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Earth Science

Stop Planting Trees, Says Guy Who Inspired World to Plant a Trillion Trees (wired.com) 155

In a cavernous theater lit up with the green shapes of camels and palms at COP28 in Dubai, ecologist Thomas Crowther, former chief scientific adviser for the United Nations' Trillion Trees Campaign, was doing something he never would have expected a few years ago: begging environmental ministers to stop planting so many trees. From a report: Mass plantations are not the environmental solution they're purported to be, Crowther argued when he took the floor on December 9 for one of the summit's "Nature Day" events. The potential of newly created forests to draw down carbon is often overstated. They can be harmful to biodiversity. Above all, they are really damaging when used, as they often are, as avoidance offsets-- "as an excuse to avoid cutting emissions," Crowther said.

The popularity of planting new trees is a problem -- at least partly -- of Crowther's own making. In 2019, his lab at ETH Zurich found that the Earth had room for an additional 1.2 trillion trees, which, the lab's research suggested, could suck down as much as two-thirds of the carbon that humans have historically emitted into the atmosphere. "This highlights global tree restoration as our most effective climate change solution to date," the study said. Crowther subsequently gave dozens of interviews to that effect. This seemingly easy climate solution sparked a tree-planting craze by companies and leaders eager to burnish their green credentials without actually cutting their emissions, from Shell to Donald Trump. It also provoked a squall of criticism from scientists, who argued that the Crowther study had vastly overestimated the land suitable for forest restoration and the amount of carbon it could draw down. (The study authors later corrected the paper to say tree restoration was only "one of the most effective" solutions, and could suck down at most one-third of the atmospheric carbon, with large uncertainties.)

Crowther, who says his message was misinterpreted, put out a more nuanced paper last month, which shows that preserving existing forests can have a greater climate impact than planting trees. He then brought the results to COP28 to "kill greenwashing" of the kind that his previous study seemed to encourage -- that is, using unreliable evidence on the benefits of planting trees as an excuse to keep on emitting carbon. "Killing greenwashing doesn't mean stop investing in nature," he says. "It means doing it right. It means distributing wealth to the Indigenous populations and farmers and communities who are living with biodiversity."

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Stop Planting Trees, Says Guy Who Inspired World to Plant a Trillion Trees

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  • by sinij ( 911942 ) on Friday December 15, 2023 @12:46PM (#64083671)
    With many obvious solutions, like nuclear, being deliberately taken off the table the only reasonable conclusion is that the main purpose is to create a Doomsday Cult and in the process quite possibly doom the humanity. Any rational and goal-oriented movement would have embraced any and all viable solutions, including partial and transitory ones, that would move us toward the goal of reducing and mitigating emissions.
    • People with the minimum scientific intelligence knew that planting trees are NOT a solution (and never was).

      Planting PLUS nurturing (which requires water, maintenance, proper shaping, pruning, etc.) is the ONLY correct way to reforestation.

      And that cost SO MUCH money, that, it was a no-brainy NOONE would spend money in doing so when they can just make rich his tree-seller friends (and themselves) in the process: the initial sale plus the "dead trees"-replant (because they were not nurtured).

      • I remember an episode of Bonanza where Ben and Hoss were planting saplings to replace the trees they'd had cut down for timber. (Not many people remember now, but the real life Cartwrights made their fortunes out of logging.) There was a little dialogue as well about needing to replace the trees as they were cut down so that they didn't deforest their land.
    • 'any and all' requires unlimited resources and time. We have neither.

      nuclear fission is terrible by every metric except CO2 release. Absolutely needed for the next couple decades, but isn't sustainable at scale due to waste issues. If we'd seriously worked thorium/molten salts we'd be far better off. That could eat a chunk of our current fission waste too. Again that's probably a decade or two from grid scale.

      we need to choose solutions carefully to spend our limited resources effectively.
    • Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)

      Nuclear is simply too expensive. There’s no conspiracy at work or government sabotage. The last reactor to come online at Watts Bar came with a $12 billion price tag. You want nuclear? Well then someone has to pay for it.

      • You want nuclear? Well then someone has to pay for it.

