Temporary infrastructure Innovation Fund
Find out how you can apply for funding to test your innovative idea for using temporary roading, bridges, log chutes and other equipment to access and improve hard to reach vulnerable woodlands.
Applies to England
The fund is currently closed for applications.
A lack of access can hamper the management of woodlands and the extraction of timber. Find out how you can apply for funding to test your innovative idea for using temporary roading, bridges, log chutes and other equipment to access and improve hard to reach vulnerable woodlands.
Invitation to apply
Find out if you are eligible to apply for the Temporary Infrastructure Forestry Innovation Fund.
About the Innovation Fund
The aim of Woods into Management (WiM), as part of government’s Nature for Climate Fund, is to encourage and broaden innovation in forestry that results in improved ecological condition of existing woodlands.
Lack of vehicular access is often a constraint on operations designed to improve the condition of neglected, under managed or degraded woodland. The installation of permanent vehicular access infrastructure, for which existing grant aid may be available, is frequently prohibitively uneconomic, considering the volumes of timber likely to be mobilised, or inappropriate for crossing non-woodland areas. It has been suggested that the development of novel techniques or temporary roading systems suitable for woodland situations, materials and machinery may be needed. Several temporary roading systems have been developed for military and civilian application but it is not clear how these perform in woodland settings.
To help address this perceived need, the Forestry Commission (FC) is launching an Innovation Fund to which applications are invited. Through the fund, the FC is looking to support projects exploring innovative means by which to access undermanaged woodland.
We are seeking project proposals to develop and use equipment and business models focused on improving or maintaining the environmental condition of woodlands, including:
- neglected plantations on ancient woodland sites
- woodland SSSI
- neglected or degraded ancient woodland
- neglected or degraded native woodland
- neglected or degraded farm woodland
- riparian woodland
- woodlands suffering from pests and diseases including Ips typographus, Phytophthora ramorum and Hymenoscyphus fraxineus
Applicants are invited to submit single year projects due to complete by March 2024, or two-year proposals scheduled to complete no later than March 2025. Proposals can be costed at up to a maximum of £100K per year.
We are particularly interested in projects that develop collaborative working amongst forestry businesses, conservation bodies and private woodland owners. We welcome projects that will develop, purchase, or hire equipment that will minimise damage to woodland soils and damage to land adjoining woodlands during habitat management operations. Such equipment includes, but is not limited to, transportable, reusable, roading, transportable bridges to facilitate access across water courses and log chutes for use on steep terrain. We will consider projects that seek to develop and improve existing, commercially available products that may facilitate habitat improvement with some modification. We are keen to hear how applicants will maintain and clean transportable infrastructure to minimise risk of moving pests and pathogens from site to site.
Eligible Innovation Fund projects could range from appraisal of existing systems in woodland situations to completely innovative approaches. They may also include novel approaches by which woodland owners may gain access to such suitable infrastructure. Projects may incorporate an element of original research but must include some practical application.
What funding is available?
In 2023, up to £1.7million will be made available through the Woods into Management Forestry Innovation Funds to support innovative project work. Proposals, whether single or multi-year, must have a minimum total cost of £20K to be eligible for funding. Projects may be costed at up to a maximum of £100K in any given financial year.
Eligible costs that may be claimed will include:
- personnel cost related to researchers, and other supporting staff to the extent employed on the project
- costs of equipment for the period of the project. Where such equipment is not used for their full life only the depreciation costs corresponding to the life of the project shall be eligible
- costs of contractual research, knowledge and patents bought or licensed from outside sources at arm’s-length conditions, as well as costs of consultancy and equivalent services used exclusively for the project
- operating expenses, including costs of materials, supplies and similar products, incurred directly as a result of the project
- travel and subsistence essential to the delivery of WiM FIF grant activities, carried out in the most economically and sustainable way possible
The following expenditure is ineligible:
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costs or overheads such as rent, and utilities apportioned to those staff directly or indirectly employed on the project
- costs incurred outside of the project delivery window
- costs involved in preparing your application
Is my project eligible?
