I never hesitate to support any
initiative that pushes vigorous reforestation and even more importantly
progressive forest management. Proper
forest management includes removing surplus production on an ongoing basis and
that is the real challenge.
The Eastern USA and Canada has seen
a massive recovery of forests but generally minimal effort at management by private
land holders. The same will hold true
everywhere else as the populations join the global middle class and subsistence
lifeways are completely abandoned.
In short all our forests will be recovering
sooner than later. This is good news of
course.
Yet a managed forests employs
people and produces large tonnages of cellulose and a wide range of recognized forest
products while providing a habitat not actually occupied by humanity.
My argument has been that the
whole issue of forest tenure has to be rethought and made over into a
proprietor and local government joint venture to provide the financial time
frames that work for both parties. In
short, a township does benefit on the basis of century long time frames, while
the local proprietor is limited to his career.
It has to be sorted out to optimize and retain value.
This applies everywhere. It is utterly pointless to reforest a
hillside in the tropics and not ensure local ownership and participation, particularly
when the locals use firewood. Yet
international projects have been that stupid.
In the event, the numbers here
are ambitious and for once the cause is excellent. Even without been clever about it all, a lot
can be done.
Global Partnership on Forest Landscape Restoration, World Resources Institute,
Conservationists and politicians meeting in Bonn on Friday launched a new initiative to
restore 150 million hectares (580,000 square miles) of deforested and degraded
forests, reports the World Resources Institute (WRI), an NGO that is involved
in the effort.
Supporters say the target — dubbed the
"Restoring 150 million hectares of degraded lands represents an exciting and largely untapped opportunity to create more jobs and economic growth, while also protecting our climate," said Göran Persson, a former Prime Minister of Sweden who will lead the New Global Restoration Council.
"
The Bonn Challenge reforestation target
in comparison to recent deforestation in Brazil
and Indonesia .
Data sources include INPE for Brazil
and Forest Watch Indonesia
for Indonesia .
WRI says the Bonn Challenge would help meet 2020 targets under the
Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and the U.N. REDD+ program, which aims
to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from deforestation and forest degradation.
The target represents just over 7 percent of the 2 billion hectares of land worldwide that are suitable for restoration, according to a recent estimate by a team of experts. The area, which is larger than
Some 30 percent of global forest cover has been cleared in recent centuries, while another 20 percent has been degraded. Roughly one billion hectares of former forest lands are presently occupied by croplands and densely populated rural areas.
The new initiative won't seek to take current agriculture lands out of production, but WRI says some of these lands "would benefit from having trees planted in strategic places to protect and enhance agricultural productivity and other ecosystem functions."
The initiative's supporters hope it will be adopted as an official target by the U.N., governments, and other institutions.
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