Ash dieback is an environmental calamity that will cost Britain £15 billion
A research paper published today estimates that the cost of ash dieback in Britain will reach a shocking £15 billion. I was privileged to have supported lead author Louise Hill as an external supervisor, and to be a co-author of this important paper.
[image error] Current Biology, May 6 2019
Behind the scenes, in the run up to publication, the findings of the paper have caused considerable ‘excitement’, and this is why:
The total cost of Ash dieback to the UK is estimated to be £15 billionHalf of this cost (£7 billion) will come be over the next 10 yearsThe total cost is 50 times greater than the annual value of trade in live plants to and from Britain, which is the most important route by which invasive plant diseases enter the countryThere are 47 other known tree pests and diseases that could arrive in Britain and which may cost an additional £1 billion or more
Ash dieback will cost British society one-third more that the foot-and-mouth outbreak of 2001. In fact, it is likely to be the largest economic impact to British society so far caused by a preventable environmental calamity.
Gabriel Hemery
The mortality expected among Britain’s ash trees is expected to result in 95% of the county’s 150 million ash trees dying over the next few years. This will be a far greater disaster than the loss of elm in the 1970s. Some papers have suggested that mortality in Europe has averaged (75-85%), yet data from 11 recent academic papers from European scientists suggest it will average 94.3% (range 86.1-99%). Note also, that such calculations do not include the impact of human reaction to the disease, in the form of tree felling (for example due to health & safety concerns), and that Britain’s humid climate is expected to cause more severe disease than in much of Europe. Full details on these papers and calculations are provided in the supplementary Excel workbook which accompanies the paper.
Ash dieback is not ‘natural’. It was introduced into Europe
from Asia on planting material, and then from Europe to UK when diseased ash trees
were imported and then planted across UK, despite warnings from scientists at
the time. It probably also spread across the channel via airborne spores, but
the original introductions and subsequent rapid spread were as a direct result
of tree imports and planting.
It is evident that we cannot stop ash dieback, so our top
priority must be preventing other diseases arriving by improving biosecurity at
our borders. So, these are my key messages arising from this work:
Governments worldwide should take biosecurity
more seriously.UK government should revise its mortality
estimates for ash dieback, and plan accordingly.Market failure is driving the value of trade in
live plants. The value of the market is small compared to the costs arising
from poor biosecurity.Tree disease (and pathogen) outbreaks are
increasing exponentially in Britain, largely driven by trade. A large number of
potential other threats are looming — including oak wilt fungus (Ceratocystis fagacearum), bot canker
fungus (Diplodia corticola), and the
bacterium Xyella fastidiosa) — all of
which could lead to multiple and overlapping epidemics which could devastate
our trees.Local authorities will be hit with costs at
least 200% greater than their average current tree health budgets. Dead trees
cause an immediate and significant risk to human health, particularly near to
the transport network. Central government will need to intervene by providing
emergency funding.Research funding needs to be increased
significantly. UK government research has awarded £6.7 million since the
arrival of ash dieback, yet this represents less than 1% of the estimated costs
of the disease.
Read the full paper:
Download the full paper:
www.cell.com/current-biology/fulltext/S0960-9822(19)30331-8
Paper DOI:
10.1016/j.cub.2019.03.033
Paper citation:
Hill, L, G Jones, N Atkinson, A Hector, G Hemery, and N Brown. 2019. “The £15 Billion Cost of Ash Dieback in Britain.” Conservation Biology 29 (9): R315–16. https://doi.org/doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2019.03.033.
Further reading:
Plant Biosecurity Strategy for Great Britain, DefraMy previous posts about ash diebackMy other scientific papersThis paper is the third paper arising from Louise Hill’s work:
Hill, L, G Hemery, A Hector, and N Brown. 2019. “Maintaining Ecosystem Properties after Loss of Ash in Great Britain.” Journal of Applied Ecology 56 (2): 282–93. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.13255.Hill, L, A Hector, G Hemery, S Smart, M Tanadini, and N Brown. 2017. “Abundance Distributions for Tree Species in Great Britain: A Two-Stage Approach to Modeling Abundance Using Species Distribution Modeling and Random Forest.” Ecology and Evolution 7 (4): 1043–56. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.2661.
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Gabriel Hemery
I’m a silvologist—or forest scientist—and a published author. I’m also a keen amateur photographer with a passion for tr Welcome to my silvological blog featuring the study of trees, forests and woods.
I’m a silvologist—or forest scientist—and a published author. I’m also a keen amateur photographer with a passion for trees. ...more
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