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UK horticulture calls on Chancellor for action on energy, water and trade

Chief Executive of the HTA, Fran Barnes.

Horticultural Trades Association

4 min read Partner content

The Horticultural Trades Association’s letter to the Chancellor ahead of the Spring Budget sets out clear asks for action on the cost of doing business, water resilience and trade, as businesses across UK horticulture continue to see soaring costs and face another challenging weather year.

The water shortage that environmental horticulture businesses face is despite an extremely wet start to 2023, with the weather contributing to a negative effect on sales in the garden sector. The trade body that represents the breadth of the industry is calling for the Chancellor to introduce a new grant scheme to support improvements to reservoirs and introduce water-saving innovations. It also reiterates that the energy crisis that came to the fore in 2022 has not gone away.

The HTA’s latest market report for the industry shows garden centre sales in January were down by 9% on the same period last year, and average transaction values were also down by 7%. The effect of inflation on wages, energy and goods has combined with pressures on household finances to severely restrict businesses’ room for manoeuvre. The HTA asks for government action to deliver consumer and business confidence.

The environmental horticulture industry is awaiting key announcements on the transition away from peat use and on how borders will operate in the future. These require action and investment, and the HTA’s letter to the Chancellor stresses that the cumulative impacts of policies and regulation must not be overlooked.

Despite these headwinds, UK horticulture remains optimistic that it can play an even greater role in success of the economy; providing a range of significant monetary, social, and environmental benefits.

Fran Barnes, Chief Executive of the HTA, said: “We have set out clearly where we seek action to ensure that businesses operating in environmental horticulture can thrive and deliver benefits to their customers and communities. It’s obvious that, as an industry, we cannot produce without water, but there are many indirect consequences of shortages, such as not being able to grow the trees we need to combat climate change or have green spaces to help flood resilience. We need to see the government recognising the value of environmental horticulture. We’re already under pressure, as our recent market statistics show, and support is vital.”

Other asks in the HTA’s submission to the Treasury include:

  • Continual review of the Energy Bills Discount Scheme and support for business.
  • Longer-term rates relief for the retail, hospitality and leisure industries.
  • Extended business rate exemptions to incentivise green business investment.
  • Grant funding to trial new growing media to help reduce the use of peat.
  • Expand the existing tree nursery production grant scheme to ensure that the industry is able to produce enough trees to meet anticipated future demand.
  • Reform the Apprenticeship Levy to ensure it is a viable training option for SMEs.
  • Action on trade barriers and border delays.

Environmental and ornamental horticulture in the UK:

  • Employs 420,000 people (and supports 674,000 jobs in the UK economy)
  • Supports contributions towards UK GDP of £28.8 billion
  • Supports tax revenues of £6.3 billion
  • Underwrites half of the UK’s 25-year Environment Plan
  • Provides physical and mental health benefits

About the HTA

The Horticultural Trades Association (HTA) is the trade association for the UK garden industry. Representing some 1,500 member companies, it supports the employment of 674,000 people.

As of 2022, the HTA represents the breadth of UK environmental horticulture sector – retailers, growers, domestic landscapers, and manufacturers/suppliers, a majority SMEs and spread across the breadth of the four nations of the UK.

The HTA’s associations and groups include the Ornamentals Management Committee (OMC), the Association of Professional Landscapers (APL) and the Growing Media Association (GMA). The trade body is a member of the British Retail Consortium (BRC) and Confederation of British Industry (CBI).

Peat made up less than 30% of the compost sold to gardeners in the UK in 2021. The HTA’s figures show that the industry is making dramatic strides to voluntarily phase out peat and calls for the Government to support efforts to find alternatives to the product.

Ornamental horticulture and landscaping in the UK is expected to contribute c£42 billion to national GDP in 2030, with around 763,000 jobs expected to be supported by ornamental and landscaping.

A YouGov survey for the HTA found that 76% of UK adults have access to a private garden and that 82% of UK adults agree that having access to a garden or public green spaces is important to them (YouGov, October 2022).

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