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An oak tree is cordoned off after being felled on 17 April 2025 on the edge of Whitewebbs Park in the Enfield area of London. Photograph: Dan Kitwood/Getty Images View image in fullscreen An oak tree is cordoned off after being felled on 17 April 2025 on the edge of Whitewebbs Park in the Enfield area of London. Photograph: Dan Kitwood/Getty Images Toby Carvery to pay for orchard planting after causing outrage by felling 500-year-old oak Restaurant chain took chainsaw to ancient oak tree in Enfield without permission The restaurant chain Toby Carvery has settled a legal dispute after taking a chainsaw to an ancient oak tree without permission by agreeing to pay for the restoration of a lost orchard. The unauthorised partial felling of the 500-year-old oak next to a Toby Carvery car park in Whitewebbs Park, Enfield, in April last year, prompted widespread public outrage and questions in parliament . Earlier this year Enfield council, which owns the land, started eviction proceedings against the restaurant chain over what it described as “a reckless act which caused huge damage to the tree and cut its expected lifespan.”. But on Wednesday, Mitchells & Butler Retail (M&B), which runs Toby Carvery, announced it had settled the dispute after agreeing to pay for the replanting of an orchard in the borough and the council’s legal costs. The company also agreed to pay for treatment of the remains of the oak, which experts say has little hope of surviving due to the damage done by M&B’s contractors. In April, the Guardian revealed that the work was done by Ground Control , based in Billericay, Essex, which describes itself as “a leading maintenance business and biodiversity expert”. In joint statement as part of the settlement M&B said it “sincerely apologises for the upset this [the felling] has caused”. The company has always maintained that chainsawing the tree was necessary for safety reasons because the oak was dying – a claim disputed by tree experts. The agreed statement added: “Enfield council recognises that M&B acted on the recommendation of reputable, professional advisers in taking the steps that it did, for the purpose of mitigating any health and safety risk to guests, team members and the wider public arising from the condition of the tree.” M&B’s undisclosed financial settlement will pay for the restoration of an orchard in Enfield’s Ridgeway corridor as part of the council’s Enfield Chase landscape restoration scheme. The statement said: “This will re-establish a publicly accessible community orchard, restore landscape character and biodiversity, and provide locally grown fruit for residents and visitors.” The settlement will also pay for the planting of 1,000 trees near the orchard. The statement concluded: “The parties now consider this matter closed.” Last year Enfield council referred the felling of the tree to the Metropolitan police, but the force refused to investigate stating it was a civil rather than criminal matter. M&B is majo
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    I hadnt considered that angle.
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    Thanks for sharing this information.
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    This is exactly what happens when corporations prioritize profit over responsibility! The fact that theyre paying for replanting now is just damage control - these 500-year-old trees cant be replaced!
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    *academic perspective* How does this replanting compensate for the irreplaceable ecological services these ancient oaks provided? The carbon sequestration capacity of 500-year-old specimens is incomparable to saplings, and this corporate greenwashing fails to address the fundamental question of whether profit-driven decisions should be allowed to undermine irreplaceable natural heritage. What metrics will truly measure the restoration of this ecosystems lost functionality? *178 characters*
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    This settlement shows corporate accountability when public outrage forces change. While replanting cant replace 500-year-old trees, its better than nothing. The chain shouldve protected these natural treasures, not just paid for new ones. #TobyCarvery #TreeProtection #EnvironmentalJustice
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    Interesting perspective on this.