June 5, 2011
Forests fight back all over the world

Woodland density is going up after decades of decline, but concerns about deforestation remain. Andrew Marszal reports on the Great Reversal


Forest density is increasing across much of the world after decades of decline, according to a new study by scientists from the United States and Europe. The change, which is being dubbed the Great Reversal by the authors, has important, has positive implications for carbon capture and climate change.

The research, carried out by teams from the University of Helsinki and New York’s Rockefeller University, shows that forests are thickening in 45 of 68 countries, which together account for 72 per cent of global forests. Traditionally, environmentalists have focused their concern solely on the dwindling extent of forested areas, but the authors believe new evidence of more dense forest – made up of more and larger trees – could be crucial in reducing atmospheric carbon, which is linked to climate change.

Forests are often referred to as the planet’s lungs, acting as huge carbon sinks that absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere as they grow and trap large amounts within their biomass and surrounding soil. In countries from Finland to Malaysia, the thickening has taken place so quickly that it has reversed the carbon losses caused by forested areas continuing to shrink during the period studied (1990-2010). In other places, including the Brazilian rainforest and parts of Africa, increasing density has partially offset the toll of deforestation caused by logging and other human activities.

With the Great Reversal, the study’s authors believe a tipping point has been reached, with countries now able to pursue policies to boost their forests’ thickness and carbon capacities dramatically. Jesse Ausubel, a director at the Rockefeller University and a co-author, said: “The enlarging forests in almost 50 nations studied may signal the start of a welcome and necessary restoration.”

Aapo Rautiainen, lead author of the report, and based at Helsinki University, said: “The reversal occurred in Europe much earlier, then a little bit later in North America, and it has now spread to certain parts of Asia. So that is a positive sign.”

He hopes policy-makers will take note: “The carbon-storage question is important as there is growing political interest in using forests as a part of climate mitigation policy…. There is a wide range of different ways you can manage forests – density is a decisive factor in carbon storage in addition to area.”

Professor Pekka Kauppi of Helsinki University, a co-author of the study, said: “People worry about forest area, and that’s quite correct. But if you want to know the carbon budget, it cannot be monitored observing only the changes in area. It is more important to observe this change in forest density.”

Commenting on the study, Mette Loyche Wilkie, co-ordinator of the UN’s Global Forest Resources Assessment 2010 report, confirmed that in some countries “the growing stock per hectare is increasing – and so is the carbon sequestered”. She noted that a recent UN report observed this trend occurring “globally”. She added that the change was uneven, and most notable in Europe, where forests had grown in density by over 6 per cent in the past decade, and North America.

Environmentalists expressed concerns, however, that much of the increasing density is driven by huge new monoculture plantations. For example, China’s ambitious reforestation programme has added three million new hectares (nearly eight million acres) to the country’s forests every year over the past decade, but green campaigners believe this is predominantly composed of one species – eucalyptus.

Planted forests are certainly playing a major role. Every year, more than 10 million hectares of forest are planted worldwide, either on newly felled woodland or reclaimed land. Species that grow faster and taller are often preferred, even where this entails importing new species, with the effects on density not seen until these reach “middle age”.

Bustar Maitar, who works on Greenpeace’s rainforest campaign in Indonesia, expressed concerns over the loss of biodiversity, saying: “There is a carbon capture, but it’s mostly the timber plantations. Timber plantations are ecologically quite different from the forest. The solution is to stop cutting down natural forests.”

Though the study, entitled A National and International Analysis of Changing Forest Density, does not itself consider biodiversity, the authors concede there is a balance to be struck. “Almost always there are trade-offs. Harmonising with other goals for forests is always difficult,” says Professor Kauppi. “They have to serve many purposes – whether it’s beauty, like the English countryside where the important priority is the landscape, or biodiversity, or protection, there are many things. It always has to be balanced, but the carbon budget is important.”

The report’s lead author, Mr Rautiainen, added: “In some regions, of course, the emphasis on monoculture plantations is very important, but there are also possibilities of managing semi-natural or natural forests. You can’t directly infer worsening or improving biodiversity from forest density.”

