Chattanooga Times Free Press

Appalachia conservati­on effort gets $5.25 million grant

- BY BEN BENTON STAFF WRITER

An $18 million conservati­on effort aimed at protection and conservati­on of the forests of the Appalachia­ns was launched this week targeting the Chattanoog­a region with an initial $5.25 million grant focused on protecting key portions of Tennessee, Alabama and Georgia while combating climate change.

The protection fund aims to conserve at least 30,000 acres in the tri-state area officials dubbed the “Cradle of Southern Appalachia,” a 7-million-acre region that has long been a priority for environmen­talists.

“The forests of the Southern Appalachia­ns are not only critical for their natural and local heritage, they also protect the land that matters most as we take on the largest environmen­tal challenge of our time — a changing climate,” Open Space Institute president and CEO Kim Elliman said in a statement issued Thursday.

The $5.25 million fund aimed at the Cradle of Southern Appalachia “will be guided by a conservati­on blueprint developed by Thrive Regional Partnershi­p’s Natural Treasures Alliance, a regional collaborat­ion of conservati­on groups, private businesses, and citizens,” according to the statement.

The $18 million Appalachia­n Landscapes Protection Fund will provide grants for acquisitio­n of land and conservati­on easements to “protect wildlife habitat and store carbon,” officials said.

The institute’s grants and loans will also leverage an additional $66 million in matching public and private funds.

The Appalachia­n Mountain region stretches 2,000 miles from Alabama to Canada, containing vast contiguous forests that are critical in combating climate change, officials said. But those forests face significan­t threats from developmen­t, poor management and energy extraction. Nationally, U.S. forests are permanentl­y lost at a rate of just under 1 million acres per year.

In 2019, U.S. forests stored 59 billion metric tons of carbon, the equivalent of more than 33 years worth of emissions in the nation, officials said. Every year, forests remove 15% of the country’s carbon dioxide emissions, equal to removing more than 673 million cars from the road.

The Cradle of Southern Appalachia is one of the fund’s three focus areas, including protection of 50,000 acres along the spine of the Appalachia­n Mountains, according to institute officials. The region is home to the world’s largest broadleaf forest, which stores more than half the country’s carbon and serves as an essential climate refuge for plants and animals.

Thrive officials and others applauded the work and players behind the effort.

“This funding announceme­nt is a direct result of what happens when citizens and local leaders come together to thoughtful­ly plan for our future,” Thrive Regional Partnershi­p Natural Treasures Alliance chairperso­n Daniel Carter said in the statement. Carter expressed thanks to the “thousands of citizens who took the time over the past several

“The fund is an invaluable tool in demonstrat­ing and documentin­g the value of land conservati­on as a critical and necessary response to climate change.”

– AMERICAN FORESTS PRESIDENT AND CEO JAD DALEY

years to convey the importance of protecting natural treasures as a key priority for this region.”

Institute officials are eyeing a better future.

“We want to make sure that what’s protected does its part to mitigate climate change both in terms of protecting carbon stores where carbon is in the trees right now, but we’ll also sequester additional carbon so the impacts won’t be so bad for people and wildlife in the future,” the institute’s southeast field coordinato­r, Joel Houser, said.

The current fund is the fourth the institute has operated in the region and is only possible with local help from supporters and organizati­ons such as the Lyndhurst Foundation,

Riverview Foundation and Tucker Foundation, he said.

Houser said the work should resonate with community interests.

“We really do try to find the balance between protecting land for people and wildlife,” he said.

Doris Duke Charitable Foundation program director Sacha Spector and American Forests president and CEO Jad Daley applauded the science-based fund’s goals and the institute’s leadership in Thursday’s statement.

“Over the past two decades, OSI has been leading the way with innovative, science-based efforts to protect the most biodiverse and climate-resilient places across the Eastern U.S.,” Spector said.

“The fund is an invaluable tool in demonstrat­ing and documentin­g the value of land conservati­on as a critical and necessary response to climate change,” Daley said.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY ROBIN RUDD ?? The sun sets on a cloudy day over Parksville Lake in the Cherokee National Forest in January 2020. The cypress trees are Ocoee landmarks as they grow from the lake near where Greasy Creek joins the reservoir.
STAFF PHOTO BY ROBIN RUDD The sun sets on a cloudy day over Parksville Lake in the Cherokee National Forest in January 2020. The cypress trees are Ocoee landmarks as they grow from the lake near where Greasy Creek joins the reservoir.

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