        Exactly and I would say do what the French do and just let the state do it. Then what can happen is everyone who uses the electricity helps pay for it via taxes and nobody has to be concerned with whether or not it's profitable. The economic output created by the energy produced by the plant can also be taxed.

        I am all for renewables and I think the private energy market is doing a fine job and are in fact incentive to produce more of it but while the US is at a historic low for coal we are at a historic h

      • by sinij ( 911942 )

        Nuclear is simply too expensive.

        Compare to what cheaper alternatives?

    • This headline is half-truth and you took the bate and ran straight to the conspiracy tree to grab a big bunch of l00ny fruit.

      He's saying that planting trees was not meant to be "just plant trees and pretend that makes everything OK " solution. It was suggested as part of a solution that should include reducing emissions. Instead, trees are being planted, and held up against emissions as some sort of "we're buying ourselves a get out of jail free card." Which is one of the dumber moves we've made as a specie

    • by Holi ( 250190 )

      Why do you think nuclear is off the table? We have the new Vogtle plant coming on line in 2023. Worldwide we are expected to increase nuclear electricity production o 630 GW from the current 390 GW by 2035.

      • by sinij ( 911942 )
        Thankfully, it is not. The point was that environmentalists opposing it is illogical.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Does he really want people to stop planting trees entirely?

    But I'm sure with such titles some people are going to use it as an excuse to do the wrong thing, and/or to encourage others to.
  • Many folks had written off the "trillion trees" bullshit for exactly these reasons years ago. Nice to see this guy's finally seen the light.
  • by Frobnicator ( 565869 ) on Friday December 15, 2023 @01:10PM (#64083757) Journal

    It isn't the planting of trees that is a problem. Planting trees overall is good.

    Planting thousands of exactly the same tree in a single area is not as good, creating a monoculture. Planting non-native trees can be harmful, especially if the new trees need irrigation or other care. Otherwise, they'll just die rather than be useful.

    Encouraging biodiversity and growth or regrowth of forests with a wide range of plants, that's a better approach.

    But the nuance is lost in headlines and showy low-budget projects.

  • H L Menken (Score:5, Insightful)

    by 0xG ( 712423 ) on Friday December 15, 2023 @01:13PM (#64083769)

    Every complex problem has a solution which is
    simple, direct, plausible—and wrong

    • Every complex problem has a solution which is simple, direct, plausible—and wrong

      Gullible, would be the factor you overlooked that makes simple, direct non-solutions plausible to the ignorant masses.

  • Duh... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by bradley13 ( 1118935 ) on Friday December 15, 2023 @01:21PM (#64083793) Homepage

    Monoculture is bad, even in forests. You need a mix of native trees, along with other types of plants. I.e., natural forests. Duh. The best way to get a natural forest is to not destroy it in the first place. Otherwise, it takes care and literally decades of time to re-establish one.

    Tree plantations are especially bad. Whoever propagated the idea that pellet heating is environmentally friendly should be tied to a fire-ant nest. Monoculture is bad enough, but when it is razed every few years, no nature at all can establish itself. Not to mention all the energy burned in cutting transporting, processing, and delivering the pellets. Return that land to real forest, and use a heat-pump. Heck, even natural gas heating is probably better.

    • Monoculture is bad, even in forests. You need a mix of native trees, along with other types of plants. I.e., natural forests. Duh. The best way to get a natural forest is to not destroy it in the first place. Otherwise, it takes care and literally decades of time to re-establish one.

      You need native trees for sure, and a tree planting campaign should use a mix of tree (seems like an easy win) though I'm not sure it's as bad as that, forests that are a relative monoculture are not uncommon. Logging companies typically replant after they log, it will take time to recover, but I haven't heard major concerns about the viability.

      Trees are a long lived species, once they're established wildlife can move in.

      Tree plantations are especially bad. Whoever propagated the idea that pellet heating is environmentally friendly should be tied to a fire-ant nest. Monoculture is bad enough, but when it is razed every few years, no nature at all can establish itself. Not to mention all the energy burned in cutting transporting, processing, and delivering the pellets. Return that land to real forest, and use a heat-pump. Heck, even natural gas heating is probably better.