Projects can be single year with output(s) that will be fully developed by 27 March 2024 or two-year proposals set to run for up to two financial years, ending 27 March 2025. Applicants submitting proposals spanning two financial years should state this on the application form and clearly outline the activities, milestones and outputs that will be delivered by the end of each financial year. Multi-year agreements will be subject to an annual performance monitoring review by the FC. Where applicants are failing to deliver against agreed outputs and objectives, or it becomes clear that avenues of research are no longer worth pursuing, multi-year agreements may be terminated at the discretion of the FC.
Work must address means by which temporary infrastructure can be used to gain access to and within woodlands in England to facilitate the mobilisation of wood and timber by modern vehicles.
To be eligible for funding the:
- work must be of direct relevance to means by which the timber resource of England may be mobilised and ecological condition of woodlands improved
- project must address temporary vehicular access infrastructure into and and/or within woodlands
- project must look at innovative approaches not currently used in forestry in England
- project must be limited to pre-commercial activity
- lead partner must be a UK based business, sole trader, organisation, or research organisation
- majority of any project work must be undertaken in England
All eligibility criteria are fully described in the Woods into Management Forestry Innovation Fund Application Form.
How to apply
The fund is currently closed for applications.
Complete the Woods into Management Forestry Innovation Fund Application Form and accompanying finance spreadsheet. Guidance for applicants is available on the application form page to help you complete you application.
Applications closed May 2023.
The Forestry Commission will be hosted a “Woods into Management Forestry Innovation Funds – How to Apply” webinar event at 2pm on Monday 3 April. If you missed the webinar you can watch again.
A single stage application process will be followed.
Applications must be written in English, (without alterations to layout or format). Send your completed application and accompanying finance spreadsheet to [email protected]. Applications received after the deadline will not be considered.
In the application form you will be asked to provide details about:
An application will contain details about:
- what the project aims to achieve and how it fits within the scope of the fund
- the approach you will take and where the focus of the innovation will be
- who is in the project team and what their roles are, including details of partner organisations
- the impact that the project might have outside of the project team
- how the project will be managed effectively
- the main risks for the project
- the impact that an injection of public funding would have on the project
- the cost of the project and how it represents value for money for the project team and for the taxpayer
- details of activities to be funded and outputs/outcome expected
All costs and financial details should be in £ Sterling.
All questions in the application form are mandatory and you must submit a finance spreadsheet as part of your application. If any part of your application is incomplete, your application will be returned to you within two working days for you to revise and resubmit before the deadline should you wish. If any part of your application is unclear, the Forestry Commission may contact you – at any time prior to informing you of a funding decision – to request further information. If you wish to amend your application before the published deadline or withdraw your application at any time, please email [email protected].
There is no limit to the number of bids an applicant may submit provided each application is for a discrete and unique project.
Consortium applications are welcomed. A lead partner should be identified in the application. The lead applicant will become the sole agreement holder with the Forestry Commission; they will be responsible for the undertakings and obligations detailed in any grant agreement, in line with Terms and Conditions of Funding. If your application is successful, the lead applicant will become the sole agreement holder and will be the sole recipient of grant funding upon receipt of valid claims. The contractual arrangements held between the lead applicant and their co-applicants are not the responsibility of the Forestry Commission and the lead applicant will have sole responsibility for onward disbursal of grant funding to co-applicants, for example.
If you consider the information contained within your application to be commercially sensitive, you must notify the Forestry Commission of this when submitting your application.
The Forestry Commission reserves the right to change the deadline for applications or make changes to the Invitation to Apply and the application process at short notice. The Forestry Commission reserves the right to amend, add to or withdraw all or any part of the funding application process at any time during the process. All changes are recorded at the bottom of this page (click ‘show all updates’) and where these are made following the opening date the lead applicant for all applications already received will be contacted directly by email. Material changes (for example to the closing date or eligibility rules) will also be communicated via the Forestry Commission’s Grants and Regulations eAlert.
