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Managing woodlands to combat climate change

Forestry has a key role to play in reducing the rate and impact of climate change, including removing carbon from the atmosphere and locking it up in growing trees.

Published: 22 Feb 2025

Topic: Manage forests

What is climate change?

Climate change is a long term shift in the temperatures and weather patterns we experience. 

It is caused by the release of Greenhouse Gases (GHGs) like carbon dioxide and methane, which stay in our atmosphere and trap the sun’s heat. 

The more GHGs in our atmosphere the higher the temperature and the greater climate change, we will experience.

Higher global temperatures melt polar ice caps, cause sea level rises and create instability in our weather systems resulting in more frequent, intense and unseasonal:

  • storms
  • heatwaves
  • water scarcity
  • drought
  • flooding
  • wildfires

Did you know?

Some climate change can be natural. But the rate and extent of change we are experiencing is driven by human activity, mainly related to: 

  • burning fossil fuels like coal, oil and gas
  • land use changes like deforestation

Is there a global strategy to tackle climate change?

The United Nations (UN) urges nations to develop and implement mitigation strategies that:

  • minimise the speed and eventual level of climate change (by reducing or preventing emissions)
  • establish resilience strategies that allow us to cope with the climate change that does take place

The Climate Change Committee’s current advice is to plan for a global temperature rise of 2°C and assess the risks up to 4°C.

Scotland's forests help tackle climate change

7.5
million tonnes
of carbon dioxide sequestered every year
14%
of Scotland’s
total greenhouse gas emissions absorbed in 2022

Forestry's role in climate change

Forestry has a significant role to play in reducing the rate and impact of climate change by:

  • removing carbon from the atmosphere and locking it up in growing trees
  • promoting sustainable forest management through the UK Forestry Standard

    Supporting home-grown timber means we are not harvesting from unsustainably managed woodlands nor increasing carbon emissions through importation.

    UK Forestry Standard, 5th edition

  • substituting wood products for materials that release large volumes of greenhouse gases in their production, such as:

    • concrete
    • plastic and steel

    Using timber for long-term products like furniture and housing, as well as re-using and recycling forest products:

    • helps ensure that the carbon sequestered is not lost back to the atmosphere
    • supports the use of wood fuel and renewable energy as a substitute for fossil fuels
  • helping communities to adapt and become more resilient through, for example:
    • flood and landslide mitigation
    • improving air, soil and water quality
    • providing shade and shelter
    • cooling urban areas


What are we doing to grow our forests?

The Scottish Government’s Climate Change Plan includes ambitious targets for creating new woodlands, aiming to increase forest and woodland cover from around 18% to 21% of the total area of Scotland by 2032.

The impact of the Forestry Grant Scheme

Funding has been made available through the Forestry Grant Scheme since 2015, with significant results.
90,700
hectares
of new woodland has been created since 2015
40,000
hectares
of which was native woodland
185
million trees
in the ground - an area 5 times the size of Glasgow

The forestry sector continues to grow

A record level of investment has been made available to support the forestry sector between 2020 and 2025. Both large and small schemes are important in contributing towards climate change objectives.
£150
million
invested for the creation of new woodlands and to support businesses like tree nurseries
4,000
hectares
of new native woodland to be funded by the Forestry Grant Scheme (FGS) every year

Woodland creation and management

There are a wide range of options for woodland creation and woodland management.  In the right circumstances, all woodland types and options can help reduce the effects of climate change.

Slower growing broadleaves can collect high carbon reserves within the woodlands themselves over the longer term. 

Faster growing conifers can:

  • sequester more quickly in the medium to long term
  • produce wood products that substitute for high greenhouse gas emitting materials and fossil fuels in the longer term

This supports Scotland’s:

  • economy
  • green recovery
  • job creation

Home grown timber also ensures we reduce offshoring of our wood production to natural forests. 

Read our climate change mitigation information note for more information.

Information Note: climate mitigation woodland creation and management

Sustainable timber harvesting

When timber is harvested with consideration for future impacts, we:

  • responsibly produce a valuable resource
  • preserve forests for future generations

Most of the houses in Scotland are made of timber. But you may not immediately identify this because timber makes up the frame and internal structures of the house. 

Timber structures:

  • can be erected quickly
  • can help reduce the energy costs of a house
  • have better environmental credentials than most other construction materials

By using timber in construction we use less CO2. Using wood in construction also locks away the carbon for the lifetime of the building.

The Bonn Challenge and Scotland's forestry pledge

The Bonn Challenge is a global ambition to restore landscapes and forests. The Scottish Government signed up to the pledge in 2018.

The goal is to bring 150 million hectares of degraded and deforested landscapes into restoration by 2020 and 350 million hectares by 2030.

The impact of climate change to our forests

The main threats to forestry are:

  • temperature - increased generally, and an increase in the length and severity of high temperatures
  • pests and diseases - increased risk due new pests that can survive in a changing climate, and an increase in more susceptible trees due to other stressors

    Prevent pests and diseases

  • frost - reduced number but changed timing, such as occasional hard frosts which are particularly damaging after bud-burst and during lamas growth
  • wildfire – increased due to reduced rainfall and higher temperatures

    Prevent wildfires

  • flooding and waterlogging – increased due to change in intensity of rainfall

    Managing water

  • windthrow - increased storm frequency and intensity - overall tree stability is also reduced by:

    • successive storm events
    • drought
    • saturated ground

    Prepare for storms

  • drought – increased due to change in distribution of rainfall

In recent years it is becoming increasingly apparent that these threats are not isolated. Together, they are having a compound negative effect on the health and vigour of our forests. 

The importance of forest resilience

Climate change presents challenges to forestry practices. In order for us to continue to enjoy and benefit from our forests, we need to increase their resilience to our future climate. 

It’s therefore vital that woodland owners and managers act now to develop more resilient forests.

Improve forest resilience

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