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Ten pitfalls of massive tree planting campaigns like the World Economic Forum’s trillion trees initiative

 By Chris LangPosted on 



“Scientists, corporations, mystics, and movie stars have convinced policymakers around the world that a massive campaign to plant trees should be an essential element of global climate policy. Public dialogue has emphasized potential benefits of tree planting while downplaying pitfalls and limitations that are well established by social and ecological research.”

That’s the opening sentence in a recent paper published in BioScience. The lead author is Forrest Fleischman of the Department of Forest Resources, University of Minnesota. “These days everyone seems to thinks that ‘planting trees’ is an important solution to the climate crisis. They’re mostly wrong, and in this paper we explain why,” Fleischman writes on Twitter. “Instead of planting trees, we need to talk about people managing landscapes.”

The paper is titled, “Pitfalls of Tree Planting Show Why We Need People-Centered Natural Climate Solutions” and lists “ten pitfalls and misperceptions that arise when large-scale tree planting campaigns fail to acknowledge the social and ecological complexities of the landscapes they aim to transform”.

Unfortunately, the authors of the paper do not mention that natural climate solutions are just another way of avoiding the urgent need to keep fossil fuels in the ground. The authors make no mention of the fact that oil corporations, including BP, Shell, Total, Equinore, and Eni, are planning to pour hundreds of millions of dollars into natural climate solutions, while continuing to extract more oil.

Of course, socially just, people-centred ecosystem restoration is a worthwhile goal. But to address the climate crisis we need to leave fossil fuels in the ground. We cannot trade the carbon stored in ecosystems against continued extraction and burning of fossil fuels. Yet that’s precisely what the oil industry, and the big NGOs that are promoting natural climate solutions, want to do.

The authors do raise the issue of social justice and point out that while the majority of carbon emissions come from the global north, tree planting campaigns focus on the global south. And the paper’s critique of the problems associated with the current tree planting craze is generally excellent. Here are the authors’ ten pitfalls of tree planting – each one starts with a quotation from the authors:

1. Ecosystems, not tree planting campaigns, capture and store carbon

Despite the importance of below-ground biomass and soil organic matter to carbon storage, the most visible and easily measured carbon resides above­ ground in trees.

The high visibility and the fact that everyone likes trees means that proponents of natural climate solutions promote tree planting above all else. But massive tree planting programmes have high failure rates. Planting trees in savannas and peatlands destroys biodiversity and can end up emitting more carbon than it stores.

2. Preventing ecosystem destruction is the most cost-effective natural climate solution

Because ecosystems are crucial to carbon sequestration, avoiding deforestation, improving forest management, and protecting grasslands, peatlands, and shrublands from conversion should be the priority.

Addressing the drivers of deforestation is crucial, otherwise the destruction will just be shifted to somewhere else. The authors note that securing the rights of rural and Indigenous people is essential. They argue in favour of “just compensation for the carbon that ecosystems store”, but do not mention where this money should come from or to whom it should be paid.

3. Forests can regrow on deforested land without tree planting

In most places where reforestation is desirable, forests can regenerate naturally from seeds or resprouts, even in landscapes that appear to be highly degraded.

It is also cheaper than tree planting, and results in faster recovery of forests, more carbon storage, more biodiversity, and more benefits for local communities. Assisted natural regeneration can include planting trees that are beneficial to local communities.

4. Tree plantations sequester less carbon, less securely, than naturally regenerated forests

Global forest restoration initiatives promote fast-growing plantations of commercial pulp and timber species as a natural climate solution despite clear evidence that these plantations lead to little long-term carbon storage.

Even worse, pine and eucalyptus trees burn easily, which results in the carbon temporarily stored in the trees being released to the atmosphere.

5. Tree plantations in grasslands, shrublands, and peatlands destroy biodiversity

Establishing tree plantations where forests did not historically occur destroys the habitats of plants and animals adapted to open ecosystems and threatens the livelihoods of people dependent on those ecosystems to produce wild game and domestic livestock.

The authors give the example of savannas in Africa that are threatened by large-scale afforestation campaigns.

6. Trees can reduce water availability

In the wrong places, planted forests [sic] deplete ground water and can cause streams to dry up.

The use of the oxymoronic “planted forests” instead of “plantations” is surprising in a paper that is rightly critical of tree planting campaigns. As Ricardo Carrere pointed out in a 1999 World Rainforest Movement briefing, “This confusion between a crop (of trees) and a wood or forest is the starting point of all propaganda in favour of tree plantations.”

The authors cite research by Robert Jackson, professor of Earth System Science at Stanford University. In 2005, Jackson was lead author of a paper in Science. “Carbon sequestration strategies highlight tree plantations without considering their full environmental consequences,” Jackson and colleagues wrote. Which is something of an understatement given the recent craze for planting one trillion trees.

7. Trees can warm the atmosphere

Trees, particularly evergreen conifers, are darker and taller than most other land covers, and therefore absorb more visible and ultraviolet sunlight (shortwave radiation) compared to highly reflective bare ground, snow, or grasses.

Planting trees can decrease the albedo of the ecosystem and more sunlight is absorbed and emitted as heat.

8. Perverse financial incentives lead to rushed planting and high tree mortality

When ambitious targets for the number of hectares or number of saplings planted are rewarded with large monetary commitments, governments and other organizations tend to focus on the act of planting rather than long-term maintenance to ensure tree survival and growth.

The drive to meet tree planting targets can result in trees being planted incorrectly, in the wrong places, and without the support of local people.

9. Tree planting threatens rural livelihoods

Tree planting programs often target ecosystems or farmland that rural people depend on for subsistence livelihoods. Frequently these people have insecure land tenure, and the land may be viewed by governments or other actors as ‘available’ for tree planting.

Replacing farmland with trees has serious implications for the livelihoods of local communities, as in the case of Green Resources’ industrial tree plantations in Uganda. Agricultural workers can lose their jobs, and local food prices increase.

10. Tree planting targets the global south to capture emissions from the global north

Proponents of large-scale tree planting, such as Plant-For-the-Planet and the Trillion Tree Campaign, equate tree planting with climate justice and prosperity for the global south. Unfortunately, these proponents ignore the opportunity costs of using land for trees instead of other economically beneficial activities.

The authors add that proponents of tree planting for climate mitigation must answer critical questions of social justice. They ask, “Is it just for the states of the global north to ask the world’s poorest people and most threatened ecosystems to bear the costs of fossil fuel emissions?”

 


PHOTO Credit: Fleischman et al (2020) – “Government officials inspect a 2-year-old plantation of Eucalyptus clones on government-controlled land in Telangana, India. Low biodiversity, soil disturbance, exacerbated fire risk, altered hydrology, and restricted access to local people mean that this afforested [sic] land, although a potentially valuable source of wood fiber for paper, disrupts rural livelihoods and should not be considered a natural climate solution.

(Sources: REDD Monitor)

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