While for much of the world thickening forests are a new phenomenon, in Europe this has been occurring since the Second World War. According to a German study in the Forest Policy and Economics journal in 2006, forest density has almost doubled in Western Europe over that time, primarily because of modern, intensive forest management, and the spectacular growth of major plantations.

In the rest of the world, where the thickening trend is only now emerging, the increase is slower, currently at around 1 per cent each decade in South America and parts of Asia and Africa. However, in a country the size of Brazil, which has more than 500 million hectares of already dense forest, even a small shift means millions of additional tons of carbon are trapped in the remaining rainforest.

The authors believe the change is also being wrought by other, less divisive factors, including more sustainable government forestry practices. Concerns over desertification and soil and water protection, together with policies favouring wildlife conservation and forests as recreational spaces, are prompting better woodland management, which allows existing forest to grow thicker in many countries.

There has also been a major expansion of forest-conservation schemes, with 94 million hectares of global forest placed under legal protection since 1990. “If you have a big area of conserved forest you will probably end up with increased density because of conservation alone, because when the forest is not utilised for wood then the trees can grow and become bigger,” said Mr Rautiainen. “That is also a part of the increasing density picture, along with the introduction of plantations and the management of other forests.”

And in poorer countries economic development has brought changes such as the diminishing use of wood as a household fuel – which exerts a heavy burden on forest resources, and results in shorter rotations of timber crops. Academics have long predicted, based on precedents in the rich world, that a host of such changes – which include the arrival of modern agricultural methods and rising living standards – would reduce encroachment on forests. This study offers early indications that these predictions are coming true, at least in certain regions.

Bizarrely, even some polluting human activities may also be boosting growth. Ms Wilkie said that UN studies suggest “there may also be some increase in the growth rates (and carbon uptake) due to changes in the atmospheric composition or the climate in some countries”. According to one study in Nature Geoscience, increased emissions of carbon dioxide and airborne nitrogen may have helped recent tree growth in Europe through increasing fertility, though the effect is uncertain.

Clearly there remain major concerns for environmentalists. Although the report says that the area covered by trees has expanded in Europe over the past decade by 2 per cent, and marginally in North America, deforestation continued globally at a pace of 13 million hectares every year in the past decade.

In Indonesia, rampant exploitation means the rainforest is getting smaller and thinner every year, while environmentalists have little faith in the government’s new moratorium on logging, which began on 20 May. There are concerns, too, over a loosening of regulations on logging in the Brazilian Amazon last month.

Things are not always as they seem in the world of global forestry. Last week, at an international summit that his country is hosting on rainforest sustainability, President Nguesso of Congo-Brazzaville announced an initiative to plant one million hectares of trees by 2020. But The Independent on Sunday has received a memo from Global Witness suggesting that the country “has already marked out approximately 80 per cent of its forests for industrial-scale logging”.

The debate over the benefits of the trend to thicker forests comes as UN World Environment Day, which is marked today, launches a series of events to celebrate the value of the world’s forests. Announcements gave no indication of whether the word “forests” included plantations.

“With so much bad news available on World Environment Day, we are pleased to report that, of 68 nations studied, forest area is expanding in 45, and density is also increasing in 45,” said Professor Kauppi.

The study is published by the online, peer-reviewed journal PLoS One.

Retreating rainforests

The news from scientists that forests across the world are thickening is certainly welcome. There has been little for environmentalists to celebrate with regard to the rainforest since the birth of the green movement. There is no doubt the pressure applied by activists and a concerned public has contributed to the reversal in forest density decline. However, today’s news does not mean the problem of retreating rainforests – due to, for example, unsustainable logging – just disappears. It is essential we do not ease off.

Governments, particularly in poorer countries, remain under intense pressure to tap into the lucrative rewards offered by resource-rich ancient forests. Some countries will be more able to withstand this than others. Where major concessions are granted, there will continue to be disastrous implications for biodiversity and degradation, as well as indigenous populations.

Plantations may bring benefits as well as dangers, but are no substitute for the sustainable management and conservation of natural forest.

