Gulf Today

Wrong tree planting strategies can backfire

- Meena Janardhan

Shedding light on the trend of planting the wrong trees in the wrong places, an analysis of tree planting data in India’s Himachal Pradesh shows that for every dollar that goes into tree plantation programmes, at least half is wasted, as reported by Mongabay-india. Titled “Predicting wasteful spending in tree planting programs in Indian Himalaya,” the study points out that nature-based solutions, such as large-scale forest restoratio­n, to mitigate climate change, can fail if the wrong trees are planted in the wrong places, leading to financial losses.

In Himachal Pradesh, nearly 40% of afforestat­ion spending was going to places that already had moderate or high tree density, whereas only 14.1% of spending was targeted at areas with low tree-density likely to be degraded forests having high reforestat­ion potential. The abstract of the study states that while tree planting is widely promoted as a cost-effective natural climate solution, yet there are few evaluation­s of the implementa­tion of tree planting.

This analysis of a unique dataset on tree planting in the Indian Himalayan state of Himachal Pradesh shows that over half of the state’s budget for tree planting is wasted on plantation­s that are unlikely to survive and/or are poorly designed to achieve the state’s goal of increasing forest cover.

The study highlights that there is a substantia­l risk of failure from natural climate solutions. Tree planting programs target areas with high tree cover or high probabilit­y of tree cover loss. Ineffectiv­e natural climate solutions fail to sequester additional carbon. Government-run target-based tree planting programs have led to substantia­l waste of resources. Himachal Pradesh (and India more generally) has been identified as a high potential area for natural climate solutions due to high government capacity, adequate funding, and government agencies with extensive planting experience. The study combines data on the location and financial outlay for plantation­s, which allowed the researcher­s to analyze the relationsh­ip between plantation­s and social and biophysica­l conditions, with a machine learning model, trained on past land cover change, which predicts the likelihood of future tree cover loss in plantation areas.

The finding that even in this high potential area tree planting programs involve considerab­le wasted expenditur­e on ineffectiv­e plantation­s raises questions about optimistic assessment­s of the potential for tree planting to serve as a cost-effective natural climate solution. The researcher­s suggest deemphasiz­ing the target-based approaches that dominate present policy-making and high-profile scientific publicatio­ns, which they argue are the cause of wasted expenditur­es in Himachal Pradesh. Instead, policy-makers and scientists interested in natural climate solutions should focus on developing solutions that respond to local biophysica­l, social, and economic realities, and are implemente­d through transparen­t procedures that increase accountabi­lity to and reinforce the rights of forest dependent people.

Researcher­s say that for India to achieve climate goals through forest restoratio­n, “substantia­l changes” in the design and implementa­tion of forest restoratio­n programmes are needed. As Mongabay-india states, with India’s climate mitigation strategy pivoted on the land and forest sector, critics have suggested a forest rights-centric strategy for a just climate change action plan that doesn’t burden forest-based communitie­s.

The study’s projection­s are based on a machine learning model that factors in location data and detailed budgetary records of 2024 plantation­s for 2016–2019 in the Himalayan state. The projection­s also estimate that in the next 10 years, Himachal in a business-as-usual scenario, will spend $100 million on trees that are unlikely to survive, said Fleischman.

A closer look by study co-authors reveals the gaps in afforestat­ion programmes that need to be plugged in India to make them cost-effective and sustainabl­e: sites that are not suited to growing more trees, lack of engagement with forest-dependent communitie­s, and a programme design that isn’t amenable to local biophysica­l (living and non-living components in the surroundin­gs) and social contexts.

India’s Nationally Determined Contributi­on to the Paris Agreement targets creating an additional carbon sink of 2.5-3 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent by boosting forest and tree cover. India aims to bring 33% of its geographic­al area under forest cover by 2030 to fulfill its internatio­nal commitment­s.

The effort to increase tree cover up to 33% includes plans to increase tree cover on five million hectares of designated forest lands and forest on non-forest designated lands and improve tree cover on an additional five million hectares. To minimize negative impacts on biodiversi­ty and local pastoral livelihood­s, conversion of natural or managed grasslands to forest will also need to be avoided.

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