In This Issue
British Garden Centres announces its 79th garden centre in Knaresborough
Gouldings acquires Rosebank Nurseries
Air Drain solution from Eco Tiffin
FELCO’s Kids range of functional tools for young hands
Garden Re-Leaf Day 2026 mobilises garden industry for nationwide fundraising effort
Everton becomes the fifth garden centre in the Your Local Garden Centre group
British Garden Centres shortlisted for National Business Charity Award for their partnership with Greenfingers Charity
GIMA AGM 2026: Craig Hall announced as New President as association continues to go from strength to strength
Adam Frost to open Grantham Garden Centre
Major funding boost to help gardeners succeed with peat-free compost
Nature Minister joins HTA event in Westminster
Greenfingers Kilimanjaro trekkers pass £100,000 milestone
HTA responds to House of Lords Built Environment Committee’s New Towns: Creating Communities Report
Over £800 raised for Greenfingers at Quiz & Curry Night
Get your copy of GTN Xtra
Air-Pot is ‘gamechanger’ in historic restoration
Royal Garden returns with bold new vision
YPHA concludes management development programme
New Webb Classic 39cm Petrol Lawnmower delivers reliable entry-level performance at exceptional value
AutoPot unveil Khloris: An interior-friendly, automatic plant watering system
BGC's 200 centre vision for the future & exclusive interview with Derek Bunker in GTN March 2026 issue, read on-line now
Industry leaders unite at RECOUP summit to shape circular plastics future
AIPH announces category leads for World Green City Awards judging
Second year of 'Make a Metre Matter' Campaign
The best of last week's
Newbridge scoop Blue Diamond Oak Garden Centre of the Year for the third year running
Garden Re-Leaf Day 2026: North and South sponsored walks
Elegant horseshoe canopy transforms outdoor plant display at Haskins West End
LOFA donates £1,000 to Royal Wolverhampton NHS Trust in gratitude for life-saving care
Dobbies unveils exciting new foodhall concept
Did you spot these April Fool's Day stories?
Louder, Faster, Bolder: Webb launches petrol lawnmower designed to be seen and heard
New Garden Spa planned for Pengelly Garden Centre
Gravity-defying hover boots launched by Flymo
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Nature Minister joins HTA event in Westminster

The Horticultural Trades Association hosted its largest-ever ‘Plants in Parliament’ event, joined by Mary Creagh MP, Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Nature at Defra. The event highlighted the importance of Britain’s original green businesses amid rising costs.

 

The HTA’s Plants in Parliament events began as a small drop-in session in November 2023 at Portcullis House. Since then, they have grown significantly in both scale and influence, with more and more plants carried along the corridors of power as an increasing number of parliamentarians queued to engage with HTA members and the team. Today’s spring reception was hosted for the first time in the larger Attlee Suite due to the growing support from MPs and Peers across the political spectrum.

 

Speaking at the event, HTA Chief Executive Fran Barnes highlighted both the scale of the sector’s contribution and the increasing pressures facing businesses.

 

Fran Barnes, Chief Executive of the HTA, said: “Plants in Parliament is about recognising the enormous value that environmental horticulture delivers to our economy, our environment and our communities.

 

“Our members are the businesses behind that impact, supporting 722,000 jobs and contributing £38 billion to the UK economy, while creating the green spaces that cool our towns and cities, improve air quality, boost flood resilience and support biodiversity. We are, quite literally, growing the future of this country.

 

“Every plant we took to parliament – and every plant in every cultivated green space – has been produced by a business. But the future of these vital businesses is under increasing pressure. While sales have grown, rising costs mean many businesses will need to increase turnover by 10–15% just to stand still. The increases to National Living Wage and National Insurance Contributions alone added around £134 million of additional cost to the industry, alongside business rates pressures, supply chain disruption, inheritance tax changes, energy costs and new regulatory burdens.

 

“For many businesses - particularly SMEs, which make up 90% of our sector - the past four years have meant tighter margins, reduced investment, growing uncertainty and less investment in the business as a result. Policymakers cannot continue to look at these pressures in isolation. The cumulative impact is what matters.

 

“Environmental horticulture delivers the green infrastructure we depend on for the environment, biodiversity, health and wellbeing and growing our green economy. Now is the time to recognise that and back the sector to grow.”

 

Mary Creagh MP, the Nature Minister, also addressed attendees, recognising the vital contribution of environmental horticulture to nature recovery, green infrastructure and communities across the UK.

 

Attendees were welcomed into a vibrant display of houseplants, bedding plants, and herbs supplied by HTA member Capital Gardens. They were invited to take plants back to their offices or constituencies, and this year, they could also pick up a DIY plant kit, complete with seeds from Crocus and materials from Mr Fothergill’s, to experience the growing process firsthand.

 

Event sponsor Ben Goldsborough MP said: “It’s a pleasure once again to support the HTA’s Plants in Parliament event and to see it go from strength to strength, bringing more colleagues together each year to celebrate the UK’s environmental horticulture sector.

 

“This is an industry that delivers real value, not just economically, but for our communities and our environment. Events like this are an important opportunity to connect policymakers with the businesses behind that impact and to better understand the challenges and opportunities facing the sector.”

 

The HTA continues to build on the success of ‘Plants in Parliament’ as a platform for engagement between policymakers and industry, ensuring environmental horticulture is recognised as a strategic sector, capable of driving growth, supporting climate and biodiversity goals, and improving quality of life throughout the UK.

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