Gathering information on the consequences of forest exploitation is expensive – for swathes of the Congo basin there exists no information. But what this Helsinki-Rockefeller study does demonstrate is that, with greater awareness of forest density, forests can be managed to ensure they remain fertile and absorb more carbon dioxide. This can make an enormous contribution to the battle against climate change.

May 21, 2011
“The Guardian” - Malaysia and Indonesia bolster defence of palm oil industry to west

Countries form European Palm Oil Council in attempt to counter criticism of industry’s environmental record

A worker loads palm oil seeds in Serba Jadi, East Aceh, Indonesia

Palm oil seeds are loaded onto a truck in Serba Jadi, Indonesia. Photograph: Sutanta Aditya/AFP/Getty Images

Malaysia and Indonesia, which together account for about 90% of the world’s palm oil production, have launched a joint PR offensive to defend the industry’s environmental record.

Late last week, ministers from the two countries agreed to finalise plans for a European Palm Oil Council (EPOC) by the end of this year, to defend the trade of palm oil to the European Union and counter the “anti-palm oil campaign”. The industry has been accused by environmental groups of destroying biodiversity and causing social conflicts, deforestation and climate change.

In a joint communique, the countries said: “This body will provide the industry [with] a collective platform to represent both countries on public debates that relate to palm oil issues such as sustainability, energysecurity, public health, address NGOs’ anti palm-oil campaigns, non-aligned lobby groups, media, journalists and feedbacks of Members of the European Parliament.”

In another move to promote palm oil to the western market, Bernard Dompok, minister of plantation industries and commodities in Malaysia and Dr Suswono Asyraf, minister of agriculture in Indonesia, will visit Washington DC next week. They will discuss barriers to palm oil trade with the US secretaries of agriculture and energy, the US Environmental Protection Agency and the US secretary of commerce and US-ASEAN business.

Dompok told the Borneo Post the initiative was “a continuation of a similar mission to the EU in November 2010”.

“When we were doing our joint mission, we met some members of parliament who didn’t know what an oil palm tree looks like. I think we should really work together and talk to them as a team,” he said.

Critics are sceptical the new push will quell the fears related to palm oil production. Friends of the Earth’s biofuels campaigner, Kenneth Richter, said: “No amount of PR will alter the facts about palm oil. The UN says it’s one of the leading drivers of deforestation in south-east Asia – trashing rainforest and wildlife. Just last month evidence surfaced that IOI – one of the biggest Malaysian palm oil producers – is involved in illegal deforestation and land rights conflicts.”

Gurmit Singh, founder of the centre for environment, technology and development, Malaysia (CETDEM), an environmental NGO, said: “The truth is, both sides are over-generalising – the palm oil industry as well as the NGOs in the north. NGOs need to be careful not to tar all palm oil producers with the same brush – not all palm oil plantations have caused deforestation and loss of biodiversity.

“What is needed is not more pro- or anti-palm oil PR, but accountability and transparency and an effective chain of custody for palm oil. Everyone – NGOs, palm oil producers and the media – has the responsibility to report the truth and ultimately the consumer will decide.”

May 15, 2011

Pretty amazing stuff.

sexyactionplanet:

Wow: How to regrow a Rainforest

TED Talk by conservationist Dr. Willie Smits. 

May 10, 2011
Wild tiger cubs front campaign against deforestation

Catherine de Lange, reporter

To anyone else, it’s just a bit of dead foliage, but for the playful tiger cubs in this footage a dry old leaf proves a whole lot of fun.

Sumatran Tigers are critically endangered, with only 400 thought to remain in the wild, so getting footage of three cubs in such a relatively short period of time is unusual.

The WWF is urging pulp and paper companies to scrap forest clearance plans in Central Sumatra after capturing the footage in the area.

Camera traps in the Bukit Tigapuluh National Park area in the Sumatran provinces of Riau and Jambi captured footage of 12 tigers in two months, including two mothers with their cubs.

