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LAND COVER A ATLAS OF THE UNITED KINGDOM Alasdair Rae 2017 INFORMATION This Atlas – and accompanying online map set – is based on analysis of Corine Land Cover data from 2012. The Corine programme – sometimes referred to as ‘CORINE’ – is a programme of the European Commission. CORINE is short for ‘Coordination of information on the environment’ and the programme has three aims, as stated in the European Commission’s CORINE information document: • to compile information on the state of the environment with regard to certain topics which have priority for all the Member States of the Community; • to coordinate the compilation of data and the organization of information within the Member States or at international level; • to ensure that information is consistent and that data are compatible. Source: European Environment Agency, 1995 The Corine project covers 39 European countries, but this Atlas covers only the United Kingdom. The Corine Land Cover data for 2012 is licenced under an Open Government Licence. The following statement must be cited when using the data presented in this Atlas: “Copyright rests with the European Commission; Acknowledgement: Produced by the University of Leicester, The Centre for Landscape and Climate Research and Specto Natura and supported by Defra and the European Environment Agency under Grant Agreement 3541/B2012/R0-GIO/EEA.55055 with funding by the European Union.; If you reuse this data, you should cite: Cole, B., King, S., Ogutu, B., Palmer, D., Smith, G., Balzter, H. (2015). Corine Land Cover 2012 for the UK, Jersey and Guernsey. NERC Environmental Information Data Centre https://doi.org/10.5285/32533dd6-7c1b-43e1- b892-e80d61a5ea1d; this resource is made available under the terms of the Open Government Licence (http://eidc.ceh.ac.uk/administration-folder/tools/ceh-standard-licence-texts/open-government-licence-corine/plain)”. Under the terms of the Open Government Licence, users are free to do the following, so long as the source is acknowledged correctly: • copy, publish, distribute and transmit the Information; • adapt the Information; • exploit the Information commercially and non-commercially for example, by combining it with other Information, or by including it in your own product or application. How is Corine Land Cover (CLC) data produced? It is created through interpretation of high resolution satellite imagery, as part of the Copernicus programme. CLC2012 (the data used in this Atlas) is based on satellite data from 2011-2012 and is accurate to about 25 metres. At national and sub-national scales, therefore, Corine Land Cover data provides a good general overview of what our land is used for and covered by. This Atlas represents an attempt to make the data more meaningful and accessible for a UK audience. If you find it useful, or have any questions, feel free to contact Alasdair Rae (the author) at [email protected]. Atlas version: 1.2 DOI: 10.15131/shef.data.5266495 TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. INTRODUCTION 2 2. LAND COVER IN THE UNITED KINGDOM 4 3. LAND COVER IN ENGLAND, NORTHERN IRELAND, SCOTLAND AND WALES 8 4. SOME LOCAL MAPS OF CORINE LAND COVER 9 5. SUMMARY 15 APPENDIX 1: More about Corine 16 APPENDIX 2: Supplementary tables 19 High resolution versions of the Corine Land Cover maps in this Atlas, for every local authority in the United Kingdom, can be downloaded from: https://doi.org/10.15131/shef.data.5219956 1 1. INTRODUCTION in order for them to be useful, someone needs to How much of the UK is urban? How much is arable turn the raw data into meaningful information that land? How much is forest? Questions like these people can actually use, and that’s what I have arise from time to time in the media, in policy attempted here. discussions, and also in conversation, so that’s one of the reasons why I decided to undertake this Atlas project (which includes a set of online maps). What’s in the Atlas? I wanted to understand better what the United This Atlas is a short report supplement to a set of Kingdom is made of. I wanted to know how much online maps illustrating land cover in the UK’s 391 of the country we might justifiably classify as local authority areas. It begins by taking an ‘urban’ and how much we cannot. As it turns out, overview of land cover in the United Kingdom, with not much of the land area of the country is actually a map and some summary statistics. Following ‘urban’, even if it does account for more than 80% this, in