ENTS:

In case you haven't seen this OP-Ed from the NY Times here it is. It 
makes good points--I agree that we are setting up a system where 
biofuel/carbon markets will lead to destruction of forests.

Lee

OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR
Clear-Cutting the Truth About Trees
By BERND HEINRICH
Published: December 19, 2009
Burlington, Vt.

THE Copenhagen climate-change summit meeting is behind us, and did not 
achieve what was hoped for. There was no lack of good intentions, but 
they generated conflicts rather than solutions, and the product was a 
weak agreement to disagree in the future. Forests were part of the 
discussion, and several things were understood: carbon dioxide is a 
potentially world-altering lethal pollutant, fossil fuels are the 
problem, biofuels are part of the solution. But exactly how to pare down 
the use of fossil fuels and switch to energy sources derived from plant 
material? That is the problem.

Biofuels are the indirect use of solar energy packaged into plants by 
the best solar-panel technology that has ever been invented, and it is 
far easier to grow green power than to build nuclear plants, dam our 
waterways and put windmills on our scenic mountaintops. Yet our current 
plans to shift to green energy - centered on so-called carbon offsets 
and cap-and-trade systems - are in some applications sorely misguided.

Contrary to what you might hear from energy companies and 
environmentally conscious celebrities, offsets don't magically make 
carbon emissions disappear. Worse, relying on them to stem global 
warming may devastate our vital forest ecosystems.

On the industrial scale, carbon trading works like this: Limits (caps) 
are set on carbon emissions so that the true costs of our energy use are 
not just passed on to our descendants or people in some distant country. 
As an incentive to help the planet, savings of carbon emissions that one 
achieves below the designated cap can then be traded, as offsets, to 
another polluter who can then go over his cap by an equal amount. While 
carbon credits can be generated by switching to cleaner technology or 
nonpolluting sources in energy production, they can also be gained by 
unrelated steps, like planting trees, that are said to deter global warming.

Thus, if I burn coal in my business, I can plant pines in Chile and earn 
an offset, which will then allow me to burn even more coal. On a smaller 
scale, Al Gore purchases carbon offsets that he says make up for the 
emissions from the jets he uses in spreading his message of 
conservation. All this may seem logical, and energy companies would have 
you believe it works in the real world. But it is actually terrible for 
the planet, which is governed by the dictates of physics and biology.

Part of the problem is the public misunderstanding of how forests and 
carbon relate. Trees are often called a "carbon sink" - implying that 
they will sop up carbon from the atmosphere for all eternity. This is 
not true: the carbon they take up when they are alive is released after 
they die, whether from natural causes or by the hand of man. The only 
true solution to achieving global "carbon balance" is to leave the 
fossil carbon where it is - underground.

Beyond that, planting more trees is decidedly not the same thing as 
saving our forests. Instead, planting trees invariably means using them 
as a sustainable crop, which leads not only to a continuous cycle of 
carbon releases, but also to the increased destruction of our natural 
environment.

A few environmental groups in Copenhagen were considered unwelcome 
guests for loudly pointing out that the carbon-trading proposals bandied 
about at the meetings subsidize forest destruction and will lead to 
large-scale destruction of ecosystems and unprecedented "land grabs." 
(Disclosure: my wife is a researcher for one of those groups.) But such 
claims are correct. More than anything, carbon offsets will allow rich 
countries to burn ever more fossil fuels under the "clean development 
mechanism" of the_ Kyoto Protocol_, the system that sets the values, in 
terms of tons of carbon equivalent, of emission-reduction efforts.

In fact, most of the problems with the system can be traced back to the 
Kyoto Protocol, which was adopted in 1997. After much political 
wrangling, the Kyoto delegates decided that there would be no 
carbon-reduction credits for saving existing forests. Since planting new 
trees/ does/ get one credits, Kyoto actually created a rationale for 
clear-cutting old growth.

This is horrifying. The world's forests are a key to our survival, and 
that of millions of other species. Not only are they critical to 
providing us with building material, paper, food, recreation and oxygen, 
they also ground us spiritually and connect us to our primal past. Never 
before in earth's history have our forests been under such attack. And 
the global-warming folks at Copenhagen seem oblivious, buying into the 
corporate view of forests as an exploitable resource.

A forest is an ecosystem. It is not something planted. A forest grows on 
its own. There are many kinds of forests that will grow practically 
anywhere, each under its own special local conditions. When a tree 
falls, the race is on immediately to replace it. In the forests I study, 
there so many seeds and seedlings that if a square foot of ground space 
opens up, more than a hundred trees of many different species compete to 
grow there.

So if you want to plant a specific species of tree for lumber or for 
offsets, you'll have to apply an (petroleum-based) herbicide repeatedly 
over its lifespan. If you hope to make a profit, you will plant a tree 
genetically engineered to grow quickly and resist disease. This is the 
path to domestication of a plant that needs to be ever coddled with 
fertilizers, herbicides, pesticides and fungicides. And not 
coincidentally, there will then be a market for its seeds, and all the 
chemicals needed to coddle the crop.

In the end, what was originally intended as a mechanism for slowing 
global warming has created huge economic pressure for ecocide. And there 
will be no objections from easily duped bleeding- heart 
"environmentalists," who absolutely love tree planting because it sounds 
so "green."

To preserve something it first has to be valued, and the most effective 
means of valuing it is to have a practical use for it. If the 
discussions in Copenhagen were any indication, mankind sees little value 
in forests, but much in tree plantations. (On the other hand, I admit 
that those of us who really do care about forests have not exactly been 
helpful. We have not encouraged selective harvesting from naturally 
occurring stands, which may be necessary.)

It is easy to scream bloody murder against tree planting as a means for 
biomass energy and industrial fiber production, but there then has to be 
an alternative (aside from the obvious one of energy conservation). We 
need either vastly fewer people or vastly more forests, along with a new 
definition of earth-friendly reforestation.

These new stands of growth - if managed as true forest rather than as a 
single-species, single-aged crops - would contain a mixture of mature 
and transitional-growth trees. Any tree cut down would immediately 
generate a race of others to replace it at that spot, and the winner 
will emerge from a natural selection of seeds and seedlings most suited 
to grow there. No, this isn't the fastest way to build up carbon 
credits. But it is the only real way to preserve the planet, and ourselves.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/20/opinion/20heinrich.html

-- 
Eastern Native Tree Society http://www.nativetreesociety.org 
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