If you wish to clarify any application requirements or the application process, please email [email protected]. We will aim to respond to all requests for clarification within two working days of receipt. If we consider information requests relevant to any applicant, we will provide additional guidance to all applicants (via point of contact provided) by email to ensure fair and openness. We may be unable to respond to other support requests due to the competitive bid process.
Applicants who canvass FC or Defra employees associated with these innovation funds may have their applications rejected from the process.
Applicants who are unable to accept standard terms and conditions may have their application eliminated from the application process.
The Forestry Commission reserves the right not to answer clarifications where it considers that the answer to that clarification would or would be likely to prejudice commercial interests.
How will applications be assessed
All applications will be evaluated by a panel with expertise and experience of woodland management in England. Any applications deemed to fall outside the scope of the fund will not be evaluated.
Applicants will be notified of their WiM funding decision by 22 June 2023.
The Forestry Commission reserves the right to not award all of the funding available if insufficient bids of an appropriate quality are received.
The Forestry Commission may carry out checks on each application using a variety of government tools including the Cabinet Office’s automated grants due diligence tool called ‘Spotlight’ and Bank Account Verification software.
As part of due diligence process, the Forestry Commission may share details of the organisations involved in applications to this Innovation Fund with other parts of government.
The Forestry Commission will regard all eligible applications as remaining valid for 6 months after the initial closing date for applications. If the funds are oversubscribed and additional funds become available. Valid applications may be reconsidered for funding.
Reporting and payments
Grant holders will be required to complete an interim and end of year report in each financial year covered by their agreement. These reports will detail achievement against stated outcomes and outputs, lessons learnt, a complete cost breakdown outlining how the grant has been spent, and any need for further development.
Interim reports are due on 31 October (31 September in Year 2), and end of year reports are due by 27 March of each financial year. Templates for both interim and end of year reports will be provided to successful applicants. Payments may be withheld or reclaimed if reports are not submitted on time. Applicants will be encouraged to work with the Forestry Commission to publish a short article in a suitable trade press after the work has been completed.
Multi-year agreements will be subject to an annual performance monitoring review by the FC. Where applicants are failing to deliver against agreed outputs and objectives, or it becomes clear that avenues of research are no longer worth pursuing, multi-year agreements may be terminated at the discretion of the FC.
Projects must not begin before the start date of any grant agreement offered by the Forestry Commission.
Payments will be made in arrears by BACS transfer following receipt of claim forms. Payment of the claim will be made within 30 days of the FC approving your claim. In any given financial year, applicants will be able to submit claims at both the interim and end of year reporting stages, and on up to two additional dates chosen by the applicant. All claims must be supported by evidence of eligible expenditure (i.e. invoices/ timesheets) and, where not accompanied by an interim or end of year report, a progress update to demonstrate that works have been carried out as per the grant agreement.
Further information
Intellectual property shall remain with the grant recipients, but the scope of the project and a summary of the outcomes and outputs shall be made publicly available via forestry trade publications.
Applicants must declare if they have received, have applied for, or intend to apply for any other government funds.
The Forestry Commission is not responsible for any losses, breakages or injuries incurred by the applicant whilst engaged in activities associated with this Innovation Fund.
Neither FC nor its respective advisers, directors, officers, members, partners, employees, other staff or agents:
a. makes any representation or warranty (express or implied) as to the accuracy, reasonableness or completeness of this guidance; or b. accepts any responsibility for the information contained in this guidance or for the fairness, accuracy or completeness of that information nor shall any of them be liable for any loss or damage (other than in respect of fraudulent misrepresentation) arising as a result of reliance on such information or any subsequent communication.
Contact the Forestry Commission
You can get further help from the FC by emailing your enquiry to [email protected].
Make an appeal
Find out how to make a complaint or appeal.
Updates to this page
Published 20 May 2021Last updated 8 December 2023 + show all updates
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Added a note to confirm applications are now closed.
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Updated to reflect the fund reopening for 2023 applications
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Page updated to reflect the Wood Into Management Forestry Innovation Funds reopening.
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First published.