section three I also look briefly at land cover of the population. in England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales. As you will see, the four parts of the UK have quite This Atlas uses Corine Land Cover data from 2012 different patterns of land cover (see Appendix 2). to show the variety and volume of different land uses across the United Kingdom. Put simply, In the fourth section of the Atlas, I also include Corine is an inventory of European land cover some more localised maps of a selection of local divided into 44 different classes, including authority areas, so that you can see more of the categories like ‘broad-leaved forest’ (about 2% of detail contained in the Corine dataset. I have done the UK’s land cover), ‘pastures’ (about 29%, the this so that local people, including planners, most of any class) and ‘continuous’ and architects, environmentalists, and anyone with an ‘discontinuous’ urban fabric (together, just under interest in land cover more generally, can see how 6% of the UK). To put this into a little bit of context, different areas are classified. The Atlas isn’t perfect, peat bogs cover about 10% of the land area of the but it’s my attempt to bring the data to life in a UK. But more on this kind of thing later. meaningful way. Why create a UK Land Cover Atlas? A few words about Corine data The main reason I wanted to create this Atlas is Before going any further, it’s necessary to highlight that I couldn’t find anything like it online or in print. that despite the name, the Corine Land Cover I wanted a basic overview of the UK’s land cover categories include areas that are not actually land. that was simple and accessible. Plenty UK Corine Water bodies – such as rivers and estuaries – are Land Cover maps can be found online, but I also also included in the Corine classification system wanted to see what the data looked like at a local (see Appendix 1). The national overviews for the level (for local authority areas). I wanted some whole United Kingdom, and the data for each part basic statistics too, such as how much of the UK is of the UK, do not include areas of sea or inshore classed as ‘natural grasslands’ (about 6%) or how waters but you will see from the local maps that in much is ‘moors and heathland’ (about 8%). most cases rivers, lakes and lochs are included in the calculations for local authority areas. One of the great things about these kinds of datasets is that they are open and free to use. But 2 Another important consideration to keep in mind If you have seen any Corine Land Cover maps when looking through this Atlas is that the Corine before, you will notice that the maps in this Atlas classification system has three different levels. At have a different colour scheme. For example, in the its most basic, land cover is classified into one of European Environment Agency Corine maps five types – ‘agricultural areas’, ‘artificial surfaces’, online, ‘peat bogs’ are blue, but in this Atlas they ‘forest and semi-natural areas’, ‘water bodies’ and are a brownish colour, which I think is a better ‘wetlands’. The next level of the classification has reflection of what they look like on the ground. 15 land use categories and at its most detailed Furthermore, I wanted to keep blue shades for there are 44. More details of each land use type are water. Undoubtedly, the colour choices on any given in Appendix 1 but you can see the individual map with more than 30 classes can make classes in the maps in the online Atlas. interpretation difficult, but there should be enough differentiation so you can tell what’s what. This Atlas is based on the most detailed Corine data, which covers 44 different land use classes. In As noted above, I have included a small sub-set of the United Kingdom, no land is classified as maps in this Atlas, including some local maps for ‘glacier’, ‘olive grove’, ‘agro-forestry’, ‘annual crops each part of the UK. The full set of high-resolution associated with permanent crops’ or maps are available online, via the University of ‘sclerophyllous vegetation’ (a kind of scrubland, Sheffield Online Research Data repository (ORDA), commonly found in hot countries), so this gives us hosted by Figshare. a total of 39 potential different land use categories in the UK (five are water body categories). Interpreting the maps The maps presented below, and in particular the A few words about the maps full set online, provide a detailed account of land The maps in this Atlas represent my attempt to cover in the UK. However, care