      I hadn't heard of the wood pellet thing, it sounds pretty sketchy though the environmen

    • Tree plantations are especially bad. Whoever propagated the idea that pellet heating is environmentally friendly should be tied to a fire-ant nest.

      No, tree plantations aren't bad. They are simply a form of farming - farm land is almost universally a monoculture. Replacing actual forest with tree plantations, that is bad, horrible even.

    • “Monoculture”, “razed every few years” - just have to say these are most clearly the thoughts of someone who never spends time in a forest or a logging area. Trees across any large section of forest are almost invariably the same species, the biodiversity is what grows beneath. And clear cut sections are recut anywhere from 30-60 years after replanting.
    • Whoever propagated the idea that pellet heating is environmentally friendly should be tied to a fire-ant nest. Monoculture is bad enough, but when it is razed every few years, no nature at all can establish itself. Not to mention all the energy burned in cutting transporting, processing, and delivering the pellets.

      I agree... but if those pellets aren't used for heating, they will be shipped all the way to England where they are touted as a green "biomass fuel" for a former coal power station. You can't make this shit up, they really do cut down trees in North America to ship to England where they get burned to make electricity: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

  • 50 Billion tons of extra CO2 per year, every year cannot be offset by planting trees. The trees cannot absorb anything like that in a year, what we need is to reduce the CO2 we produce by switching so much of energy production away from the fossil fuels that our undustry, homes, buildings are all heated and cooled and lit with nuclear power. This would not only cut CO2 emissions by double digits percentagewise but would also allow future growth without adding too much CO2 to our yearly production. We hav

    • But if the #TeamTrees happy-clappy MrBeast Cheshire cat, pied piper, ostentatious philanthropy credit-taker shouts it enough times, it must be true! My bet is he's a Jimmy Saville pedophile or human trafficker out to become a celebrity-politician to infect the world with his ego and stupidity.
  • Planting trees is a brilliant scheme. You plant a tree and get credit for 200 years of CO_2 reduction. Planted tree dies in 2 years. You plant another tree and get credit for 200 years of CO_2 reduction.

    • That's why the brutal, woman-hating, head chopping, foreign worker-enslaving, oil drilling, banana republics like UAE are buying up Africa with neocolonial zeal: to sell "carbon offsets" to enable additional pollution in the chasing of profits. OPEC nations are the enemies of all people and of all life.
  • by Applehu Akbar ( 2968043 ) on Friday December 15, 2023 @07:35PM (#64084831)

    Not only is the Earth 71% water, but most of the free CO2 is in the ocean. Remember that news story last spring: warm water in the Atlantic had promoted massive amounts of floating sargasso weed, forming a giant blob that was going to wash up on Atlanta breaches and cause chaos? The story went away as quickly as it came, because most of that floating weed died and sank before it reached land, taking its carbon down with it.

    Instead of covering marginal land with trees it might not support, let's promote the growth of floating seaweed in the Atlantic and Pacific gyres, where the currents sweep all that floats to a center, rather than threatening beaches with it. We could permanently get rid of a lot of carbon that way.

    • Instead of covering marginal land with trees it might not support, let's promote the growth of floating seaweed in the Atlantic and Pacific gyres, where the currents sweep all that floats to a center, rather than threatening beaches with it. We could permanently get rid of a lot of carbon that way.

      When I studied undergrad geology last century, I remember this idea being floated. Add nutrients the oceans to grow photosynthetic plankton, which would then die, sink and sequester the carbon. My profs shot down the idea, because the main nutrient required was iron... and the amount of iron required to even make a dent with global CO2 was some significant fraction of the entire global iron supply. Even if iron production were to increase, that mining would also lead to more emissions.

      Carbon sequestration c

  • Let me tell you that trees take decades to grow, must be acclimated to local conditions, they die, and they fucking burn. They are NOT a climate change solution and CANNOT sequester anything. They are a canard, a distraction, and a total waste from meaningful action. Thunderf00t did a video that completely debunks this stupidity with simple math.
  • Planting a tree because you've done something bad is about as constructive as going to church and saying some Hail Marys. It gives people an excuse to avoid the real issue and means corporations can trumpet their green credentials whilst doing nothing to change their processes. As per the article though, having completely homogenous forests springing up is nothing like real nature

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