The Phnom Penh Post

Oil giant Total’s chief announces new $100M unit to invest in forests

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THE head of French energy giant Total announced on Saturday that the company would invest a hundred million dollars annually on a new forest preservati­on and reforestat­ion project.

“We want to set up a business unit to invest in projects that will preserve forests,” CEO Patrick Pouyanne told a meeting to discuss economic issues in Aix-en-Provence, in the south of France.

The company would spend $100 million a year on the project, he said.

“The most effective way today to eliminate carbon, for less than $10 a tonne, is reforestat­ion,” he added.

“This is not philanthro­py,” he added. “It’s about investing in the medium- and longterm. A project for the forests, it has to last a long time to be positive for the planet.”

Pouyanne was speaking just days after Total said it had begun producing biofuel at a refinery in southern France, a project that has sparked an outcry from environmen­talists and farmers over its plans to import palm oil.

The site at La Mede near Marseille is a former oil refinery which has been converted and is now one of the largest biorefiner­ies in Europe.

A study released on Thursday said that a massive campaign of reforestat­ion could help battle climate change.

The study, carried out by ETH Zurich and published in Science, said a large-scale operation could capture two-thirds of man-made carbon emissions and reduce overall levels in the atmosphere to their lowest in almost a century.

It found that the Earth can support 900 million hectares of trees t hat would sequester 205 billion tonnes of carbon.

Some environmen­tal campaigner­s have reacted cautiously to t he research.

“Yes, of course we need to plant as many trees as possible,” wrote teenaged activist Greta Thunberg on Twitter on Friday.

“Yes, of course we need to keep the existing trees standing and rewild and restore nature.

“But there’s absolutely no way around stopping our emissions of greenhouse gases and leaving the fossil fuels in the ground.”

 ?? MOISE GOMIS/AFP ?? A report issued earlier this week said massive reforestat­ion might help fight climate change.
MOISE GOMIS/AFP A report issued earlier this week said massive reforestat­ion might help fight climate change.

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