must be taken make this fascinating, important dataset more when reading the maps. For example, if we see that easily digestible by those with an interest in the an area is classified as ‘discontinuous urban fabric’ subject. It is also partly an attempt to engage it will be displayed in a solid red colour on the people who might not otherwise care about land map. In reality, of course, this will include a variety cover in the first instance. As a consequence, I have of land cover, including houses, gardens, sheds, tried to make the maps as simple as possible. In garages and other physical artefacts and structures order to aid orientation, I have added some place which fit within the ‘discontinuous urban fabric’ names, road lines and railways. Corine definition, which is as follows: Each of the 391 local authority maps in the online “Most of the land is covered by structures: buildings, Atlas has a map key associated with it. This lists all roads and artificially surfaced areas associated with the potential Corine Land Cover classes in the vegetated areas and bare soil, which occupy dataset and it shows what percentage of each discontinuous but significant surfaces.” local authority is covered by each particular Corine class. For values below 1%, and particularly very In order to understand exactly what the maps low values under 0.2%, I have shown these in a show, I recommend reading Appendix 1, in lighter coloured font to indicate the uncertainty addition to the Corine Technical Library associated with very low values. documentation online. 3 2. LAND COVER IN THE UK UK lives in urban areas (World Bank, 2016) it is not As noted above, the UK contains 39 out of the 44 surprising that some people hold the opposite to different Corine Land Cover classes and displays a be true. However, from a land cover point of view, great deal of landscape diversity. However, this the United Kingdom is in fact dominated by includes several non-land categories, including pasture and arable land. ‘sea and ocean’, ‘estuaries’ and ‘water courses. If we remove the non-land categories, we are left If we look at the other end of the scale, we can see with a total of 34 different Corine Land Cover some land cover for the ‘vineyard’ and ‘rice fields’ classes in the UK. land use categories. These cover such tiny portions of land (0.0001% and 0.0003% respectively) that Looking at the map on the next page gives an they barely register. It should be borne in mind that overview of the geography of the different land use the Corine Land Cover classification correctly picks classes in the UK. As you can see, ‘pastures’ and up the existence of these uses in the UK, but the ‘non-irrigated arable land’ account for more than exact extent of coverage is so low that the precise half of the land area of the country, though this areas they cover needs to be treated with some differs significantly across the nations of the UK. caution. It is certainly correct to say that there are vineyards and rice cultivation in the UK, but they The ‘pastures’ category covers nearly 29% of the are undoubtedly quite unusual land uses. land area and ‘non-irrigated arable land’ covers just over 27%. The former refers to areas of dense Other land use categories of interest to emerge grass cover that are mainly used for grazing (often from the Corine Land Cover dataset include by cattle) but may also be used for fodder. ‘Non- ‘industrial or commercial units’ (0.8%), ‘green irrigated arable land’ refers to areas with cereals, urban areas’ (0.3%), ‘airports’ (0.2%) and fodder crops and root crops, among others. ‘continuous urban fabric’ (0.1%). This last category relates to the very most densely populated areas of Following these two categories are ‘peat bogs’ the UK and differs from ‘discontinuous urban (9.4%), ‘moors and heathland’ (7.5%) and ‘natural fabric’ only in terms of it being subject to the grasslands’ (5.8%). The first artificial land cover criteria that at least 80% of the total surface area class appears in sixth place on the list – within this class should be impermeable. ‘discontinuous urban fabric’ covers 5.3% of the land area of the UK. This accounts for most of the The map and table on the following two pages land in the UK covered by structures. Rounding out illustrates this land cover diversity in more detail. It the top ten in terms of land coverage are is clear that the UK is a nation of landscape ‘coniferous forest’ (5.1%), ‘broad-leaved forest’ diversity and – in places – significant population (2.2%), ‘transitional woodland-shrub’ (1.4%) and density. The extent to which this varies within ‘sport and leisure facilities’ (1.1%). England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales is explored in a little more detail in subsequent These figures may come as a surprise to you if you sections. To put it simply, though, it can be said think of the UK as a particularly urban, crowded that England is by far the most urbanised (8%), country. It may feel like a very densely populated Wales and Northern Ireland are both more than urban nation, but the reality is that the vast 50% pasture land and Scotland is 50% peat bog, majority of the land area of the UK is not built on. moors and forest. But these headline figures are far However, given that 83% of the population of the from being the whole story! 4 5 UK Corine Land Cover Corine Land Cover 2012 (UK) Sq Km % of Land 1 Pastures 71,069.2 28.7129 2 Non-irrigated arable land 66,954.9 27.0506 3 Peat bogs 23,281.1 9.4059 4 Moors and heathland 18,546.8 7.4931 5 Natural grasslands 14,407.2 5.8207 6 Discontinuous urban fabric 13,183.5 5.3263 7 Coniferous forest 12,700.1 5.1310 8 Broad-leaved forest 5,368.1 2.1688 9 Transitional woodland-shrub 3,402.6 1.3747 10 Sport and leisure facilities 2,840.1 1.1474 11 Intertidal flats 2,746.0 1.1094 12 Mixed forest 2,723.9 1.1005 13 Sparsely vegetated areas 2,572.3 1.0392 14 Industrial or commercial units 2,036.2 0.8227 15 Land principally occupied by agriculture, with significant areas of natural vegetation 1,292.0 0.5220 16 Mineral extraction sites 717.1 0.2897 17 Green urban areas 657.7 0.2657 18 Airports 493.3 0.1993 19 Beaches, dunes, sands 490.2 0.1980 20 Salt marshes 460.9 0.1862 21 Complex cultivation patterns 360.0 0.1454 22 Continuous urban fabric 326.8 0.1320 23 Bare rocks 208.1 0.0841 24 Port areas 147.7 0.0597 25 Inland marshes 145.8 0.0589 26 Road and rail networks and associated land 121.7 0.0492 27 Fruit trees and berry plantations 91.9 0.0371 28 Construction sites 77.3 0.0312 29 Dump sites 74.8 0.0302 30 Burnt areas 17.1 0.0069 31 Rice fields 1.1 0.0005 32 Salines 0.7 0.0003 33 Permanently irrigated land 0.4 0.0001 34 Vineyards 0.3 0.0001 6 The headline figures for the UK in the map and heathland’, at 29.4%. As mentioned above, the table above are interesting in themselves but they Corine Land Cover classification includes 44 mask a lot of localised variation in land cover. different land cover types in total, although the UK Unsurprisingly, the City of London is the local only contains 39. Unsurprisingly, the areas with the authority with the highest percentage of area greatest number of different land cover classes classified as ‘continuous urban fabric’, at 97.6%. tend to be the largest geographic areas. For ‘discontinuous urban fabric’, the London Borough of Lewisham comes out top, at 87.1%. At the top of the list of areas with the greatest Also in Greater London, Barking and Dagenham Corine Land Cover diversity is Dumfries and has the highest percentage of land cover classified Galloway in the south of Scotland which, according as ‘industrial or commercial units’, at 22.8%. to my analysis, contains 29 different Corine Land Further details can be seen in the online maps that Cover classes. This is followed by Perth and Kinross accompany this Atlas (see also Appendix 2). (28), Aberdeenshire (28), Cornwall (27), Highland (27), Northumberland (26), Angus (26) and Argyll The local authority in the UK with the highest and Bute (25). The other end of the scale is percentage of land area classified as ‘green urban dominated by areas in Greater London. The City of areas’ is Westminster, at 21.1%. This is of course London, for example, contains only ‘continuous not surprising when you consider that it contains urban fabric’ (plus a little water) whereas Islington Hyde Park, St James’s Park and Regent’s Park. Also contains only the two ‘urban’ types. Again, given in Greater London, the Borough of Richmond upon the built-up nature of London, this is hardly Thames is classified as being 40.9% ‘sport and surprising. leisure facilities’, much of which are golf courses. What is perhaps surprising is the extent to which Other interesting extracts from the localised some of the ‘urban’ local authority areas of major analysis of the national Corine dataset include the UK cities are in fact not very ‘urban’ at all, when we fact that South Holland in Lincolnshire is 93.3% consider land cover. This is often a result of ‘over- ‘non-irrigated arable land’ and Armagh City, bounding’, where