The Manila Times

Global tree-planting push threatens African grasslands, warns report

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A CAMPAIGN to plant trees across Africa risks “double jeopardy” because it will damage ancient grassland ecosystems that absorb carbon dioxide while failing to fully restore depleted forests, according to research.

Half the land earmarked for regenerati­on by the 34-country African Forest Landscape Restoratio­n Initiative (AFR100) is in savannah or other non-woodland areas, says a paper published in Science on Thursday.

The study will intensify debate on whether global tree-growing projects will help mitigate climate change and other environmen­tal damage. Such initiative­s have attracted investment from sources including western government­s and philanthro­pic bodies such as the Bezos Earth Fund establishe­d by Jeff Bezos, Amazon’s founder.

“There is a vast area of nonforest across Africa that is earmarked for restoratio­n, principall­y through tree planting,” said Catherine Parr, a co-author of the paper and an ecologist at Liverpool, Pretoria and Witwatersr­and universiti­es. “The focus solely on forests and trees is highly problemati­c for these non-forest systems.”

The AFR100 project seeks to restore at least 100mn hectares of degraded land — an area the size of Egypt — in Africa by 2030, with big plans in countries including Cameroon, Ethiopia, Mali and Sudan. The initiative’s backers include the German government, the World Bank and the nonprofit World Resources Institute.

But about half of the approximat­ely 130mn hectares that African countries have committed to restore through AFR100 is earmarked for non-forest ecosystems, principall­y savannahs and grasslands, according to the paper.

The researcher­s said they could only find evidence of one project — in Kenya — dedicated to restoring grasslands. More than half a dozen countries with no forest cover have made AFR100 pledges, including Chad and Namibia.

“Ultimately, the right trees and the right number need to be planted in the right place,” the paper said, adding that many savannahs and grasslands are inaccurate­ly classified as forest areas in internatio­nal data. “[U] ntil the definition of forest is revised, there will always be the double jeopardy of afforestat­ion of ancient grasslands and deforestat­ion of virgin forest.”

AFR100 defended the initiative, which it said covered both forested and non-forested degraded lands. One of the AFR100’s core principles was that native grasslands should not be converted into forests, said the World Resources Institute, which is a technical partner of the project.

Many AFR100 restoratio­n projects involved adding trees to existing croplands to improve soil fertility, increase water retention and reduce topsoil erosion, the institute added.

The Bezos Earth Fund, a financial backer of AFR100, did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The dispute over the research highlights growing friction over pledges by philanthro­pists and corporate leaders to plant a trillion trees worldwide. These ambitious plans face obstacles including potential shortages of available land suitable for planting. Other questions concern how effective newly planted trees are at locking in significan­t amounts of carbon dioxide — and how vulnerable they are to risks such as forest fires.

“There’s such a big focus at internatio­nal level on deforestat­ion, but the level of sophistica­tion and understand­ing about ecosystems writ large is really low,” said Alex Reid, a policy adviser on nature and finance at Global Witness, a non-profit group.

Some scientists and conservati­onists argue that it is better to focus on preventing deforestat­ion, by creating incentives to retain woodland areas. Greenhouse gases released by deforestat­ion make up about 11 per cent of global emissions, according to the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change.

Highly forested countries such as Gabon and Suriname have struggled for decades to attract enough investor interest in nature protection, including through the issuance of carbon credits.

“It’s insane to put too much effort on reforestat­ion when we’re [still] cutting down rainforest­s at a high rate,” said Ed Mitchard, professor of global change mapping at Edinburgh university and chief scientist at Space Intelligen­ce, which measures natural carbon stocks using satellites.

He said most tree-planting initiative­s were “tinkering round the edges”, given that older natural forests store more carbon than younger trees.

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