A SCHEME to plant deciduous trees across an area equivalent to about 14,000 football pitches should consider the needs of farming and create networks for wildlife, a national park committee has been told.

Members of the North York Moors National Park Authority heard 220 hectares of woodland needed to be planted by 2022 and the same amount again every three years for 100 years to offset carbon emissions from the electricity usage of Sirius Minerals mine outside Sneatonthorpe, near Whitby.

Under the agreement as part of planning permission for the mine, the authority is obliged to cover just under four per cent of the park with trees. Considering a strategy to achieve the goal, members were told it would be necessary to incentivise landowners with grants of up to 100 per cent.

Authority member David Hugill said it was vital the future need of farming and the landscape was considered “rather than the temptation to meet targets”.

The authority’s chairman, Jim Bailey, questioned one of the proposed criteria landowners needed to fulfil - that the minimum area of woodland creation in one agreement is one hectare.

He said: “I think there is a huge opportunity we are missing. Much of the biodiversity is not in the middle of the forest or in the middle of a farm, it is between the two. There is a lot of people in the national park that would love to plant a hectare of woodland and I think that would enhance the landscape.”

He added while the trees needed to capture carbon, trees that could be used for timber or other benefits, such as apple trees, should be considered.