the administrative boundary of Banbridge and Craigavon in Northern Ireland is the city – as in Leeds – covers an area that classified as being 84.6% ‘pastures’. The Isles of stretches far beyond the urban fabric. In the case of Scilly, in a similar vein, are classified as 96.2% ‘land Leeds, this means that we see 19 different Corine principally occupied by agriculture’. The area with classes and the largest of these is ‘non-irrigated the highest percentage of land cover classified as arable land’, at 32.5% of the total land area. This ‘natural grasslands’ is Blaenau Gwent, in Wales compares to a figure of 27.5% classed as (28.8%). ‘discontinuous urban fabric’. If we look at forestry cover, Moray in north east Also in West Yorkshire, the local authority area of Scotland is 21.6% ‘coniferous forest’, and Mole Bradford is classified as 42.8% ‘pastures’, 11.0% Valley in Surrey (just beyond the M25) is 16.7% ‘peat bogs’ and 26.5% ‘discontinuous urban fabric’. ‘broad-leaved forest’. The Scottish local authority Such curiosities are of course related to how we of Na h-Eileanan Siar (the Outer Hebrides) has the draw administrative boundaries but it also highest percentage of land classified as ‘peat bogs’ demonstrates the diversity of land cover in some (60.9%) and, also in Scotland, Angus has the areas we often think of as being particularly greatest percentage covered by ‘moors and ‘urban’. 7 3. LAND COVER IN ENGLAND, NORTHERN ‘moors and heathland’ and 5.7% ‘non-irrigated IRELAND, SCOTLAND AND WALES arable land’. In Wales, the two main ‘urban’ land As stated above, this Atlas is a short text cover classes account for 3.6% of the land. supplement to the set of maps published online for every local authority in the UK. However, given On the following pages you will see a selection of the different political and governance contexts localised Corine Land Cover 2012 maps for within the UK, and the way land is managed in different parts of the UK. These maps are extracted different parts of the county, it is worth looking from the complete set of UK local authority land briefly at land cover in England, Northern Ireland, cover maps in the associated online map set. I Scotland and Wales separately. have chosen these in an attempt to illustrate the diversity of land cover in the UK and to highlight England is by far the most urbanised part of the UK some of the more interesting areas. and the two main Corine ‘urban’ classes account for just over 8% of the total land area. For example you can see that, according to the ‘Discontinuous urban fabric’ (7.9%) is the third Corine classification, Tonbridge and Malling in the largest category. The largest two land cover classes south east of England is 7.3% ‘fruit and berry in England are ‘non-irrigated arable land’ at 43.1% plantations’, and Merthyr Tydfil in south Wales is and ‘pastures’, at 30.4%. The fourth largest 4.2% ‘mineral extraction sites’. Each of the maps category by percentage in England is ‘broad- lists all potential UK Corine Land Cover types and if leaved forest’, at 2.7%. A full breakdown of Corine an area contains a particular land cover type it will Land Cover in England, in addition to the other be indicated in the horizontal bars, in addition to a nations of the UK, is provided in Appendix 2. figure indicating what percent of the land area is accounted for by that class, as shown below (from Northern Ireland is dominated by the ‘pastures’ Blackburn with Darwen, in case you’re curious). Corine Land Cover category, with 67.1% of the land in this class. This is followed by ‘natural grasslands’ at 7.3%, ‘moors and heathland’ at 4.5% and ‘peat bogs’ at 4.4%. ‘Continuous’ and ‘discontinuous’ urban fabric account for just over 3% of the land area of Northern Ireland. In Scotland, almost a quarter of the land (23.6%) is classified as ‘peat bogs’ on the Corine Land Cover 2012 measure used here. This is followed by ‘pastures’ at 18.7%, ‘moors and heathland’ at 15.6%, ‘coniferous forest’ at 11.1% and ‘non- irrigated arable land’ at 10.1%. The two main ‘urban’ classes in Scotland account for only 1.6% of the land cover. In Wales, the single largest land cover category is ‘pastures’, which cover 52.4% of the land area. This is followed by 11.5% ‘natural grasslands’, 8.0% 8

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useful, or have any questions, feel free to contact Alasdair Rae (the author) at [email protected]. Atlas version: 1.2. DOI: 10.15131/shef.data.
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