For more than a century, a display at the RHS Chelsea Flower Show has served as the flower world’s ultimate badge of honor—a horticultural equivalent to a knighthood for Britain’s growers, nurseries, and designers. Yet as the 2026 show approaches, that prestige carries a heavy price. A growing number of exhibitors are withdrawing, being denied space, or openly protesting the Royal Horticultural Society’s strict peat-free policy, exposing a deepening rift between environmental ambition and the practical realities of the supply chain that sustains the event.
A Policy Under Pressure
The RHS first committed in 2021 to a “No New Peat” mandate, requiring all plants at its shows to be either fully peat-free or grown in peat extracted before the end of 2025. The initiative aligns with broad environmental goals: peatlands cover just 3% of Earth’s surface yet store more carbon than all global forests combined. In the UK, an estimated 75% of peatlands are degraded, now releasing carbon instead of sequestering it. The society made its own retail operations peat-free in January 2026 and has invested roughly £2.5 million over a decade into peat-free research and workshops for hundreds of nurseries.
But anticipated government support never arrived. A planned retail peat ban collapsed after a change in government, and a promised prohibition for commercial growers remains stalled. Facing what RHS director general Clare Matterson described as a “legislative black hole,” the society relaxed its own rules earlier this year, permitting up to 40% of nurseries in the Great Pavilion to sell “peat starter plants”—those begun in peat plugs and later transferred to peat-free medium—through 2028.
Growers Struggle with Compliance
Even with those concessions, the policy has proven a logistical challenge for the trade. Growers supplying show gardens have told industry publications that fully tracing a plant’s peat history is nearly impossible unless the specimen has spent its entire life with a single nursery—a rare scenario given the complex, international nature of modern plant supply chains, with much young stock imported from abroad.
The friction has already cost Chelsea some longtime participants. Contract grower Creepers Nursery announced a year-long break from growing for the show, and at least one other nursery has withdrawn entirely, citing the strain of traceability requirements. Kelways, a longstanding grower, has publicly questioned whether the policy is workable as written.
A Public Spectacle
The dispute erupted into full public view this year when award-winning exhibitor Tim Penrose claimed the RHS had denied him a stand because he had not attended the society’s anti-peat seminars and was deemed insufficiently committed to the policy. Rather than retreat quietly, Penrose arrived at Chelsea in a Superman costume, suggesting only a superhero could rescue the show from itself, and aired grievances over what he described as a bureaucratic, unevenly enforced rule.
Financial and Competitive Pressures
The peat controversy is unfolding against a backdrop of financial strain. The RHS reported a net loss of £8.1 million for the year ending January 2025, though the organization says more recent, unpublished figures show improvement, including a 7% rise in income and a £4.8 million cash profit. The show has also lost major backers: an anonymous philanthropic couple, who had contributed more than £23 million to Chelsea over the years, ended their support this year. Meanwhile, a rival event backed by The Newt in Somerset has launched with free admission for children under 16—a direct, if polite, challenge to Chelsea’s dominance on the show calendar.
Critics within the industry argue the peat dispute reflects broader institutional drift. Some designers and writers have accused the RHS of lagging on multiple fronts—organic growing practices, gender representation among top garden designers, and sustainable materials—while continuing to feature elaborate, corporate-sponsored show gardens whose own carbon footprints have drawn scrutiny.
A Defining Moment for Chelsea
None of this signals that Chelsea is collapsing or moving smoothly toward a peat-free future. The RHS points to genuine progress: all show gardens, judged floral displays, and trade stands at its 2026 shows must meet the “No New Peat” standard, and the society continues funding research into alternatives. Yet the exhibitor departures and public friction suggest the transition is proving far messier than the tidy deadlines first set in 2021.
For an institution built on horticultural excellence and tradition, the peat question has become an unusually visible test of how far the RHS can push its membership toward sustainability before some choose to walk away.