Lancashire Coastline Protected by Reused Christmas Trees
Lancashire Coastline Protected by Reused Christmas Trees
US · Published Feb 16, 2026
Discarded Christmas trees are being repurposed to protect the Lancashire coastline from rising sea levels.
Volunteers are burying trees to create sand dunes, natural barriers against storm surges, and habitats for rare wildlife.
The initiative addresses coastal erosion, enhances biodiversity, and raises awareness about climate change impacts.
Christmas trees repurposed to protect Lancashire coastline
Thousands of discarded Christmas trees are being used to protect the Lancashire coastline from rising sea levels. Volunteers buried trees along a two-mile beach near Lytham St Annes to create sand dunes, which act as natural barriers against storm surges. The Lancashire Wildlife Trust leads this initiative, funded by the Environment Agency, to combat the 80% loss of sand dunes since the mid-1800s due to urban development. These dunes provide sea defense and habitats for rare wildlife like sand lizards, reintroduced after 60 years. The project intensified as sea levels rose, with the UK seeing a 19.5 cm increase since 1900, two-thirds in the last 30 years.
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