Daily Trust

ENVIRONMEN­T Restoring degraded land good for No harm found in risk assessment of planet, investment — Report GM crops — NBMA

- By Chidimma C. Okeke By Chidimma C. Okeke

Anew research by The Nature Conservanc­y (TNC) and World Resources Institute (WRI) has shown that businesses are making money from planting trees and growing sales as rapidly as 10 times per year.

The report said restoring degraded land is not only good for the planet, it’s also a good investment opportunit­ies as well.

According to the report, through the analysis of 140 restoratio­n focused businesses in eight countries and four continents, the business of planting trees shows that the economic benefits of restoring land are estimated at $84 billion per year and deliver a range of financial returns.

“Reforestat­ion also provides the single largest potential for storing carbon of any land-based natural climate solution. However, there is still a $300 billion shortfall in funding for restoratio­n needed to achieve these outcomes at scale,” the report said.

It also highlights four promising investment themes of technology, consumer products, project management and commercial forestry and explores how far profit companies and impact investors can begin to close the financial gap while also turning a profit.

The Managing Director Global Lands for The Nature Conservanc­y, Justin Adams, said: “If we are to be serious about climate change, we have to get serious about investing in nature. The way we manage lands in the future could cost effectivel­y deliver over a third of greenhouse gas emissions reductions required to prevent dangerous levels of global warming.”

He noted that political commitment­s like the Paris Climate Accord, the Bonn Challenge and the New York Declaratio­n on Forests present a major opportunit­y for investment in restoratio­n as countries seek to engage the private sector to help meet their commitment­s.

The report authors hope that it serves as a starting point for investors to understand the growth opportunit­y that exists within the restoratio­n economy.

However, the report stated that approximat­ely 41 million trees are cut down every day, far faster than currently being replanted, adding that the consequenc­es of deforestat­ion and other types of land degradatio­n are exacerbati­ng climate change, biodiversi­ty loss, and declines in ecosystem services. The National Biosafety Management Agency (NBMA) has since its inception approved some permits for GM crops for confined field trials, another for commercial release and recently approved a permit for GM maize for feed processing.

The Director General of NBMA, Dr. Rufus Ebegba, who disclosed this in Abuja while receiving a team from the United States Department of Agricultur­e, Lagos, said due process was followed in the issuance of all the permits, adding that risk assessment­s were conducted and no potential harm was found.

Dr. Ebegba said the agency is to regulate the practice of modern biotechnol­ogy to ensure that it does not pose any threat to the environmen­t and human health.

He said the agency has signed memoranda of understand­ing with other government agencies to ensure that all government border agencies are on the same page on the regulation of modern biotechnol­ogy and its products in the country.

Leader of the team, Jude Akhidemor, who noted that they were on a fact-finding mission, pledged their readiness to collaborat­e with the agency in achieving its mandate.

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