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New charity initiative enables Leeds residents to get trees planted outside their homes

Leeds City Council has entered a partnership with Trees for Streets and has chosen to pilot the National Street Tree Sponsorship scheme in the city this year.

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Leeds residents can request to sponsor and look after a new semi-mature street tree

The agreement means that Leeds residents can now request to sponsor and look after a brand new semi-mature street tree at a location with a grass verge of their choosing in Leeds for £150. Neighbours can even choose to set up a crowdfunding page and club together to fund new trees.

Trees for Streets works in partnership with Leeds City Council to get the trees planted. The charity engages with the local community, whilst the council manages the planting of the sponsored trees at the requested locations.

During summer months, residents will take on the job of watering their sponsored trees.

The council says the new scheme is the latest effort towards Leeds’ ambitious target of practically doubling the number of trees across the district by 2050.

Around 150 hectares of woodland has already been planted on public land with the help of volunteers since the launch of the council’s Woodland Creation Scheme. Meanwhile, private landowners (including farmers) in the district are also being helped to access support to plant trees through the council’s partnership with the White Rose Forest initiative.

Tree cover in England is amongst the lowest in Europe. This impacts resilience to the climate crisis, rising temperatures and increasingly severe weather – particularly in towns and cities.

Street trees act as natural air conditioners, providing shade on hot days and cooling the air through a process called evapotranspiration. They also help places cope with heavy rain and protect from flooding. Their roots absorb huge amounts of water, and their leaves and branches collect rainwater as it falls.

Councillor Mohammed Rafique, executive member for Climate, Energy, Environment and Green Space, said:

“I am always amazed by the incredible benefits that the right trees, planted in the right places, can have and street trees are some of the most beneficial of all.

“From cooling our streets on hot days, helping to prevent flooding, boosting our wellbeing, creating space for nature, improving beauty in an area—or even their ability to remove planet-warming gases from the air—our ambitious tree planting targets are key to making Leeds a greener, healthier, and better place to live.

“Nobody knows our streets better than the residents who live in them, so I am pleased to launch this exciting initiative with the charity Trees for Streets to empower neighbours and individuals to be able to green their own communities if it is right for them.”

Simeon Linstead, project director at Trees for Streets, said:

“Trees breathe life into our streets. They transform them. By working in partnership with Leeds City Council, our aim is to empower locals to make their neighbourhoods greener and healthier.”