30 Apr 2002
Friends of the Earth is calling on gardeners to keep their gardens green and continue to avoid peat and peat-based products this Bank Holiday - one of the busiest weekends for planting in the gardening year[1]. And it is also calling on gardeners to keep up the pressure on those retailers who have still not committed to going peat-free.
Over recent years, thousands of gardeners have being doing their bit to protect
peat bogs -which are some of the UK's finest wildlife sites - by refusing
to buy peat. And while B&Q, Homebase, Focus and Wyevale Country
Gardens have led the trend for retailers by promising to phase-out peat-based
products, Tesco, Sainsbury's, Safeway and ASDA, are yet to commit to
going peat free.
Pressure from retailers was a vital factor in securing a major victory earlier this year, when US corporation Scotts agreed to end peat-extraction at three of the UK's top wildlife sites [2]. But Friends of the Earth is urging consumers to keep up the pressure, as peat bogs are still under threat.
Peat free gardening is easy. The National Trust, which operates 200 of the nation's finest gardens is completely peat-free and the Eden Project in Cornwall was developed without using peat.
TV gardener Monty Don said:
No garden is an island. Every time a gardener buys a bag of
peat they are directly responsible for destroying some of our most precious
wildlife habitats. Nowadays, there are plenty of good substitutes
that are in many ways more useful to peat. The truth is that there is
no excuse for ever using peat in our gardens. Keep it in the bogs where
it belongs
Craig Bennett, wildlife campaigner at Friends of the Earth said:
"If gardeners really want to have green fingers they should
avoid peat-based products. Many gardeners have cut out peat because
they know its extraction damages the[2] Although
the Government and US corporation Scotts have agreed to end commercial
peat- cutting in the UK - consumers must still
be vigilant when shopping for garden supplies."
Contact details:
Friends of the Earth
26-28 Underwood St.
LONDON
N1 7JQ
Tel: 020 7490 1555
Fax: 020 7490 0881
Web: www.foe.co.uk/feedback.html
Media team