 

Karmila Parakkasi, head of the WWF’s tiger research team in Sumatra, says:

What’s unclear is whether we found so many tigers because we’re getting better at locating our cameras or because the tigers’ habitat is shrinking so rapidly here that they are being forced into sharing smaller and smaller bits of forests

The area has been designated “global priority Tiger Conservation Landscape,” and Indonesia has agreed a 2-year moratorium on new permits to clear forest, but it has yet to be signed into law as ministries wrangle over details, according to Reuters.

In the meantime, a subsidiary of pulp company Barito Timber Pacific is waiting for a government permit to clear the area of forest in which the tigers were spotted.

The WWF is calling for all concessions operating in this area to abandon such plans.

A spokesperson says:

We also urge the local, provincial and central government to take into consideration the importance of this corridor and manage it as part of Indonesia’s commitments to protecting biodiversity

It’s not the first time candid cameras have highlighted the plight of Sumatran tigers. Last year, WWF conservationists caught illegal loggers red handed as their bulldozers triggered the infra red cameras laid down to monitor tiger population

May 2, 2011
Tropical Peat Forests in Trouble - ScienceNOW

Southeast Asia boasts nearly 250,000 square kilometers of peat swamp forests, which host creatures such as orangutans and the world’s smallest fish, and store vast quantities of carbon. But these peat swamps are in trouble, according to a new study of deforestation in the region. If people continue to chop, drain, and burn at current rates, researchers report, by 2030 no native swamps will remain and billions of metric tons of carbon will be lofted into the atmosphere.

Almost all peatland in Southeast Asia is found in peninsular Malaysia and an archipelago of islands that includes Borneo and Sumatra. Rain trickles down mountains and through forests there, ultimately ending up in low-laying lands that can’t quickly drain. Plant matter can’t fully decay and turns into a peaty, acidic stew, trapping carbon and forming a unique environment for wildlife. Although Southeast Asian swamps comprise between 6% and 7% of global peatland, they store roughly 64 billion metric tons of carbon—about nine times the global emissions from fossil fuel combustion in 2006.

Globalization eventually reached Southeast Asia in the 1980s, driving farmers to fell peat forest trees for cash and replace the swamps with palm oil plantations. Earth-monitoring satellites have visually documented such destruction for decades, but researchers had never precisely quantified the loss for the region over a long period of time. Sorting out which pixels in the images belonged to swamps, palm oil plantations, urban areas, and the like is also difficult work that’s impossible without well-tuned algorithms. So for 5 years, lead author and ecologist Jukka Miettinen and his colleagues at the National University of Singapore studied maps and developed methods to codify the images. They also incorporated infrared images to gauge the effect of human-set fires in the region.

The results, published online 15 April in Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, show that peatland forest dropped from 77% of original coverage to 36% between 1990 and 2010. At current rates, no forest will remain in 2 decades. “Even though I have been working in this region for nearly ten years and was well aware of the deforestation taking place in Southeast Asian peatlands, I must say that I was still surprised to see how little peat swamp forest is left,” Miettinen writes in an e-mail.

As unique habitat for animals is gobbled up locally—6000 plants and dozens of birds, fish, and mammals live only there—the rest of the planet is bound to feel the effects. Once people drain peat swamps for plantations or urban development, plant material begins to decompose, release carbon dioxide, and fuel planet-wide climate change.

“Nearly all peatlands in Sumatra and Borneo are now sources of carbon emission,” says hydrologist Aljosja Hooijer of the National University of Singapore, who works with Miettinen but wasn’t involved in the study. Ecologist Sue Page of the University of Leicester in the United Kingdom says that Southeast Asia emits as much as 363 million metric tons of carbon each year through peatland destruction. “That’s the same amount of carbon stored in the entirety of England’s peatland,” Page said. “These new maps really show the extremely rapid rate of deforestation. We knew it was bad, but the scale of destruction here is shocking and frightening.”

With an average of 2700 square kilometers of Southeast Asian peat swamp vanishing every year, the situation is dire. One peatland researcher who works in the region, but wished to remain anonymous (for fear of losing his job), said the Indonesian government at all levels is not doing anything constructive to curb the problem. “There is a lot of talk, to please international donors, but no action. It even seems that in some areas that forest clearing has accelerated, to make sure it’s done before conservation laws are enforced,” the source said. “It is all about political will.”


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