Northern brown argus halts Todrig forestry plan as investors seek woodland tax breaks
Campaigners say commercial tree planting is threatening rare grassland habitats on the English-Scottish border.
En resumen
- A legal challenge over the vulnerable northern brown argus has delayed a forestry plan at Todrig, where investor Gresham House wants to plant commercial trees.
- The case highlights rising demand for woodland as a tax-efficient asset for wealthy families.
Resumen generado por IA
Por qué importa
Todrig is a large site on the English-Scottish border with heath moorlands and many species of flora and fauna. The article says the site became the focus of a legal challenge after plans for a commercial plantation threatened habitat for the northern brown argus.
A legal challenge over the vulnerable northern brown argus has delayed a forestry plan at Todrig on the English-Scottish border, where investor Gresham House wants to plant commercial trees.
Todrig, a 580-hectare site with heath moorlands and rich biodiversity, is one of several borderland areas where investors are buying land for timber production. Campaigners say this kind of forestry replaces varied habitats with monocultural plantations and harms wildlife.
The plan was halted for now after the butterfly’s protected status prompted further checks by the environmental regulator. Gresham House, which bought the land for £12m in 2022, is still aiming to develop it as a tree farm.
The case has become part of a wider debate over woodland investment, inheritance tax relief and the spread of large commercial forests across the UK. Critics argue that these schemes threaten natural grassland and native habitats, while investors say commercial forestry can provide carbon capture, timber supply and other economic benefits.
At Todrig, campaigners say the issue is not only ecology but also land ownership and community accountability. They argue that large institutional landowners can make it harder for local people to influence what happens to the landscape.
Gresham House says the project was designed as a high-quality woodland scheme and that it has held public consultation, carried out ecology surveys and set aside about 40% of the site as open ground. It says it will continue working with Scottish Forestry on a lawful and robust redetermination.
Qué observar
Perspectiva de IA — posibilidades, no hechos
Gresham House will pursue a revised or legally compliant forestry application for Todrig.
Probable · En semanas
The Todrig dispute will continue to be used as an example in debates over woodland tax relief and land ownership.
Posible · En meses
Further legal or planning scrutiny may be triggered for similar forestry schemes on rare habitats.
Posible · En meses
Preguntas abiertas
- Will Scottish Forestry approve a revised woodland plan at Todrig?
- How much of the site will remain open ground in the final design?
- What will happen to the legal challenge if the redetermination changes the project again?






