not eligible to receive grant support. Open space includes forest tracks, rides, wayleaves and other permanent open areas.
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Have your Single Business Identifier (consisting of nine digits), application year and agreement title (as detailed on the application form) on the top right.
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Have your name or the business name that is registered with the Rural Payments service for the SBI, on the right hand side.
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Not have any correction fluid on it. If you make a mistake strike through it.
6.2.3 Authorising an agent
Read section 5.7 for information on how to authorise an agent to fill in the application and claim form on your behalf.
6.2.4 Consents and evidence
It is your responsibility to check the requirements of the option you apply for and to get all consents needed. You can read the requirements for WD1: Woodland creation - maintenance payments in the option guide.
6.3 Woodland Creation Maintenance and Basic Payments Scheme (BPS)
You may be eligible to claim BPS during your Woodland Creation Maintenance agreement. However, you must take action from the start date of your agreement to make sure you are eligible. For more information on Countryside Stewardship Woodland Schemes and BPS including eligibility and what you need to do read Guidance on woodland grant schemes and BPS: operations note 42. You should also read the guidance on the Basic Payment Scheme (BPS).
6.4 Agreement Management
As this is a Higher Tier option of the Countryside Stewardship you must comply with the mandatory elements of the Higher Tier. These are set out in the following sections of the Higher Tier manual:
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Section 3: Who can apply and what land is eligible
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Section 5: Scheme requirements and procedures
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Section 6: Agreement Management
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Annex 6: Common land (for common land and shared grazing applications only)
You should also be familiar with the Terms and Conditions of the Higher Tier.
Work can start on or after the 1 January agreement start date. For information on the records you need to keep read the WD1: Woodland creation - maintenance payments option guide.
6.5 Claims process – multi-year agreements
We must receive your payment claims for Woodland Creation Maintenance by midnight on 15 May of the relevant claim year.
If 15 May is on a Bank Holiday, other public holiday or weekend the deadline is the next working day.
If you miss the 15 May deadline, you can make a late payment claim for annual maintenance payments, until midnight on 9 June but we will apply a reduction. For each working day your payment claim is late, we will apply a 1% reduction to your payment.
If 9 June is on a Bank Holiday, other public holiday or weekend, you can make a late payment claim until the next working day.
You cannot make payment claims after midnight on 9 June (apart from in cases of force majeure). Your payment claim must include any paperwork needed to support your claim.
You can find more information at WD1: Woodland creation - maintenance payments.
6.5.1 Claims process – claims from land managers with multiple agreements
If your business covers a number of farms but is managed as a single unit, or uses one Single Business Identifier (SBI) number, you can have more than one agreement for that SBI. If you have multiple agreements in place, you must submit a separate multi-year CS payment claim in the usual way, but must also submit a separate over-arching declaration covering all of the agreements before we can pay any of the multi-year claims.
6.5.2 Claims process - Changing a claim after it has been submitted
You can change an annual maintenance payment claim up to midnight on 31 May without us having to apply a reduction. If you make a change between 1 June and midnight 9 June, we will apply a 1% reduction to the land parcel and option which the change relates to.
You cannot change a claim after 9 June, apart from:
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cases of force majeure
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where you withdraw all or part of a claim, or
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obvious error
6.5.3 Payments for all agreements
We (RPA) will make all payments directly into the Agreement Holder’s nominated bank account.